Leading from the Middle. Scott Mautz

Leading from the Middle - Scott Mautz


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Jack Welch Management Institute, told me, “Middle managers are like the middle child of an organization, often neglected by senior managers and blamed by their reports. However, they're still expected to be as charming as the youngest and simultaneously as responsible as the oldest. We end up with middle child syndrome, enshrouded in conflict, wanting more of a say, and not sure how they fit in.”

      Omnipotence

      So where does that leave those who lead from the middle? Like you're expected to know everything, like omnipotence is written into the job description. You have to keep one foot in strategy and the other in day‐to‐day operations and tactics. You should know your business inside and out and know your competitors just as well. Your market share ticked down in Peoria? You should probably know why. You have to explain the what, how, and why and decide who. You must know how to handle the changing nature of work with remote work, global conference calls at ungodly hours, and scads of contracted work the norm. You're expected to know how to grow others despite a lack of investment in you, and without time to grow yourself.

      Physical

      Emotional

      While the scope (SCOPE) of what makes leading from the middle so messy can feel daunting, it doesn't have to. Through decades of research and experience I can share with you a framework, or actually a reframework, to help you reframe the way you see, experience, react to, and ultimately resolve each of the specific difficulties outlined. (We'll get into the overall mindset required to thrive as a leader in the middle in the next chapter.) Let's go through the SCOPE acronym again, this time armed with reorienting insights to help reframe and reshape the way you view the inherent, unique difficulties associated with leading from the middle.

      Self‐Identity

      While you're constantly switching roles and changing hats, in flux between high‐power and low‐power situations, your identity is never actually in flux, even though it might feel like it. An organization is like the human body, it needs a healthy, flexible core. If you strengthen your middle, you strengthen your entire body. If you strengthen the middle of the organization, you strengthen the entire organization. You are the core, flexible center and the center of strength for your company. Take pride in that truth.

      Here are some other reframing insights to help you fully appreciate your pivotal place in the organization.

      2. You're the ultimate catalyst from which progress pulses, the amplifier. We'll cover this in depth in Chapter 3, “The Skillset for Leading Effectively from the Middle.”

      3. You're the keeper of the long and short‐term flame, working on the business and in the business. This is a unique privilege that those leading from the middle experience.

      4. You're a lighthouse and a beacon, signaling threats and drawing all toward opportunities. It's a powerful duality. For example, being in the middle means you're best suited to spot external threats from competitors and identify internally generated ideas for innovation.

      5. The micro‐transitions you're constantly making aren't segmented, they're integrated. The 100 jobs you belong to add up to one vital job you're uniquely suited to do well. Value the variety.

      6. While you might be the “middle child,” the middle child is also resourceful, creative, and independent. Galloway reminded me of this, and she's right. These are all things to take pride in.

      Conflict

      More reframing insights follow.

      1. You're not squeezed in the middle; you have the unique opportunity to impact in all directions. There's no position quite like it.

      2. Instead of getting frustrated that you can't specialize when you're in the middle, which makes it difficult to grow your craft, view the action in the middle as your craft. Redefine success as having mastery over nothing except


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