Whatâs it like to work with you?                                                                                                    [Working with Claire]( Whatâs it like to work with you? [Marc Cenedella](
Dec 8 [Comment]( [Share]( Whatâs it like to work with you? Claire Johnson, previously COO at Stripe, and a VP at Google where she ran the âGreat Manager Awardsâ, has served up a management masterclass on the question. She wrote down her answers and turned them into an â[Unauthorized Guide](â on working with her. She shares this document when starting with a new team, or onboarding new team members. Itâs a guide and a user manual for working with her and serves as an âaccelerantâ in getting to know each other. She mentions that she picked up the idea from the legendary Urs Hölzle at Google; itâs still pretty cutting edge as far as management practices go. I think it works great for Claire and maybe it would work great for you. Let me know your thoughts after reading these highlights from Claireâs âUnauthorized Guideâ: âIâm very collaborative which means I like to discuss decisions and options and whiteboard big stuff in a group. I will rarely get stuck in one position or opinion but the downside is that you wonât always get a quick judgment out of me.â âIâm not a micro-manager and I wonât sweat your details *unless* I think things are off track and if I do, Iâll tell you my concern and we can work together to make sure I understand and plan together on how to communicate better or right the situation.â âOverall, I like more communication rather than less and I like to know whatâs going on with you and your team and that helps me do a better job for you. I donât view that as micromanagement but if you feel like I am too much in the weeds, please tell me.â Whatâs great about Claireâs guide is how open and approachable it is. Sheâs willing to let people in, so that they can know what sheâs like and how she works best. She sets expectations. She wonât get into the weeds of your business, unless⊠(and I love the appropriate use of asterisks here to highlight **unless**), unless she thinks youâre not keeping up with the job. [Subscribe now]( She puts requests in context. More communication helps her do a better job for you. Thatâs true, but itâs often unstated. Being explicit helps her team understand that more communication is not simply the boss keeping tabs on them. She points out the downsides of her style⊠donât expect quick judgments, completely hands-off management, or a meeting-free working relationship with Claire. And rather than leave you to grumble about her flaws with your co-workers, she highlights the grumbles for you in advance. She invites feedback. If you feel sheâs straying from her stated purposes, she asks that you help keep her on track. She gives permission to share your opinions. She even provides some of the words and phrases a team member can use to share criticism in a way that doesnât feel threatening or risky. And she suggests fixes in a positive way. When there are problems, youâll sit down together to find solutions and communicate better. A couple more passages to highlight: âI take action items really seriously and I expect you to know what yours are, when they are due, and get them done. I donât like chasing them but I do notice when things slipâ I love how she emphasizes really seriously here. There can be no doubt in your mind about what she requires from you. And her expectation is that youâll know your stuff. The boss will be unhappy otherwise! [Share]( âWeekly team meetings âI view these as both update and decision-making/work review forums. I expect people to be prepared and to participate, even though weâll have to manage video conferences and time zones.â She sets the table for meetings - both updates and decisions will happen. And is definitive about what you are requested to do - be a part of the meeting and have your preparation done. If the goal is driving team performance, Claireâs âUnauthorized Guideâ gets an âAâ. Team members know their jobs and that they need to deliver. No guesswork required about what the boss is thinking or hoping to see from you. Claireâs Unauthorized Guide paves the way for praise as well as performance conversations. The direct report who repeatedly misses action items is going to hear about it from the boss. This is leading by example. Claire demonstrates excellence in communication, setting boundaries, and holding people accountable. The managers on her team are witnessing the right way to do it. The upside of this management style is that expectations are clear to everyone on the team. It also creates a sense of shared purpose. The downsides for this approach are that the boss has to know themselves pretty well. For example, it would be demoralizing for a boss to say theyâre not a micro-manager, and then wanting to review every email you sent to your team or criticizing your font choice on your annual review. It also wonât work if the team isnât sufficiently mature, or professional enough, to respond to this type of communication. You could end up with team members taking advantage, or being overly literal. Interestingly, in a [longer interview]( she notes that only 50% of her direct reports picked up the practice and wrote guides with their teams. What do you think? Would your team benefit from a guide from the boss? Share your thoughts in the comments! [Leave a comment]( [Comment]( [Share]( I like writing the [Marc Cenedella Newsletter]( for you for free. If you like reading it, [please consider becoming a paying subscriber](. [Subscribe now]( © 2021 Marc Cenedella [Unsubscribe](
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