CORE tips for new managers
- By Core Element
- •
- 24 May, 2016

By the time we become managers, we are usually well regarded in our area of functional expertise. Most of the time however we’re being asked to excel at something that might be very new – manage and lead people.
Here are just a few tips that Core Element has for new managers – just remember CORE and the fundamentals will help you through.
C – Culture built on credibility
Setting and living your team culture is important from the start. You want to establish what the company culture is but also that of your immediate team. You need to live this too, establishing a sense of credibility in what you say and do. This can be anything from any reports that need to be completed regularly to ways of communicating. You can’t expect people to know how you like things done if you don’t tell them. Build credibility with your people and watch your team culture take shape.
O – Open communications
Open communication applies to your people and your manager. If you ensure there are clear communications around objectives, goals and milestones you are sure to meet your boss’s expectations and have your team deliver on them too.
Open communications also refers to establishing your individual employee motivations. Not everybody is motivated by the same things. One may be motivated by money and the other by recognition, feedback or acceptance. Meet with each team member one-on-one and understand their motivators and preferences and be sure to communicate yours.
R – Respect your people and be respected
You have probably been promoted for doing your autonomous job really well and demonstrating your capacity to learn more and take on more. Problem is there’s not a universal book-of-rules for every new leadership situation so it pays to listen to your common sense. Everyone is different and everyone thrives when they feel they respected. You can go a long way to earning the respect of your team by simply respecting diversity. Treating others with empathy and displaying humility showcases your emotional intelligence (‘EQ’) and trust me, that’s what separates great from good.
E – Empower your people
It might seem hard at first but you need to empower your people. People will perform at their best when they are genuinely mandated and given scope. No-one likes to be managed by the microscope so don’t do it. Set clear deliverables and mutual check-in points and get into coaching mode. Remember you’re role now has broader scope and you’ll miss the mark if you’re fixated on the detail of your team’s individual tasks.
By no means does the CORE list have ALL the answers but hopefully it offers some proven and common sense tips to get you off on the right foot.
One last thing, if all else fails, think of the best manager you’ve had and understand why you got so much out of them. Take that philosophy, shape it and run with it.
Hope it helps.
Steve