Saturday, August 26, 2023

HBR's 10 Must Reads for Mid-Level Managers by Harvard Business Review

Managers Can't Do It All by Diane Gherson and Lynda Gratton
Managers are being asked to do more and more while working with less and less. Even as we are having to downsize the workforce, we are having to manage the emotions of the people left behind. 
This article explores some ways that we can make life easier for those managers including how AI can help with things like metrics, budget approval, and salary negotiations. It also looks at how one company made life easier by flattening the hierarchy. 

The Real Value of Middle Managers by Zahira Jaser
For the past 50 years, the thought has been that middle managers are... well, middle people. Better than average but not quite higher management material. Jaser would like to change that and bring back to the idea of the manager, the role of leader, to take over being the amplifying voice on the way up, and the explanatory voice on the way down.

In Praise of Middle Managers by Quy Nguyen Huy
Recently, there has been a school of thought that middle managers don't do anything, Huy begs to differ. A six-year study shows that managers at least two levels below the boss and one up from line employees combine knowledge of company goals with boots-on-the-ground practicality in a way that no other managers can. 

Managing Your Boss by John J. Gabarro and John P. Kotter
Middle managers are often the "boots on the ground" but may be scared to speak up about changes or ideas because they are afraid of the consequences. But these are the people who most need to be able to sell their ideas because they are going to know what works. They need to know the tactics, know how to combine the tactics, and know when and how to implement them. 

Get the Boss to Buy In by Susan J. Ashford and James Detert
Mid-level managers have the power to effect big change at their companies. Ashford and Detert give seven tactics for how to raise ideas to the senior levels and make information more palatable so the company can prosper: tailor your pitch (make it specific to the decision maker), framing (show how your goal fits into the big picture), manage emotions on both sides, think about your timing, involve others, adhere to others (know how your organization makes decisions and play into that information), and suggest solutions (if you bring up a problem, also suggest a solution. These tactics can be pick and choose though the authors found more successes when using all seven ideas at once. 

The Secrets of Great Teamwork by Martine Haas and Mark Mortensen
Teams need any number of things to work well but the authors have identified four. They start with a well-dedined shared direction. Strong structure needs to be considered for great teamwork, who will be on the team, what the max capacity will be, and who will do what to compete a project. The third importance is support. That support comes from both outside and within the team. Finally, they talk about a shared mindset to overcome us/them thinking and fractures that can be caused by any number of reasons.

How the Best Bosses Interrupt Bias on Their Teams by Joan C. Williams and Sky Mihaylo
The best bosses can’t solve bias but they can interrupt it by making sure that they are fairly looking at all applicants and making a concerted effort to make their teams more diverse. That includes using fewer referrals, fairly dispersing office chores, and mindfully assigning high-value projects. But it also includes things that may not be as obvious like making sure you are scheduling the same amount of time for each of your employees (one person may feel more comfortable taking your time)

Making the Hybrid Workplace Fair by Mark Mortensen and Martine Haas
The new hybrid working model can make it hard for managers to keep things fair. The authors of this paper put forth some ideas on how to level the playing field: track and communicate, design, educate (let people know how hybridity can create unfair conditions), and monitor. 

Why Strategy Execution Unravels—and What to Do About It by Donald Sull, Rebecca Homkes, and Charles Sull
There are any number of books about strategy but little explores how to actually implement the strategies once they are decided upon. The authors look at ways to more successfully implement strategies with tactics like making sure that we are working well cross-departmentally. Of course, resource allocation comes up as a topic but we don't mean just moving things around, it can also mean resource elimination. Of course, there is getting out the message of key strategies but we have to remember to measure them in results a.k.a. frontline workers knowing what our strategies are rather than how many times we communicated the message. We also need to focus on what execution success looks like and think about the fact that it can't always be top down.

The Leader as Coach by Herminia Ibarra and Anne Scoular
Coaching is hard and many middle managers just aren't very good at it. But they can use the advice from this article and looking at their 2x2 matrix on various aspects of coaching ranging from mentoring (letting the manager solve the problem) to hands off, to withholding judgment. The square the authors suggest as the sweet spot is "situational." They suggest using the GROW method: finding the Goal, looking back at the Reality, examining your Options, and Will (what will you do and whether they are willing to act.)4

Make the Most of Your One-on-One Meetings by Steven G. Rogelberg
Rogelberg did three different studies around one-on-one meetings. They are incredibly important and managers need to view and prepare for them through the lens of making their employees be more prepared as well as finding solutions for difficulties the company is facing.

Learn When to Say No by Bruce Tulgan
Before you automatically say either yes or no to an ask, you need to pause and think about a number of factors before you answer the question. And you also need to think about your timing in how you day yes or no. Then be able to state why you said yes or no.

Begin with Trust by Frances Frei and Anne Morriss
The authors of this paper identify core drivers of trust: authenticity (working with the real you), logic (people trust your decisions), and empathy (people feel you care about them.) Everyone has one that they are weakest in, their trust wobble. Ways to adjust the wobble are given for each of the three. 

Four stars
This book comes out August 29, 2023
ARC kindly provided by Harvard Business Review Press and NetGalley
Opinions are my own

Friday, August 25, 2023

The Picture House Murders by Fiona Veitch Smith

Miss Clara Vale is one of the first of the graduating group that includes women getting a degree in chemistry. Unfortunately, she is not able to find a job that will let her work in that field. Even more unfortunately, the one person who seemed to ever support her, her Uncle Bob, has passed away. She hasn't seen him for years but he's left Clara his worldly fortune, including his detective agency. 
Unsure of what to do, she decides to give herself a little bit of time to figure it all out. While she is searching through her thoughts and talking to the people who were closest to her uncle, one of his clients stops by. The woman's case was still open and she is hoping that Clara will  take it on. Alice is asking Clara to go up against an insurance company that isn't paying out for their movie theater. And her husband died in between. When a second fire occurs, Clara gets suspicious.
This was an interesting story and a nice start to a new series. With that, there was a lot going on and one or two threads probably could have been shaved to allow more room for character development. 

Three and a half stars
This book comes out August 29, 2023
Followed by the Pantomime Murders
ARC kindly provided by Embla Books and NetGalley
Opinions are my own

Thursday, August 24, 2023

Big Nate: Move It or Lose It! by Lincoln Peirce

We get to see Nate's baseball team celebrate their end of year. He also tries to create a superhero universe (of course, the NCU.) But he does have to go back to school where he discovers that his homeroom teacher is none other than... Mrs. Godfrey. There's also a storyline where Alan changes his line to Nate and Nate W is really not excited. Also not excited, Chad when he and Gina are set up as partners for a school project. But it's Nate to the rescue when he hypnotizes Chad to have a bad personality. Hopefully he'll be able to change him back...

Four stars
This book comes out August 29, 2023
Follows Nailed It
Followed by This Means War!
ARC kindly provided by Andrews McMeel Publishing and Edelweiss
Opinions are my own

Wednesday, August 23, 2023

The Sunset Years of Agnes Sharp by Leonie Swann

This book opens from the view of the house turtle. Someone is dead. Well, at least their toes are pointing up and no lettuce is being proffered.
We then move to third person omniscient with Agnes Sharp. There is just a little too much going on in Agnes's world on the day the book opens. Lilith is dead but they do not want the police; the police come anyway. And their news makes it advantageous to let them know about Lilith. Plus, the new lodger, Charlie, is moving in. 
We know from the beginning that Agnes is an unreliable narrator. She has a loud ringing in her ears and she can't hear during those times. Then there are the moments that she is pulled back into the past. And we actively read her thinking about deceiving the police and refusing to think of bad memories.
There are some other glimpses into other characters, especially Marshall who seems to have some memory issues though he also seems to know the identity of the killer. 
I'm assuming this is going to be set up as a series since we have many hints of each of the characters having pasts in various parts of law enforcement. Plus, we haven't learned nearly enough about new lodger Charlie and her handsome grandson. 

Four stars
This book comes out August 29, 2023
ARC kindly provided by Penguin Random House and Edelweiss
Opinions are my own

Tuesday, August 22, 2023

The Sweetheart List by Jill Shalvis

This book mainly focuses on Harper Shaw though there are a number of other stories that get pulled in. Harper is moving to Lake Tahoe to open a bakery. She doesn't start off on the right foot with her landlord, Bodie Campbell who is mourning the loss of his father as well as his career. Harper also meets Ivy, a teenage runaway, who reminds Harper a lot of herself. 
As Harper begins to get closer to the people in the town, the ties she sees begin to get more and more complicated. There is also a B plot with Bodie's brother and a woman that Harper is slowly starting to make friends with.
This was a fast, fun, and fluffy book but I didn't feel like I got to know any of the characters really well and I wished for more interaction between Harper and Bodie to really get a sense of their HEA.

Three stars
This book came out June 13, 2023
Followed  by The Bright Spot
Borrowed as ebook from Libby
Opinions are my own


Monday, August 21, 2023

The Legacies by Jessica Goodman

I saw that a friend of mine had read this books and reviewed it highly so I thought I'd give it a chance. It didn't capture my attention as much as it did her but it was an interesting book.
If you get into the Legacy Club, you are pretty much guaranteed that you are set for the rest of life. This year, there are three young people whose entree is pretty much ensured, Bernie, Isobel, and Skylar. They each of something which might prevent them from getting in but all three also want to make it through the week of hazing to capture a seat in the club. Who or what could possibly stop them? Not even Tori, the nominee from some no-known family in Queens. Will all four make it to the end of the week and be able to celebrate at the Legacy ball?

Three stars
This book came out July 25, 2023
Ebook from Libby
Opinions are my own


Sunday, August 20, 2023

The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club by Dorothy L. Sayers

It is not in dispute that General Fentiman is dead. It's a sad thing. And on Armistice Day, too. The problem arises from whether or not he predeceased his sister. At stake? Half a million pounds. Lord Peter Wimsey is among the people who found the old man and he noticed something strange about the body. But what does it mean? And is that the only thing that is going to make this case complicated?
Lots of British culture included in this story. Lord Peter is a fantastic character to begin with but this book really paints a picture of what it was like to live in England following the first World War. 

Three and a half stars
This book came out in 1928
Followed by Strong Poison
Borrowed as hard copy from library
Opinions are my own