New Report Details the Impact of Poorly Trained Supervisors - American Society of Employers - Michael Burns

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New Report Details the Impact of Poorly Trained Supervisors

A leadership learning solutions organization out of San Francisco published results of a nationwide study (2,066 American adults) examining how first-time managers’ performance impacts their teams. Oji Life Lab engaged Harris Research to survey the impact first-time supervisors have on their subordinate employees and the impact that being untrained has on the first-time supervisors themselves.

The survey found that 40% of employees felt “stress or anxiety about going to work” due to a first-time manager, and more than a 1/3 of those subordinates lacked motivation with 1 in 5 reporting losing sleep because of a poor performing supervisor.  The sum of these factors and others resulted in a third of those reporting wanting to leave their companies.

40% of respondents stated that the new supervisor was weak at reducing conflict, handling difficult situations, providing quality feedback, running productive meetings, and making decisions.

During the time you worked for a first-time manager, which of the following, if any, did you experience as a result of working for this manager? (Please select all that apply.)

Effects of First-Time Managers

Total

(N=897)

Female

(N=395)

Male

(N=493)

Stress or anxiety about going to work

41%

353

46%

177

36%

171

Loss of confidence (Net)

40%

349

40%

152

41%

191

Loss of confidence in the company overall

31%

267

33%

126

29%

137

Loss of confidence in myself

20%

170

18%

69

21%

99

Lack of motivation to do more/offer suggestions

36%

312

40%

154

33%

154

Desire to leave my company

34%

295

40%

155

29%

135

Desire to change managers by changing jobs/teams within my company

31%

264

33%

129

28%

131

Negative impact on my relationships (Net)

30%

257

27%

105

32%

151

Negative impact on my relationships with co-workers

23%

201

22%

86

24%

114

Negative impact on my relationships with family and/or friends

13%

108

9%

35

15%

72

Negative feelings about my career path

23%

202

25%

96

22%

104

Poor sleep quality (e.g., trouble sleeping)

21%

185

22%

86

20%

 96

Oji Life Lab 2023 Survey

For many HR and training and development managers these findings are not a surprise. In fact, too many experienced HR and training professionals think the “some weakness” 40% rate is probably too low.

Older workers (55+) report the lack of skills even more frequently with “handling difficult situations” being observed over 60% of the time and poor skills in “providing feedback” 59% of the time.

So, what are we talking about here? It’s no real news that new supervisors often lack sufficient training. This often can be the result of the employers promoting a strong individual contributor and unfortunately installing them in the supervisory role with a “sink or swim” philosophy.

Oji Life Lab CEO Matt Kursh states, “It’s no surprise that these freshly-minted managers have anxious teams that want to quit. Not only that, poorly trained new managers can walk themselves into situations that will cause the employer legal issues and employee and labor relations problems. Labor relations problems is one that employers today should be concerned with even more.

Union organizing is on the rise. Recent statistics out of the National Labor Relations Board reports unions are winning 80% of the elections being run today – up from below 60% in the past. Employers need to understand that poor supervisors and managers are one of, if not the biggest reason, employers find themselves being organized by a union. Although commonly cited reasons for organizing by employees is pay or job security, more often than not poor management leading to poor employee relations is really behind union organizing.

Also as mentioned above, new supervisors lack knowledge about reducing conflict and handling difficult situations. With this problem, they are not talking about being unable to fix a production problem. They are talking about problem employees and a new supervisors’ inability to properly respond to situations resulting from those employees and their behaviors. A new supervisor’s poor response to a disciplinary situation will resonate far beyond the employee at hand. This in turn will lead to poor employee relations, bad culture, and possible wrongful employment actions of many different sorts.

If there are enough of those poorly handled employee disciplinary situations, and in short order broader employee relations problems arise as one employee is treated differently than another and morale is impacted.

This study reminds employers and HR professionals to train first line supervisors up front, or better yet, before the employee is promoted into the supervisory role.

One-on-one coaching is another great option. This tool provides individualized, targeted training to develop management skills quickly.

ASE provides an array of leadership development courses starting with our flagship Principles and Practices of Supervision I & II for the new or pending supervisors. ASE also has a comprehensive Leadership Certification program that includes classes on;

  • Conflict Prevention and Resolution Skills
  • Dealing with Difficult Behavior
  • Delegating for Results
  • Employment Law: Danger Zones
  • Giving and Receiving Feedback
  • Leadership Essentials
  • Managing Problem Employees

View the full ASE course catalog here. If you’d like help developing a leadership curriculum, please contact Rosetta Stoops, ASE’s Training & Development Manger at rstoops@aseonline.org.

 

Sources: Press Release: American Workers are Anxious, Losing Sleep and Considering Jumping Ship Due to Unprepared First-Time Managers. Harris Poll (7/17/2023); U.S. Workers Report Anxiety and Stress Over Unprepared First-Time Managers, HR Dive (7/24/2023)

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