Ensuring that managers are managing people well has a range of benefits for you and for your organisation.
First, when employees are healthy, engaged and performing, the organisation is likely to achieve better results: this might be in terms of productivity, customer/patient care, sales or financial returns. It may also be about better employee retention, reduced sickness absence or fewer grievances and disciplinaries. Better results and reduced costs are a source of success and satisfaction for the organisation, the employees and for you as a people professional.
Second, within an organisation, each individual and team interacts with others in a dynamic, complex and adaptive way to create an ever-evolving system and culture. The management style of each manager and the health, wellbeing, engagement and performance of each employee are therefore part of the complex range of feedback loops and influences that make up the organisational system. Those who are managing people well can therefore create a positive series of feedback loops that support a positive organisational culture and a thriving organisation.
Third, when managers are managing in positive, healthy ways they can prevent people management issues from arising, so neither the people manager nor the HR team has to give time and energy to dealing with them. For example:
• When a manager’s approach creates support and collaboration by building and sustaining relationships conflict between team members is less likely and people are likely to help one another out if needed.
• When managers provide people with clarity about tasks, expectations and how they are doing, the members of their team are less likely to focus on the wrong task, do things that are not wanted/intended, or get into a poor performance spiral.
• When managers’ behaviour is appreciative, positive, consistent, and kind, and they remain calm under pressure, team members are less likely to get stressed.
• When managers treat people fairly, openly and with respect, grievances and complaints are less likely to occur.
• When people managers support people’s development, they are less likely to leave unexpectedly and leave you struggling to recruit in a hurry.
When people trust their manager, they are more likely to tell them about any work or with non-work challenges as soon as they start happening. Being able to address issues or refer people to appropriate support early on means they are less likely to escalate into major problems. This means that the manager is more likely to be able to handle the issue themselves and either not need input from HR or be able to seek support from HR early in the process. This will save you and them a huge amount of time – the time that gets wasted when dealing with such issues at a later stage when they have become more serious or difficult.