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Introduction

The corporate workplace is an interesting and sometimes tragic organizational ecosystem. The often unspoken truth is that so many work environments suffer from an anachronistic, primitive organizational culture developed around an “us vs. them” hierarchical food-chain mentality—pitting leadership against subordinates (and vice versa). In many ways, the hierarchy that defines so many organizations reinforces the mythology that those in a leadership or managerial capacity are better, smarter, all-knowing, perfect decision makers poised to lead their teams to success if their subordinates would just flawlessly execute their every demand. That might work with superhuman leaders, but anyone who has worked in a real workplace knows that we’re dealing with mere mortals. What’s more realistic (here on planet Earth, at least) is that leaders and managers, like all of us, are typically flawed in one way or another and oftentimes truly need help and support from subordinates and staff to optimize success (if not to avoid all-out calamity every now and then). While those at the top of the organizational food chain are typically more experienced and hopefully effective decision makers, success is optimized when everyone has each other’s back irrespective of hierarchical level or title. In many ways that’s what managing up is all about.

Another often whispered, rarely publicly acknowledged reality is that there is a distinct segment of the leadership pool that is just downright difficult and/or challenging. There are many varieties of the difficult boss—some may have behaviors or personality quirks that create a difficult working environment, others may create problems instead of preventing them, while others may be weak and ill-equipped to adequately support the team. Encountering a difficult boss isn’t the rare Loch Ness Monster or chupacabra myth—something you’ve read about but never seen; it’s a fairly common experience. If you work long enough, you’ll certainly find yourself struggling with a challenging boss at some point. This means that subordinates are too often faced with the Darwinian reality of needing to navigate their difficult boss’s significant flaws in order to avoid poor business results, unpleasant work environments, or even personal career limitations. Indeed, learning to manage up is not a luxury but too often a necessity for success. This book seeks to demystify managing up—to clarify what it is and isn’t, explain why virtually everyone should do it, and, more importantly, reveal the ins and outs of doing it well!

The book pulls from not just my own research and personal experience but also from powerful testimonies and tried and true recommendations, tips, and suggestions from more than 1,100 survey respondents on this topic. You’ll find survey data, findings, and verbatim comments sprinkled throughout the book. I’ve compiled these best practices that have been used in the trenches, on real projects, in real work situations to provide you with an arsenal of tips and techniques to use when you’re faced with a less than effective boss or senior leader.

WHO IS THIS BOOK FOR?

Yes, I’m biased—the capitalist in me screams, “EVERYONE!” But seriously, I honestly think the book can be helpful to anyone in the workplace and particularly helpful to recent college graduates, early career professionals, or rookie project managers. These professionals will typically encounter a variety of managers throughout their career, and learning to manage up is a critical skill set that can be used with a wide range of senior leaders, from the amazing manager to the one who is downright pitiful. Whether your work environment is traditional with lots of layers of management or more nontraditional with dotted-line matrix style reporting or a flatter management structure, these skills can help virtually anyone work more effectively with professionals who have more power and influence in the organization (irrespective of their specific title). Even after having been an entrepreneur for more than fifteen years without a boss, I’ve found the techniques helpful when dealing with difficult clients, colleagues, or partners. In short, while I refer to the “difficult boss” throughout the book, I use it as a generic label for any challenging senior leader, executive, client, or partner whom you might be dealing with now (or might encounter, to your dismay, in the future). Too many people come up to me after a presentation or training class exclaiming, “I wish I’d heard this two years ago when I really needed it!” So my mantra is that it’s always better to have the tools in your toolbox before you need them. Obviously, the book targets two primary audiences—leaders and subordinates—and I try to speak to both. While the focus is on providing tips for managing up (focused to the subordinate audience), the book also speaks to leaders in an attempt to help them better understand their flaws and how they might affect others, so that they can work to minimize them.

If you’re thinking to yourself after reading the subtitle, “I’m not a project manager. I’m just trying to figure out how to deal with my crazy boss,” please keep reading. First, the book is largely focused on just that—demystifying the difficult boss. Oftentimes they’re just misunderstood, and we’ll explore some of those misconceptions. We will also explore several variations of the difficult boss and equip you with specific techniques (many of them time-tested project management best practices) that anyone can use to effectively manage and partner with a difficult boss. Second, everyone is a project manager! If you’ve planned a wedding, organized a family trip, thrown a kids’ birthday party, or managed a work-related effort with a few moving parts, you are a project manager. You may never have held that title, but you’ve certainly done the job. There are many different definitions of a project. My personal definition is “a reasonably complicated effort focused on producing a specific result within defined parameters,” and everyone has embarked on that at some point in their personal or professional lives. Indeed, the broad umbrella of “project management” is a well-regarded discipline providing valuable tools and techniques. Even if you haven’t worked in the project management arena, why not use some of those techniques to deal with issues we all face?

This book focuses on providing practical advice that’s most likely to work in real-life situations. As such, the project management concepts are pulled from a wide variety of sources, including traditional project management theory and methodology, project management training, survey feedback from people just like you, and, most importantly, practical experience. Since the content is unabashedly focused on practical experience, there will certainly be discrepancies and departures from formal, academic management theory with regard to referenced tools, techniques, definitions, and so on, and that’s quite intentional. My goal is not to regurgitate or repackage academic theory or best practices, but instead to customize (and reference where appropriate) existing theory and best practice to provide the reader with more robust, practical suggestions—from the trenches, not the textbooks!

THE GENESIS OF THE BOOK

Unfortunately, one of the universal hallmarks of the first decade or so of work experience for most people is having a difficult boss (or two, or three, if you’re unlucky). I actually consider myself one of the lucky ones. During my tenure in the corporate jungle, I was blessed with mostly mediocre to downright likable managers, but as a project manager (and then later as a corporate trainer), I also supported senior-level stakeholders and clients with personalities that ranged from fierce and motivating to scattered and delusional. Certainly as a professional corporate trainer and speaker since 2003, I’ve become convinced that there are a lot of bad bosses and senior leaders out there causing many teams and individuals a lot of sleepless nights. Indeed, I think we’re in the midst of a true leadership crisis—just when more and more organizations insist that they need everyone to step up and show leadership.

One of the activities I’ve conducted for years as a corporate trainer is called “The Best/Worst Leader You Ever Had.” During the activity, I ask participants to document (on sticky notes) traits of the best and worst leaders they’ve ever experienced. I draw a line down the center of the flip chart for each group and label the left column “Best Leader” and the right column “Worst Leader.” Small groups then document their collective listing of the traits of each. I was amazed (and somewhat perplexed early on) by how often groups would skip the left column entirely to start working on the Worst Leader list of traits first. Indeed, they often explained that they didn’t have many Best Leader examples to pull from so they skipped right to the Worst Leader list (since their bank of references for those was vast). When we conducted readouts from the activity, there would be so much energy, passion, and enthusiasm during the lively discussion and sharing of anecdotes about the worst leaders. There were lots of “amens from the choir,” hand slapping, and laughing. You could tell the group was bonding over these common bad boss experiences. However, when we discussed the best leaders, the silence was deafening. One or two anecdotes would be shared that others seemed to admire, but there wasn’t nearly the same common experience that everyone could relate to. As the years progressed, I noticed a similar phenomenon during my speaking engagements. I’d speak on a wide range of topics (leading effective meetings, project management best practices, building strong teams, enhancing team communications, etc.), and I noticed that irrespective of the topic I was covering, one of the first questions during Q&A would usually be some version of “But how do these techniques work if my boss is the problem?” I received the question so often that in 2010 I wrote a white paper entitled “The Project Manager’s Guide to Managing Difficult Sponsors.” As I received more and more requests for advice, I updated my content arsenal to provide techniques for managing a wide variety of difficult bosses. Years later, I wrote the manuscript for this book with two primary goals in mind:

• Helping leaders by giving subordinates tips on how to make their life easier

• Helping subordinates by equipping them with practical techniques to maximize their effectiveness with virtually any boss type

HOW THE DIFFICULT BOSS CHAPTERS ARE ORGANIZED

To promote a sense of consistency, each of the difficult boss chapters has been organized similarly (with icons provided for easy reference, see Figure 0.1):

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Figure 0.1 Difficult Boss Chapter Section Components

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