Three Skills New Managers Need to Succeed
by Susan Margolin

Making the leap from individual contributor to manager can be fraught: for the new manager, their direct reports, and the organization as a whole. New managers tend to rise into their position based on past success. But few have the experience or training to effectively manage a high-performing team.
This is a huge problem for organizations large and small, according to Steve King, an adjunct professor of executive education at Kellogg and former executive vice president of human resources at Hewitt Associates, where he oversaw HR for the firmâs 25,000 associates.
âSenior executives count on frontline managers to make things happen,â King says. After all, the vast majority of a firmâs employees report to frontline or middle managers, not those at the top of the organization. Yet, executives often overlook frontline managersâ need for clear guidance and direction about change efforts.
Leaders often mistakenly presume that managers are already trained and proficient at rolling out changes with their teamsâand that the benefits of the changes they are proposing are self-evidentâso there is little need to explain or clarify things to managers and teams.
In Kingâs view, new managers need to master three critical skills to succeed in their roles.
Know What Kind of Team You Are Leading
Frontline managers need to understand whether their team is comprised primarily of individual contributors or whether it is highly collaborative. And then, they need to set goals accordingly.
âFor example, a wrestling team and a football team have a very different kind of team dynamics,â King says. âTheyâre both teams; they just need to be managed differently.â
Some sales leaders set revenue goals for each salesperson and offer financial incentives for their individual efforts. Others set team revenue goals and reward the team when they collectively hit their target. Neither approach is inherently more effective, but the team approach drives greater collaboration.
Early in the pandemic, teams comprised of individual contributors were more nimble than highly collaborative teams because they had already established processes to work independently, come together as a group, and share information. Interdependent teams that relied on face-to-face interactions had to establish new ways to collaborate.
But individualized teams require special attention, too. Many frontline managers fail to articulate what King calls âmetagoals,â or the shared goals among individual contributors. If individual contributors donât see their work in the context of the companyâs larger goals, itâs easy for conflict to arise. It may also be a sign that the team ⊠isnât really a team.
King recalls a manager tasked with coordinating three groups to work together on a project. After a lot of pushback from the groups, the manager realized they had failed to define their common goal. This led to a robust conversation where all the parties concluded that there was no common goal.
âIn the end, the groups needed to act independently on three different goals,â King says. âThey were, in fact, three separate teams. Weâre trained to think âone organization, one goal,â but that isnât always true.â
Know How to Establish Clear Goals
The promotion from individual contributor to manager often comes with a reality check: managing teams means dealing with tough interpersonal dynamics, from trust issues to personality clashes to competing ambitions.
âMany managers mistake these conflicts for personality clashes,â King says. âBut more often than not, what presents as a relationship problemâpeople blaming one another, bad group dynamics in meetingsâis the result of the manager failing to clarify the teamâs goals.â
Managers also have to ensure that team members understand the process for achieving these goalsâand especially which team members are empowered to make which decisions. By clearly stating which team members can decide on a course of action ahead of time, managers preempt disagreements.
Say, for example, two team members are tasked with handling a companyâs marketing initiative. If both people think they have the right to make decisions about the tone of the outreach emails, their manager has set up a situation where conflict can easily arise. Being clear about who holds the âdecision rightâ will decrease the likelihood of conflict.
King stresses that such alignment is especially key when the teamâs goals shift. Managers should explicitly state what has changed and the ways these changes will impact the team, as well as individuals.
âTeams have learned this lesson as weâve grappled with Covid,â King says. âSupply-chain issues have prompted changes in goals, which has meant changes in work processes and team-performance expectations.â
For example, if a revenue target shifts from $500K to $300K, the manager can say, ââWe have a new goal here. Letâs talk as a group about how weâre going to achieve it and what roles everyone is going to play in getting that done.ââ
With goals in flux and work processes being revisited, frontline managers need to dedicate time to identifying any stressors that might bubble up under the surface and disrupt team dynamics.
Teams Need Feedback, Too
As customary as it is for managers to set clear, appropriate goals for their team members, those same managers often fail to provide regular, clear feedback to the team as a group. This is a missed opportunity for ensuring and advancing broader company goalsâand for coaching the team on how it can achieve those goals.
King recommends bringing your team members together quarterly to give them feedback on areas including how they are progressing toward their goals, how well they are handling changes to work processes, or how they might have more successfully collaborated on a project.
âWhen I managed teams, I used those moments to let team members share their feedback on team performance as well as feedback to me about my management of the team,â King says. âThe same parameters about giving good feedback apply to groups as to individuals: Be clear, concise, and specific with your comments. And make sure to come prepared with examples and plans for improvement.â
Incorporating team feedback into routines is a straightforward way for managers to improve their effectiveness and keep their teams engaged. At a time of high employee turnover, keeping your team on the same page can help prevent the frustrations that may lead to individuals heading for the exits.
âFrontline managers are the foot soldiers of talent management in organizations,â King says. âWhen managers get team management right, itâs to both employeesâ and the organizationâs benefit.â
This article originally appeared in Kellogg Insight, a publication of Northwestern University. It is used with permission.
Stephen King is Adjunct Professor of Executive Education at Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University.
Susan Margolin is a freelance writer based in Boston.
