By: Stephanie Diana Wilson- Eubank
Micromanagement is a method of leadership which based on my research of remote work and my own work experience is a hostile and lazy form of leadership. It is lazy because rather than leading with the understanding your greatest resources a company has is its employees. Hostile because micromanagement has been shown to not only create room for management bullying but to cause harm to employees emotionally. Remote work becoming more normative since COVID has allowed for more transparency of how authentic leadership as a term being corrupted by controlling leaders who are insecure, and incompetent to shine through. Leading remote teams is more emotional work on the part of leadership but, it is good and necessary work. Before I detailed the facts of how micromanagement is beyond harmful to employees onsite and remote there are some concepts of remote workers as a focus need to be detailed first.
Such as there is a great article pre COVID found on, https://journals.aom.org/doi/abs/10.5465/ame.2000.4468068 on how to manage remote workplaces. In said article the author Cascio details how remote workers suffer from three types of isolation.
- Social,
- Professional, and
- Geographical.
Due to these types of isolations managers of remote workers and teams need to work on calling or reaching out to subordinates. Not just for status on projects or assignments. Rather to reach out to employees and just say, “hi”. There is an interesting TED Talk, (Durrwachter, 2020); regarding the power of saying, “How are you doing?” and “ hello my friend”. As leaders we need to bother to talk to our employees! To ask, how are you? We all have been traumatized globally by the pandemic. Many of us are still living in the trauma. The surprising thing is candid, open, and reasonable conversations spark and genuine leadership and communication arises. Which is the true intention of authentic leadership. Not the excuse to be a tyrant and a bully that the term has come to be synonymous with.
However, there are articles like, (Milne, 2021); detailing how there is now spy ware for managers to investigate employee’s cameras and see them and monitor them. Showing linkage with these programs with communication software like Slack where the user can watch a team and chastise them if they are not at their computer at the exact moment management is checking on them. There is ample evidence on how micromanagement hurts the work force and can hurt a company’s work force. Such as the article from Forbes, (Kurter, 2021); and the article from Psychology Today, (Golden, 2020); on how micromanagement hurts businesses.
Micromanagement is not only detrimental to a company and its employees but, it is a testament to lazy management. How is it lazy management? For one as noted in remote workplaces there is additional work that must be put into cultivating a team. Micromanagement is a leaders’ scream that they as leaders did not hire people that they trust to get the job done. When employees don’t feel like management trusts them it is unnerving. Micromanagement just shows a leader who isn’t willing to adapt and get to know their team and how best to support them. At the end of the day remote or onsite employees are a company’s best resource and need to be treated as such.
If this article helped shed some light on how micromanagement is not in the best interest of a workforce especially not remote please share.
Work Cited
Cascio, W. F. (2000). Managing a virtual workplace. Academy of Management Perspectives, 14(3), 81–90. https://doi.org/10.5465/ame.2000.4468068
https://journals.aom.org/doi/abs/10.5465/ame.2000.4468068
Durrwachter, D. (2020, October 1). Authentic leadership. TED. https://www.ted.com/talks/dianna_durrwachter_authentic_leadership.
Milne, S. (2021, September 5). Bosses turn to ‘Tattleware’ to keep tabs on employees working from home. The Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/sep/05/covid-coronavirus-work-home-office-surveillance.
Kurter, H. L. (2021, July 1). Is micromanaging a form of bullying? here are 3 things you should know. Forbes. https://www.forbes.com/sites/heidilynnekurter/2021/06/29/is-micromanaging-a-form-of-bullying-here-are-3-things-you-should-know/?sh=45a23efa4467.
Golden, G. (2020, October 30). 8 micromanaging boss traits that endanger your business. Psychology Today. https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/curating-your-life/202010/8-micromanaging-boss-traits-endanger-your-business.