1.3: What Do Managers Do?
- Understand what managers do to help organizations achieve top performance.
Managers are in constant action. Virtually every study of managers in action has found that they “switch frequently from task to task, changing their focus of attention to respond to issues as they arise, and engaging in a large volume of tasks of short duration" (Hannaway, 1989). Mintzberg observed CEOs on the job to get some idea of what they do and how they spend their time. He found, for instance, that they averaged 36 written and 16 verbal contacts per day, almost every one of them dealing with a distinct or different issue. Most of these activities were brief, lasting less than nine minutes (Mintzberg, 1973).
Kotter studied a number of successful general managers over a 5-year period and found that they spend most of their time with others, including subordinates, their bosses, and numerous people from outside the organization. Kotter’s study found that the average manager spent just 25% of his time working alone, and that time was spent largely at home, on airplanes, or commuting. Few spent less than 70% of their time with others, and some spent up to 90% of their working time this way (Kotter, 1999).
Kotter also found that the breadth of topics in their discussions with others was extremely wide, with unimportant issues taking time alongside important business matters. His study revealed that managers rarely make “big decisions” during these conversations and rarely give orders in a traditional sense. They often react to others’ initiatives and spend substantial time on unplanned activities that aren’t on their calendars. He found that managers spend most of their time in short, disjointed conversations with others. “Discussions of a single question or issue rarely last more than ten minutes,” he notes. “It is not at all unusual for a general manager to cover ten unrelated topics in a five-minute conversation" (Kotter, 1999). More recently, managers studied by Sproull showed similar patterns. In the course of a day, they engaged in 58 different activities with an average duration of just nine minutes (Sproull, 1984).
Interruptions also appear to be a natural part of the job. Stewart found that the managers she studied could work uninterrupted for half an hour only nine times during the four weeks she studied them (Stewart, 1967). Managers, in fact, spend very little time by themselves. Contrary to the image offered by management textbooks, they are rarely alone drawing up plans or worrying about important decisions. Instead, they spend most of their time interacting with others—both inside and outside the organization. If casual interactions in hallways, phone conversations, one-on-one meetings, and larger group meetings are included, managers spend about two-thirds of their time with other people (Eccles & Nohria, 1992). As Mintzberg (1973) pointed out, “Unlike other workers, the manager does not leave the telephone or the meeting to get back to work. Rather, these contacts are his work."
The interactive nature of management means that most management work is conversational (Pondy, 1978). When managers are in action, they are talking and listening. Studies on the nature of managerial work indicate that managers spend about two-thirds to three-quarters of their time in verbal activity (Mintzberg, 2009). These verbal conversations, according to Eccles and Nohria, are how managers gather information, stay on top of things, identify problems, negotiate shared meanings, develop plans, put things in motion, give orders, assert authority, develop relationships, and spread gossip. In short, the manager’s daily practice is all about these interactions. “Through other forms of talk, such as speeches and presentations,” they write, “managers establish definitions and meanings for their own actions and give others a sense of what the organization is about, where it is at, and what it is up to" (Eccles & Nohria, 1992).
- What do managers do to help organizations achieve top performance?