No question, I was as good a sprayer as anyone in the company. I know my agronomy. I know the rigs. That's how I ended up as a supervisor. That was a promotion and I wasn't going to turn it down. But now I've got all this paperwork and have to worry about these other people on the team, people I know are not that good as sprayers anyway. Maybe I'm just not a natural leader.
—Twentysomething
“They want more status, authority, rewards,” said one senior engineer in a major electronic products company. “But they don't want the additional responsibilities of being in management roles. We give a junior engineer the big promotion, make him an engineering supervisor, and he keeps acting like he's just a project engineer. He acts like nothing has changed. They don't step into that role. There is a big leadership gap, especially at those lower levels. How are we supposed to find those people who have sufficient technical skill to be in charge of an engineering project but are also suited for leadership?”
This is the Holy Grail of retention: identifying and building new leaders. It's not just retaining the best technical talent. Rather, it is retaining those with the best technical ability who are also willing and able to take on leadership responsibilities and helping them step into those roles successfully. How many people have both the technical ability and the desire and ability to lead?
What usually happens is this. Those who are very good at their jobs (those with technical ability) are given more and more work. Over time, they need people to help them. If they are willing and available, these people are given supervisory responsibilities, sometimes informally at first. Eventually they become managers and are taught how to complete the additional paperwork that comes with their managerial responsibilities. But they are rarely taught how to be a manager. Instead, they develop their own management styles on an ad hoc basis and then conclude they are great at it, whether they are great at leadership or not. Or they struggle with it and conclude they are not management material after all. Usually they are stuck, in one organization or another, struggling with management responsibilities that nobody ever really taught them how to handle. They go through their careers thinking, “I'm not a natural leader. I'm a …” (You fill in the blank: accountant, engineer, doctor, chef.)
Over the years, some business leaders have tried to fight this conundrum by creating technical tracks and manager tracks. The idea is that those who are great technicians can continue growing as technicians, while the “people people” are encouraged to follow the manager track instead. The problem with this strategy is that if an individual doesn't have the technical talent, they will lack credibility when it comes to playing the manager role. Who is going to manage an accountant but an accountant? Who is going to manage a doctor but a doctor? Who is going to manage a chef but a chef?
That's why, when you are looking for new leaders, you have to focus first and foremost on those with real technical talent, those who are really good at their jobs. These are the individuals who have demonstrated their commitment to their work and careers. That commitment is the first essential piece when it comes to identifying new prospects for leadership roles.
The problem is, especially among the best young technical talent today, that there are a lot of people who are committed to their work and career but are reluctant to take on supervisory roles. Why? The main reason, according to our research, is that they can see with their own eyes the experience of their own managers and their slightly more advanced peers. What they see is that managers, especially new managers, are often given loads of additional responsibility with very little additional support.
Often when young people are given their first chance to lead a team or a project, they find themselves managing people—temporarily or longer term—who were their peers the day before. Sometimes those “peers” are the same age, sometimes older, sometimes their friends. Without support and guidance from above, new young leaders often have a hard time establishing their credibility and getting others to respect their new authority. One Twentysomething explained: “All of a sudden you go from being one of the guys to being the project leader. You are supposed to be in charge, but everybody is looking at you like you are exactly the same person you were before. It's pretty hard to establish your authority in that situation. They are all looking at you like, ‘Okay, are you going to start acting like you think you are my boss all of a sudden?’” Under these circumstances, new managers are likely to soft-pedal their authority with some people and lean on others disproportionately; to gravitate to friendly faces and avoid unfriendly ones; and to fall back on cliques and ringleaders in order to exercise any power at all. It's true that sometimes young people thrust into leadership roles without support land on their feet anyway. But way too often this is a setup for frustration and failure.
Is it true that some people are naturally cut out for leadership while others are not? Maybe. But I think that if natural leaders really exist, they are extremely rare. Very few people are endowed with that special brand of charisma, passion, infectious enthusiasm, and contagious energy that inspires and motivates people. No organization can afford to wait for those rare natural leaders to come along and fill each supervisory role, especially if they also need to have good technical skills and a proven commitment to their work and career. Frankly, I don't think charisma, passion, enthusiasm, and energy are traits that can be learned. Either you have them or you don't. What is more, I'm absolutely convinced that these “natural leadership” traits are not what most new managers need in order to succeed.
What do new managers need? They need support and guidance in learning and practicing to provide support and guidance—they need the basics of management.
When you ask a young star to step up and make the transition to a leadership role—at any level—you owe it to that new leader and their team to make sure that they are fully prepared to take on additional responsibilities and authority. Teach new leaders how to do the people work, and then support and guide them in this new role every step of the way:
With this kind of sustained low-tech hands-on leadership development effort and constant evaluation, you can develop your future leaders. Who will move along that path and grow into a high-level leader? Don't look for those who are comfortable slapping other people down. Don't look for those who love the power. Don't look for the biggest egos or the loudest, most confident voices. Don't be lured by charisma, passion, enthusiasm, and energy.
Look for those young people who love the responsibility and the service. Look for those who consistently practice the basics of management with discipline. Look for those who spend the most time patiently teaching. Look for those who want to lift people up and make them better. They will likely be your future leaders.