The Workplace Asked by Ahmad on December 22, 2020
I’m the manager of IT department in my company. One of direct reports is sometimes browsing the web and reading articles instead of working.
His performance is suffering and the project is behind the schedule, and I don’t know the reason for this behavior (maybe I’ve just become too sensitive about him).
What should I do about it?
I don’t want him to feel micromanaged all the time and I want to help him become interested in work and increase his performance.
Many people learn about emerging technologies through social media like twitter , they learn how to solve problems through Q/A sites like: How should I deal with a subordinate who is distracted and not performing well?, even reading web comics like xkcd.com can be quite educational and a much needed emotional reset similar to taking a smoke break, but potentially more productive.
In most cases when an IT worker is "wasting time on the web" at work it is not that they are reading articles that is the problem but how much.
In many cases, it also turns out that the perceived problem is that people are animals of habit. You may always have enough downtime at a certain time of day to check on him which just so happens to be when he also has a bit of down time to read articles; so, just because you routinely "catch him in the act" does not mean that that is what he is normally doing. If instead you should be looking at his projects: how much he is backlogged, how many hours a day he is devoting to tasks, and are those tasks are taking as long as they should.
The best way to do this is making your IT department use some manner of CRM for tracking the work they do. Normally CRMs are used for tracking the work consulting firms do for outside companies, but even if this is an internal IT department, a CRM will help them organize information about your infrastructure, track projects statuses, and most importantly as far as your question is concerned: log how much work he is actually getting done.
Then if the data shows he is in fact slacking, instead of trying to confront him about something that may or may not really be a problem, you can talk to about how you need him to meet measurable data points. So your conversation might sound like, "Arjun, I noticed you have a lot of projects left open, I need to you to step it up and get your queue back down to a manageable size." or "I noticed you spent 3 hours yesterday on task that only takes Kabir or Ananya 1 hour. I need you to speed those up, and if you're not familiar with how to do it, I need you to get with one of them to see how you can do it better."
Here you are setting goals instead of fence posts, he will know if he needs to stop spending so much time browsing to reach his goals, then he can find the balance that makes the most sense for him. The important caveat to remember though is that IT is a mental task. It is emotionally and psychologically draining; so, while a CRM is good for tracking your projects, make sure to use it as a means to set goals and stay motivated, and not to let it degrade to the knife you hold above thier heads, because if anything drives an IT guy be less productive, it is feeling like they have goals they can not meet.
As for goal setting: There is a metic often used by sales managers that states that all minimum goals should be meet 80% of the time. What this does is it keeps your minimum goals hard enough to motivate them to do what it right, but easy enough that people don't loose hope or feel like they need to cheat the system to reach them. Goals should also not be a moving target. Once you feel you have a good gauge on what your people can do, set a goal and see how it works for at least 6 months before revisiting it.
Answered by Nosajimiki on December 22, 2020
I want to clear up some common misconceptions that you seem to believe:
Answered by Nzall on December 22, 2020
How about transferring him to sales? (Only partially joking.)
EDIT: (Sigh) all right, it's because this guy seems like all talk and no walk, and doesn't have the concentration necessary to make it as an IT developer. But in sales, all they do is talk.
How is it I come up with the obviously best answers but get voted down? I guess people don't appreciate real answers.
Answered by Jennifer on December 22, 2020
You need to have a conversation.
If there is any doubt about in your mind about this situation, you need to start by giving your colleague the benefit of it.
Ask about what you have seen, and see if they have an explanation.
Why?
A manager, you can see reduced productivity for several reasons:
You've said that you "feel" that (1) is likely. If I were this person's manager, I'd want to verify this assumption before "setting expectations".
Assuming (1) is correct, you need to dig a little deeper. Why has productivity dropped off? Again, there are many possibilities. Some examples:
...and many others.
The point is, each of these should elicit a different behaviour from you as their manager.
In the second case, cutting your colleague a little slack in the short term could do wonders for you over the long-hall.
Take the wrong action now, and you stand to loose someone who has shown they can be a good employee in the past. Take the right action, and you stand to gain loyalty and hard-work in the long run.
Answered by Kramii on December 22, 2020
This is one of the cursed problems of IT:
Answered by l0b0 on December 22, 2020
One thing to look out for is to see if there is something that is frustrating this worker's efforts. If he feels unable to progress on an issue, he might get bored from a lack of anything to do and go out for some entertainment.
Answered by EvilSnack on December 22, 2020
What is hard as a manager is keeping your team members motivated. If they are motivated, they will make their best every day.
In this case, I would discuss with him getting more information about how he feels these days, and trying to know what makes him less motivated than before. I think the best way to lead your team is to know deeply how the members are doing, what they don’t like, and what they do like.
Ideally, you would trust them all, and you would not have to control them. This idea comes from the freedom-form company theory by Isaac Getz, among others.
Answered by RawBean on December 22, 2020
If you see something you perceive to be an issue you investigate and proactively mitigate against it.
In this case you're not even sure, so you have a couple of recourse's. Firewall the internet connection (it probably is already) and monitor usage at least broadly, on top of that you can restrict access to sites if you feel the need.
Almost all my clients have had to block social media like YouTube and Facebook to increase productivity. Some have outright blocked them, others allow management access, or time limited access, still others allow all web traffic but monitor usage.
Blocking proactively eliminates the surfing as a problem symptom, monitoring makes it easy to identify what is actually happening. I've had a client who's total web traffic was over 90% YouTube and Facebook.
Answered by Kilisi on December 22, 2020
The problem here is not the web browsing, but that his work output is not satisfactory.
You need to address this like any other performance issue: set clear expectations and hold them accountable. For example, agree on what you expect to be done by Friday and get them to commit to it. If he delivers, all good, just keep doing this. If he does not, ask them why and figure out what you both can do about it. Maybe he needs to spend less time web browsing, maybe it's something else entirely.
Answered by lambshaanxy on December 22, 2020
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