Beware The “Mommy Manager” Syndrome

Whether this applies to you—or to female (and even male) managers on your team or in your company—beware the “Mommy Manager Syndrome” because it seriously undermines the potential leadership strength and strategic vision of otherwise intelligent and competent leader-managers. (I will refer to Mommy Managers as female, as that is most prominently the case, but please be aware that everything below applies to males who over-parent as well.)

What To Watch For:

1 - Overly Protective Loyalty To Team
When executives see the need to reorganize a division or the entire company such that it will disrupt, divide, or even dissolve elements of a team’s current functioning, the Mommy Manager’s first impulse is to jump to the defense of their team, perhaps even sacrificing their own leadership position in the company in order to put their team’s welfare at the forefront.

Rational progressive understanding of what is desired from the re-org is sacrificed to deeply intense emotional loyalty to the Mommy Manager’s team. At the extreme this can lead to resignation from the company, and at minimum to a level of heartbreak that renders the Mommy Manager incapable of leading with clarity and authority thereafter.

2- Defensive Attitude When Team Members Receive Criticism
When a team has cross-functional integration with other teams there is bound to be appropriate (and not-so-appropriate) critical feedback across the teams. When you see a manager routinely and even fiercely come to the defense of their team members you know that there is Mommy Management attachment going on.

If that were not the case, the manager would take in the criticism as important information to be considered, assessed, and passed along constructively when it would help a team member become better at collaborative tactical and strategic thinking, functional interfacing, and ultimately sharing in the positive outcome of teamwork.

3 - Insistence On Team Collaboration At The Expense Of Personal Leadership
Far too often Mommy Managers believe they should use their position to draw out from their team members the ultimate planning and direction for even major projects. They want to make everyone happy. They want to make everyone believe that they are major contributors. And they rob their team of the actual leadership of their own wiser, more experienced seniority.

When Mommy Managers function this way, they not only use unnecessary time in the decision making process as they nudge their team members to collaborate, they also depreciate their own expertise.

4 - At The Ready To Take Up The Slack Rather Than Call Out Poor Performances
The Mommy Manager indulges the impulse to jump in and do the work that properly belongs to people on her team. Rather than step up to the more leaderly responsibility of providing critical feedback, potentially painful coaching, or even appropriate lines in the sand re: potential termination or at minimum a PIP (performance improvement program) the Mommy Manager rolls up her sleeves and works alongside her team members rather than insisting on specific criteria for acceptable performance from her team members.

Always concerned about “hurting someone’s feelings” or “being seen as bossy” the Mommy Manager devalues her own leadership by routinely behaving in ways that are overly “nice” and “extra helpful.”

5 - Difficulty Taking Command And Standing Out As A Separate And Strong Leader
Because Mommy Managers are so overly-concerned about the well-being of others, especially members of her team, she has a difficult challenge with asserting herself in meetings, garnering publicity for the good work she and her team provide, and in any other way putting herself forward as an authority and leader.

All too often Mommy Managers will say something like, “It’s not my work that needs acclaim, it’s the great work of my team members. I’ll get my promotion when people notice the great work my people produce.” They typically abhor managing up, ie making sure those above them are aware of the outstanding excellence she and her team are bringing to the company. To the Mommy Manager that seems like “playing politics” rather than responsibly educating others about the benefits of her expertise.

So, What To Do...

First - clearly define for yourself and/or people who fit this description who work for you the differences between parenting and managing.

Second - review these distinctions in a private 1on 1, making it clear you expect your manager to forego parenting in favor of growing the excellence and leadership of her team members.

Third - provide oversight and input (if this pertains to you, ask for this from your colleagues and/or manager) to help support, value, and steer the new course of correction. Praise and recognition for good managing is important in the weaning process!

Now, what other behaviors have you noticed in the way of overly parental management styles?

(Photo: Business picture - Female manager/Flickr)

Judith Sherven, PhD and her husband Jim Sniechowski, PhD http://JudithandJim.com have developed a penetrating perspective on people’s resistance to success, which they call The Fear of Being Fabuloustm. Recognizing the power of unconscious programming to always outweigh conscious desires, they assert that no one is ever failing—they are always succeeding. The question is, at what? To learn about how this played out in the life of Whitney Houston for example, and how it may be playing out in your own life, check out their 6th book: http://WhatReally KilledWhitneyHouston.com

Currently consultants on retainer to LinkedIn providing transformational executive coaching, leadership training and consulting as well as working with private clients around the world, they continually prove that when unconscious beliefs are brought to the surface, the barriers to greater success and leadership presence begin to fade away. You can learn about their core program “Overcoming the Fear of Being Fabulous” by going to http://OvercomingtheFearofBeingFabulous.com

Note: Their 7th book, short and to the point, “25 Power Speaking Tips That Will Leave Your Audiences Wanting More,” has been recently published in kindle at:
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Gilbert Young

Co-Founder | Product Consultant | Global VP | Program Delivery | Transformation | Helping organisations develop & deliver futureproofing service solutions, portfolios & new recurring revenue lines.

10y

A type of manager traits is described in the article, but the trait should not be measured against leadership . The parenting approach is by no means an assessment of leadership quality. The article f I feel confuses the context of "leadership-manager" role

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Jeanette Hacker

"Butterflies are like women. We may look pretty and delicate, but we can fly through a hurricane." —Betty White.

10y

I enjoyed what you wrote even though I don't agree with all of it. For example, there are times for being stern and there are times for having a softer side. I often compare parenting to leadership (not management). As a parent, my long-term project is to develop happy, confident adults that contribute to society (one day). I want my children to be capable of making decisions and that means I don't make all decisions for them, even when other people think that I should. There are times when I want to get involved and I don't. I think every project (including leading others) has it's different stages, just like parenting. You have to be observant about what is needed at different stages and with different people. Caring about other people's well-being as much as your own, or more, is not a bad thing.

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Mark Roberts

Helping Manufacturing CEOs and Business leaders strategically Drive Explosive Growth in Revenue, Profits, and Shareholder Value for over 37 years. Leveraging data to drive results. Certified Scaling Up Coach

10y

This content obviously hit a cord with many. Interesting....would everyone be as upset if the author said: your job is to be a leader in the workplace not a parent? Having helped businesses for over 30 years I have often seen people ( men and women) thrown into leadership roles with no training. Kind of like the thought process a great salesman makes a great sales manager right? WRONG. So not being trained not having a mentor, these new leaders try to grab onto something, anything that has worked in other situations. I have seen what you call " mommy managers" - hate the term but get your point. I have seen men who were coaches outside of work trying to apply what worked on the ball field to be a better leader. I have seen the grandfather leader style- son...back in my day... Content , the problem you are sharing is by nature going to often rattle some cages. What you have described does occur. We also have men who , without leadership training treat employees like their kids and not professionals...it happens. What may help quiet the critics is to identify the problem then provide questions to help understand the symptoms of the problem? In conflict we seek to find a common ground....can we agree that good leaders can have the heart of a parent , but training and skills to lead and not parent their employees?

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Jennifer Fairburn

Executive Leader and Strategic thinker. Sets the vision, influences the atmosphere.

10y

Guilty! Particularly in the defence of my team....it did cost me dearly....thank you for the insights

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