Thursday, November 21, 2019

What to Do When Your Boss Keeps Changing His Mind -The Muse

What to Do When Your Boss Keeps Changing His Mind -The MuseWhat to Do When Your Boss Keeps Changing His Mind After weeks of pouring all of your time and energy into a new project, you turn it in and are feeling pretty victorious. Moments later, your supervisor walks over to your desk. It feels a little soon for praise, but OK, why not?She sits down and tells you that youll need to go back to the drawing board.Wait, what?Then she starts describing the revisions shes looking for, and theyre nothing like the project you were assigned. Is your manager an indecisive flip-flopper, or was she saying this all along and you completely missed her point? Here are two key questions you can ask to figure out what happened and prevent this from happening again (and again).Are We Shifting ur Primary Goals?Your first order of business is to learn if there are new considerations. Even though its a little annoying to start over, if recent budget cuts or new information from the client has come to ligh t, this question ensures youll have the information you need to revise your work. It also reassures you that you heard your boss correctly the first time (important for overall communication and your self-esteem)- and reminds him that you were doing your best to deliver what he originally asked for. As a bonus, its a gentle nudge in his direction to keep you in the loop as much as possible.Conversely, if youre told the audience, focus, and metrics are the same as theyve always been, youll know that you and your manager have been on two different pages. Clearing this up is the first order or business- otherwise youll keep making the same types of mistakes. This time around, instead of using his recommendations as a jumping off point, plan to stick to exactly what he asks. Take notes- verbatim- and wherever theres room for interpretation, ask for clarification. Clearly, your boss has specific expectations, and it will make both of your jobs easier if youre clear on what they are.What Can I Do to Make the Next Version Successful?OK, your tone really matters on this one. If theres even a hint of I cant believe I have to rework this in your voice, it could come off as passive-aggressive. And thats not your goal Your goal is to zero in on the exact flaws and areas for improvement. Theres no need to redo the parts of the project that are working- and at the same times its essential that you do revise the elements where your supervisor expects changes.This question moves the conversation to what your boss sees as a miss. Sometimes, it gives you an opening to discuss why you got (overly) creative, and either way it ensures you and your manager will be on the same page moving forward.Youre always trying to shave minutes off your daily to-do list. Being asked to completely revise your work is basically the enemy because it forces you to spend time redoubling your efforts. Use the questions above to figure out where you went astray, get back on the same page as your boss, and avoid going through this process again.Photo of confusing messages courtesy of Shutterstock.

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