Stop Kissing Worms - Ann Tardy | Speaker, Author, Trainer

Stop Kissing Worms

I have a confession… I’ve been kissing a lot of worms lately.

Figuratively, not literally.

I keep getting in the weeds on projects – I’m so far in that I’m kissing worms. For example, Cindy on my team took the initiative to set up a follow-up meeting with a client. I insisted on participating and then I monopolized the conversation. I didn’t need to. She is the consummate client engagement specialist.

So why am I suddenly micromanaging?  Well if I’m honest, I’ve been traveling a lot, the team is growing, and I’m feeling disconnected and less relevant.

Insecurity is at the root of all worm-kissing:

  • We don’t know people’s skills or experiences.
  • We’re confounded by the importance of the situation or task.
  • We feel left out of the loop and therefore vulnerable.
  • And sometimes we’re avoiding other aspects of our job where we feel less proficient.

 

As managers, we’re masterful at kissing worms – managing the heck out of projects made us successful in the first place! But the problem with kissing worms:

  • Our distrust bruises morale (and breeds distrust).
  • We solve problems for people, which hampers their growth.
  • We aren’t teaching, coaching, training, or developing.
  • We become overwhelmed – with our work and theirs.
  • We can’t take on new projects or strategize about the big picture.

 

Granted, some situations warrant our increased involvement, but we can view the weeds without diving into them:

  • Agree on a schedule for receiving updates
  • Discover people’s skills and experiences
  • Share context and content
  • Ensure people have what they need to be successful
  • Encourage questions and ideas
  • Allow people to fail and learn

 

To be a better boss, we must delegate to develop, grow, and recognize people.  In other words… kiss people, not worms (figuratively, not literally).

ps. If you are burdened by a boss who loves to kiss worms, just commit to over-communicating.