Listen to your staff
By far the best advice I can possibly give you is to listen to your staff and to take their recommendations seriously. You don’t necessarily have to follow every recommendation, but at least hear your employees out. They are the ones who do most of the day-to-day work, so they may have insight into aspects of the organization’s operations that you might not pick up on yourself. Not only can your staff give you valuable guidance, but taking the time to listen to them helps build morale. Listening to your employees shows that you respect them and that you value their input.
Be accommodating
Another thing I realized during my tenure as an IT manager is that it’s important to be accommodating to your staff whenever possible. In every organization I have ever worked for, IT jobs have involved a lot of stress and some really long hours. Because everyone worked such long hours, I had to accept the fact that sometimes my employees would need to leave for a little while during the workday. For example, someone might need to go to the bank before it closed or pick up their kids. As an IT manager, I always tried to accommodate these types of requests so long as they didn’t interfere with IT operations.
Maintain your technical knowledge
Often, IT managers (and especially CIOs) spend more time in meetings than they do configuring servers or troubleshooting problems. As a result, it’s easy to let your technical skills become outdated. But there are at least three good reasons why you should maintain your technical skills, even if you don’t use them on a regular basis. First, you don’t want your staff to think of you as an idiot manager who knows nothing. If you don’t have a minimal level of IT knowledge, your staff may not respect you. Second, you never know when you may have to fire an employee or when someone will quit or end up in the hospital or something like that. You need to have enough knowledge to pitch in and help complete whatever projects the employee was working on. Even if you don’t have sufficient time or technical knowledge to complete the project yourself, you should know enough about it to help those who are going to be working on it, if necessary. Third, vendors will constantly try to sell you things. Unless you have a good bit of technical knowledge, you could easily get taken for a ride by a fast-talking vendor who is pitching an inferior product.
Know when to get outside help
No IT employee knows everything. Everyone has his or her strengths and weakness. Sometimes, a project may come along that falls outside of your employees’ skill sets. As an IT manager, you must not be afraid to acknowledge that some projects simply can’t be handled in house and to outsource such projects when appropriate.
Take measures to relax and avoid burn out
IT can be stressful. Being a manager can be stressful. So it’s critical for IT managers to regularly take time to do something to relax and de-stress. Otherwise, you will become apathetic toward your job as you get burned out, and you will become irritable toward your staff.
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