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12 - Managing people

from Part II - Thriving in your new job

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2011

Barbara J. Gabrys
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
Jane A. Langdale
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
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Summary

There are so many theories of how best to manage people that whole courses are run on this topic alone. Here we advocate thinking ‘win–win’ and ‘seeking first to understand’ in order to create synergy. In practical terms, we provide a number of scenarios that require a management solution. These are managing up (your bosses), sideways (your peers) and down (your research group). We recognise that different management skills are required to handle different situations; however, the ‘win–win, seek first to understand and synergise’ approach underlies all cases.

The theory

Managing people is an art not a science and some would even say a black art. There is an apocryphal saying that managing academics is like herding cats or pushing a wheelbarrow full of frogs. However, you only have to look at the success of ‘big science’ projects such as the Large Hadron Collider to realise that this saying is only partially true.

Managing people in academia, or more generally in research, does not necessarily mean working within well-defined hierarchical structures, such as those found in industry. However, there is a common code of good practice, which underlies managing others. It requires recognition of the fact that we are interdependent on others for achieving outstanding results. In the context of Covey’s seven habits of effective people (Chapter 1), a good group leader would think ‘win–win’ (habit 4), seek first to understand (habit 5) and synergise (habit 6) (Covey, 2004). What does this mean?

Type
Chapter
Information
How to Succeed as a Scientist
From Postdoc to Professor
, pp. 116 - 121
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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References

Covey, S. R. 2004 The 7 Habits of Highly Effective PeopleLondonSimon & SchusterGoogle Scholar
Mullins, L. J. 2010 Management and Organisational BehaviourLondonPearson EducationGoogle Scholar

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