The Boss' Creed
When you go to a doctor, its reassuring when you see the Hippocratic Oath on the wall. Likewise, wouldnt it be great if bosses pinned up in their office, for all to see, their own creed as facilitators of peoples careers?
The Boss' Creed
When you go to a doctor, it’s reassuring when you see the Hippocratic Oath on the wall. Likewise, wouldn’t it be great if bosses pinned up in their office, for all to see, their own creed as facilitators of people’s careers? Consider this: employees, prospective employees—they’d walk out of that office confident they’re in good hands.
Robert I. Sutton, a Professor at Stanford University and author of Good Boss, Bad Boss, was interested in exploring the mindset of great bosses, and used his own experience studying and consulting with managers in numerous settings to determine 12 key beliefs the majority of them shared.
Sutton’s 12 points could be used as an excellent Boss’ Creed that would benefit employees and enlighten managers all over the world:
1. I have a flawed and incomplete understanding of what it feels like to work for me.
2. My success — and that of my people — depends largely on being the master of obvious and mundane things, not on magical, obscure, or breakthrough ideas or methods.
3. Having ambitious and well-defined goals is important, but it is useless to think about them much. My job is to focus on the small wins that enable my people to make a little progress every day.
4. One of the most important, and most difficult, parts of my job is to strike the delicate balance between being too assertive and not assertive enough.
5. My job is to serve as a human shield, to protect my people from external intrusions, distractions, and idiocy of every stripe — and to avoid imposing my own idiocy on them as well.
6. I strive to be confident enough to convince people that I am in charge, but humble enough to realize that I am often going to be wrong.
7. I aim to fight as if I am right, and listen as if I am wrong — and to teach my people to do the same thing.
8. One of the best tests of my leadership — and my organization — is "what happens after people make a mistake?"
9. Innovation is crucial to every team and organization. So my job is to encourage my people to generate and test all kinds of new ideas. But it is also my job to help them kill off all the bad ideas we generate, and most of the good ideas, too.
10. Bad is stronger than good. It is more important to eliminate the negative than to accentuate the positive.
11. How I do things is as important as what I do.
12. Because I wield power over others, I am at great risk of acting like an insensitive jerk — and not realizing it.