The Art of Disengagement
Any “valuable” manager can appear to be on the side of the angels of engagement while still preventing the chaos of involvement,which is too explosive to fool around with.
- By Robert Pater
- Jan 02, 2008
I’ve seen many executives and senior
managers sincerely seeking to enhance
employee involvement. They realize
engaged workers are more likely to be
more motivated, do higher-quality work,
make better suggestions, deliver improved
service, be more alert and aware—and
show far better Safety results.
But to a high-control-oriented manager,
there are clear disadvantages to activating
workers:
¦ engaged employees often exceed
previous self-restricted limits, then may
feel proud, important, or even “uppity”;
¦ involved workers may be more
likely to challenge those managerial
directions they don’t understand or
that are unclear—diminishing tightfisted
control over them as they
become more sure;
¦ participating people take up more
time in suggesting improvements or
offering alternative solutions. Some
managers view these actions as wasteful
(“What happened to the good old days
of ‘Shut up and check your brains at the
time clock?’”);
¦ they’ll expect to have a say in
future decisions or implementations;
¦ and, possibly worst, they might
even be successful when participating in
active Safety committees, becoming
peer trainers and/or change agents, and
lobbying for policy or tooling changes.
Then where would command-and-control
managers be? Unnecessary? Less
important? Looking for new work?
Clearly contrary to high executive
expectations, strong involvement won’t
thrill an I-tell-they-listen type manager.
Unfortunately for these kinds of bosses,
it’s not enough to just ignore or disregard
budding worker participation. Like it or
not, many employees are increasingly
more educated, bombarded with information
from the Internet and other surrounding
media. Further complicating
this, aging workforces tend to become
even more adamant, self-assured, more
difficult to control.
No, really clever managers have to go
beyond, to actively discourage employee
participation that might otherwise upset
the power cart. But, of course, few such
managers want to be seen torpedoing
engagement efforts their executives or
employees jointly embrace. Not good for
the career.
But help is at hand. Here are seven
beneath-the-radar methods for “limiting”
employee engagement:
1. Speak in generalities. Remember,
ambiguities and platitudes (such as
“Think before you act”) don’t communicate
anything critical, keep others off balance,
and frustrate would-be efforts at
change—while still cloaking you in the
image of Leadership.
2. Offer only phantom responsibilities
—never actual power—and certainly not a
budget. Be sure to lid Safety Committees’
and others’ potential pushes by restricting
their resources. Don’t let them bring in
outside resources; appear to check out
their suggestions, making sure these don’t
go anywhere (hint: look for faults).
3. Nanomanage. Closely oversee their
efforts. Arbitrarily change whatever they
come up with you don’t like. Eventually
they’ll get the message. Be aware they may
try to “get even.” I recall an employee
committee that was asked to create its
company’s Safety slogan for the year. The
committee’s response? “Let’s All Talk
Safety—It’s A Lot Cheaper Than Doing
Anything About It.” Needless to say, this
wasn’t allowed, but it made the rounds
and became the grassroots Safety theme
and joke beyond that year.
4. Build in lag time. Don’t follow up on
employee suggestions too promptly. Plead
“other priorities.” This will slow down
their desire to generate more ideas that
might otherwise take up your time or
reduce your control.
5. Screen any training to make sure it
doesn’t encourage their sense of personal
control. Instead, put most of your efforts
into crafting detailed policies and procedures—
this can always give you a sword
over their heads. No way will they be able
to remember or follow all the paper rules
you can dream up.
6. Pick the “right” workers to spearhead
new efforts. Select a creative mixture of a
few retired-on-active-duty, those who don’t
have the respect of their peers, and some
who will do anything to please . . . you.
7. Create pushback to participation. By
forcing involvement—e.g., scheduling
meetings at times inconvenient for
workers or giving them insufficient
advance notice—you can appear interested
while actually minimizing potential
threat of change. I’ve seen one manager
schedule workers for feedback or training
sessions on their days off. Another would
cancel meetings at the last minute, citing
“my busy workload”—after employees
jumped through hoops to attend. Other
managers set wrong expectations (e.g.,
telling employees a five-day Instructor
training would last only one day).
Any “valuable” manager can appear to
be on the side of the angels of engagement
while still preventing the chaos of involvement
or a platform for the devils of dissent.
Be warned! Involvement can be a
potent instrument for spreading the leadership
load, catalyzing significant change,
zooming improvement and organizational
enthusiasm.
This article originally appeared in the January 2008 issue of Occupational Health & Safety.