> He's the boss, and they better shut up and do what they're told.
Hypothetically let's assume you are a manager. You have a team of smart people and like any other team, everyone wants to work on the hardest problem. Particularly two guys want to do the same thing: How do you handle this?
The most important thing I advocate in a manager / employee relationship is trust. You should be able to trust that your manager has your best interests in mind and vice versa. If you do trust each other, I don't see why there will be a problem in doing what is told. In fact you won't even see it as being told to. The managers on the 'good end' of the spectrum will also make it appear as if it is a suggestion, but any smart person should be able to see through that for what it is: an order to do X or Y.
Most of the issues happen because of the lack of trust. This is the prime thing I tell new folks: Choosing a manager who is exactly on the same page is prime directive. Get the human element out and build trust. You miss out on that / settle, you are just settling for a life of misery.
Easily, I once worked at a place where everyone wanted to work on the hardest problems. I could have done that also but instead I recognized that there was a lot of grunt work that needed to be done in order to get our product out and meet our deadlines so I volunteered to get that stuff done. The director of our department took note of this and when bonus time came around I received a significantly larger bonus than everyone else and was thanked for my dedication to doing what needed to be done. The lesson being that, you reward people who do what it takes to get the job done not people who are self-serving glory hounds looking to boost their resume with hard problems.
Hypothetically let's assume you are a manager. You have a team of smart people and like any other team, everyone wants to work on the hardest problem. Particularly two guys want to do the same thing: How do you handle this?
The most important thing I advocate in a manager / employee relationship is trust. You should be able to trust that your manager has your best interests in mind and vice versa. If you do trust each other, I don't see why there will be a problem in doing what is told. In fact you won't even see it as being told to. The managers on the 'good end' of the spectrum will also make it appear as if it is a suggestion, but any smart person should be able to see through that for what it is: an order to do X or Y.
Most of the issues happen because of the lack of trust. This is the prime thing I tell new folks: Choosing a manager who is exactly on the same page is prime directive. Get the human element out and build trust. You miss out on that / settle, you are just settling for a life of misery.