Even
as bosses worldwide, including in India, are well regarded by their
employees, most of these same employees think they could personally
manage even more effectively do their managers' job, according to a
survey. Millennial (73 per cent) and Gen Z (70 per cent) employees
are most confident they could do their boss's job better, the
Workforce Institute at Kronos Incorporated and Future Workplace
survey revealed. The survey was conducted by Future Workplace on
behalf of Kronos Incorporated (a workforce management and human
capital management cloud solutions provider) between July 31 August
9, 2018, among 3,000 employees in India, Australia, Canada, France,
Germany, Mexico, the UK and the US.
-
The survey revealed that based on grades given of a C, D, or F, at
least one in three employees feel their manager could improve at
modeling work-life balance (37 per cent), their ability to coach for
better job performance (37 per cent), handling performance-related
issues (33 per cent) and communication (33 per cent).
-
For overall people management skills, the majority of workers would
'pass' their boss with an A (26 per cent), B (37 per cent) or C (25
per cent), yet 4 of employees give a solid F for performance, it
added.
Indians
have more Confidence over Bosses
Indian
employees are the most satisfied with their managers, with at least
eight out of 10 grading managers an A or B in every category. Despite
rating their manager's number 1 in all categories, a whopping 95 per
cent of Indian employees still say they could do their boss's job
better, all of the time (47 per cent) or some of the time (48 per
cent), it added.
This
sentiment is followed by 87 per cent of Mexican workers and 71 per
cent of French workers, it said. Canada (61 per cent) and US (59 per
cent) workers feel the least confident that they could do their
boss's job better, yet it's still more than half of all employees, it
added.
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The
Workforce Institute at Kronos executive director Joyce Maroney opined
that as the working world continues to evolve, and new generations
enter the workforce, styles, preferences and perceptions will
continue to change. "With the number of millennial managers
growing, attitudes toward aspects of management and working style
will also change. As the student becomes the teacher, organisations
should have a clear lesson plan for leadership development and
effectiveness in key areas to set tomorrows managers up for ongoing
success," she added.
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