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Working with your new boss
Your new boss will have more impact than anyone else over whether you succeed or fail. Your boss establishes benchmarks for your success, interprets your actions for other key players, and controls resources you need. Building a productive working relationship with him or her while you establish your mandate and negotiate for resources is a clear early priority.
Defining your goals
When you think about working with your new boss, keep the following goals in mind:
Clarify mutual expectations early. Begin managing expectations right away. You are in trouble if your boss expects you to fix things fast when you know that the business has serious structural problems. So it is wise to get bad news on the table early and to lower unrealistic expectations. Be careful to assess your new organizations capacity for change before making ironclad commitments to your new boss.
Secure commitments for the resources you need. In conjunction with establishing goals, begin to negotiate for the key resources–people, funding, and knowledge–you need to succeed. Dont commit to goals without getting corresponding commitments on resources. Otherwise you wont have much bargaining power.
Aim for early wins in areas important to the boss. Whatever your own priorities, identify what the boss cares about most and pursue results in those areas. That way, your boss will feel some ownership of your success. But dont make the mistake of doing things you consider misguided or trivial. In part, your job is to shape your bosss perceptions of what can and should be achieved.
Aim for good marks from those whose opinions your boss respects. This is an aspect of building supportive internal coalitions. Your boss may have pre-existing relationships with people who are now your subordinates. If so, their assessments of you will take on additional importance.
Establishing how you will work together Its essential to figure out how you and your boss will work together. Your preferences may differ, such as over how much information the boss wants (and you want to give) and how involved the boss wants to be (and you want him or her to be) in the details of what you are doing. Rather than allowing misunderstandings to complicate your relationship, spend some time at the start discussing how you will work together. Even if you dont develop a close personal bond, doing so will help you create a productive working relationship.
Matching your requests for support to your situation The type of support you need from your boss will vary depending on the business situation you are facing. The role of the boss in a startup is very different than in turnaround, realignment, or sustaining success situations. So you need to gain consensus on the type of situation. Then you have to think carefully about what role you would like your new boss to play and what kinds of support you will ask for. The table below summarizes typical roles that new bosses play in each of the four major types of transition situations.
Situation
Typical Roles for the New Boss
Startup
Helping to get critically important resources quickly.
Setting clear, measurable goals.
Lots of up-front attention, then get out of the way.
Guidance at key strategic breakpoints.
Help in staying focused.
Turnaround
Same as startup plus:
More support for making and implementing the tough personnel calls.
Support for changing or correcting the external image of the organization and its people.
Helping the new leader cut deep enough early enough.
Realignment
Same as startup plus:
Helping the new leader make the case for change to the organization, especially if he or she is coming in from the outside.
Sustaining Success
Constant reality testing: is this truly a sustaining success situation or a realignment?
Support for playing good defense, not making mistakes that damage the business.
Help in finding ways to take the business to a new level.
Living by the golden rule
Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. You will almost certainly hire new people as your subordinates. Just as you need to develop a