Our Most Radical Belief on Management

I often say that our most radical belief at Happy is this: you should decide who should manage people based on how good they are at managing people.

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Because too often they are chosen on their core skill or how long they’ve been in the job.

We worked with one company who had a problem with their Marketing Manager. Let’s call her Sarah. Now Sarah was brilliant at marketing and vital to the company’s success. But she was not good at managing people and lost around half her staff every year as they moved to other jobs.

They came to us to help them solve the problem. They wanted to keep Sarah but needed to find a way to motivate and keep their people. The solution was, of course, simple. Sarah’s role got changed to one of Marketing Expert, where she spent all her time doing marketing stuff. We found the person in the team who was great with people and trained them to be the new manager. (Of course, if it had been at Happy, we’d have had the staff choose who it should be.)

The great thing about this solution was that it was win/win. Everybody gained. The happiest person of all was Sarah who lost the bits of the job that were stressing her out and got to spend all her time doing what she was great at.

Working with groups of managers, I’ve found many who absolutely love managing people. Its what motivates them, what gets them up in the morning and what they will remember long after they leave this job. But many others hate it. However much training they receive, they still aren’t great at it and they know it. It stresses them out and they would love it if they could have their seniority without having to manage people.

This is one of the most important steps to making your workplace happier.

Make sure your managers are selected for how good they are at managing people and you will transform the lives of many of your staff. And that means they will stay and be motivated to do a great job. It is kind of common sense.

Learn the 10 core principles to create a happy and productive workplace in Henry Stewart's book, The Happy Manifesto.

Support your aspiring and current managers to be empowering and confident leaders with Happy

Happy offers leadership programmes at Level 3, Level 5 and Level 7, from new managers/supervisor level all the way up to senior leadership teams and CEOs. These programmes are based on the ideas of trusting your people. They are practical and based on applying what yo’ve learnt. We aim to inspire and ignite change in your organisation, as well as giving you valuable management skills such as business strategy, decision-making, negotiation and project management.

We also offer programmes tailored specifically to people from Global Majority backgrounds. The content is the same, but have been designed to give new and experienced managers the skills they need to navigate organisational culture with a clearer perspective on their own potential, as well as building their confidence and expanding their professional strengths.

Henry Stewart

Henry is founder and Chief Happiness Officer of Happy Ltd, originally set up as Happy Computers in 1987. Inspired by Ricardo Semler’s book Maverick, he has built a company which has won multiple awards for some of the best customer service in the country and being one of the UK’s best places to work.

Henry was listed in the Guru Radar of the Thinkers 50 list of the most influential management thinkers in the world. “He is one of the thinkers who we believe will shape the future of business,” explained list compiler Stuart Crainer.
 
His first book, Relax, was published in 2009. His second book, the Happy Manifesto, was published in 2013 and was short-listed for Business Book of the Year.

You can find Henry on LinkedIn and follow @happyhenry on Twitter.

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