Sometime ago, I posted When It Comes Time to Play Golf with the Boss? blog. The interest in that blog resulted in receiving a few emails from Bosses asking how to go about playing golf with their employees. Naturally, there were several reasons given why they wanted to know, but overall I found the interest they had in learning how to play golf with employees confirmed there must be as many Bosses who want to play with employees as employees wanting to play with bosses. So, I decided to break it down for the bosses out there intending to ask an employee to play golf, on how to use this opportunity to their benefit.
From the Get-Go!
OK, Bosses of the world…First, most bosses who ask an employee to play golf are doing so, on the most part, to enjoy a casual day of golf and, of course, taking the opportunity to getaway from the office to get to know each other better. If there is another motive, like covering business issues while playing golf, I suggest you stop there and revisit the need to play golf with the employee. Talking business during a round of golf can cause problems and at very least send mixed messages. So keep the business part business and the golf part golf.
It is true playing golf with someone opens up a window to a person’s true character and does build a closer relationship. However, bosses have to be very careful with this very powerful tool. In the right hands, and used for the right reasons, business golf can solve a lot of personnel issues and improve productivity. Used incorrectly or outside the standard procedures outlined in playing business golf the golf outing could cause more problems than initially were there before the round of golf. So, from the beginning use caution, but have fun.
How a Boss Should Play
I am an advocate that all things risky have a higher reward if done successfully and have double the negative impact if done wrong. So, playing golf with an employee is risky but has a very high reward if done correctly. However, done wrong, you have compounded the problem or created more problems than you started with. So learn how to play business golf before going making the invitation to an employee to play golf.
Playing golf with the employees is a very good move. Here is how a boss should go about safely playing with the troops.
Make it clear from the invite sent to an employee exactly what to expect. If there is a business issue to discuss after the golf or if the round of golf is to just get out of office for the day, state the intention and stay with it. Do not change in the middle of the stream. Wavering off the intended plan builds unnecessary anxiety on the employee’s part.
Reiterate the intentions of the round again on the first tee and make it clear there will be no business talked during the round. Propose a game to be played to keep the focus on the golf. Focusing on a game eliminates the urge to fill the idle time with business questions.
Take the opportunity to relax, but yet be guarded to not looking or presenting yourself as a slouch.
Dress professionally but appropriately. Never dress up or in exorbitant fashion. Both of those images will leave a bad impression in the employees’ eyes.
Friendly Non-Friend
As mentioned on how an employee is to play with the boss, the same goes for the boss playing with the employee..never think the round of golf is a good time to become friends. Becoming friends with employees seldom works out in the long run.
Naturally, being friendly..slapping each other on the back and telling jokes is OK, but only to a point. It should never appear that all of the friendliness displayed is part of developing a very close friendship. Needless to say, Boss-Employee friendships seldom never work.
There are exceptions and eventual friendships that develop, but only after years and years of relationship building would a boss every think of one of his employee’s as a close friend. However, these friendly relationship gets very complicated quickly when something demanding happens and the boss has to demonstrate leadership within the company. If the boss gives his presumed friend a crappy project the employee who thought they were friends will think otherwise and perform poorly. If the boss gives his presumed friend a cake project the others are going to react to it as being brown nosing. Either of these methods of managing the business could be anti-productive.
There is a line between a boss and employee and it is best for each to stay on their side of the line to make the golf outing a pleasant experience.
Benefits
Of course, there are many benefits to playing golf with an employee. If there weren’t this would have been a very short blog. There are things playing golf with an employee can achieved that are very worth the while.
Get the Word Out
One of the things playing golf with employees can do is build trust. If there is a problem in the workforce concerning the boss’ trustworthiness, playing a round of golf with a few key personal will get the word out on the boss’ intention or trustworthiness. Many times a round of golf can speed up communications about a concern employees have…like a rumor of layoffs or downsizing.
Feedback
If the boss plays his cards right..or in this case, plays business golf correctly, he or she can received some very frank feedback. This is good for bosses to hear. To many times what the staff reports is not what is actually going on out in the workforce.
The opportunity for the employee to be frank and provide straight-up feedback to the boss is unique to them so their openness is going to be guarded but factual. What a boss can learn could make a difference in how they should be doing business.
I personally enjoyed taking employees out for a round of golf. I knew it was a pressure situation for them but watching how they dealt with it and finding out more about how they were as a person made it easy for me to make business decisions based on what my employees are capable of doing or really wanted to do for the company. Try playing golf with your employees sometime, and see what you achieve.
Let me know how I can help.