Hello everybody. Good Day. Just a casual question.
Question of the day: How do you manage a newly arrived employee who has more knowledge, skills & expertise than you as the owner in certain factors such as production,installation & overall operations.
Do you,
1) Swallow your pride. Engage him & ask him to share his expertise & experiences with the company, asking for his opinions & views on stuffs. Ask him to share information about his old employer, competitors, etc. His opinion on further improving the shop's sales. etc ?
Downside: He will have no respect for you as the 'leader' & will think you as an idiot for 'consulting' his opinions. In the long run, he might ask for additional major increase of pay, because he thinks he is good, special & inexpendable asset to the shop.
Or
2) Firm up your image. Be that tough no nonsense boss. After all, you are the boss. Even though you know that he is more experienced than you. Delegate jobs to him in an indirect way. You get the results either way using this approach, without him knowing you are the amateur.
Downside: I see no downside to this method at the moment currently. Might due to change after hearing you guys out.
So which is the preferred? How do you guys handle this kind of scenario. Did it happen before with you? Please share your experiences. Remember, There is no right or wrong answer to this. Just let it flow.
Cheers!
Question of the day: How do you manage a newly arrived employee who has more knowledge, skills & expertise than you as the owner in certain factors such as production,installation & overall operations.
Do you,
1) Swallow your pride. Engage him & ask him to share his expertise & experiences with the company, asking for his opinions & views on stuffs. Ask him to share information about his old employer, competitors, etc. His opinion on further improving the shop's sales. etc ?
Downside: He will have no respect for you as the 'leader' & will think you as an idiot for 'consulting' his opinions. In the long run, he might ask for additional major increase of pay, because he thinks he is good, special & inexpendable asset to the shop.
Or
2) Firm up your image. Be that tough no nonsense boss. After all, you are the boss. Even though you know that he is more experienced than you. Delegate jobs to him in an indirect way. You get the results either way using this approach, without him knowing you are the amateur.
Downside: I see no downside to this method at the moment currently. Might due to change after hearing you guys out.
So which is the preferred? How do you guys handle this kind of scenario. Did it happen before with you? Please share your experiences. Remember, There is no right or wrong answer to this. Just let it flow.
Cheers!