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![]() The Middle By Brenda Beukelman, MBA The role of the marketing director can seem both powerful and powerless; it depends on the day, season, and maybe even the time of day. For all the usual frustrations of managing a team, a tight budget and competing demands, there is great power in the ranks of middle management. These leaders are the fulcrum of strategy and implementation. Successful marketing managers transform strategy into reality through leadership, sweat equity, and creativity. “Seemingly mundane things that managers do can have great impact on their workers,” says Harvard Business School Professor Teresa Amabile. Her recent research studies the impact of day to day management on the organization’s ability to implement strategy. The findings suggest effective leadership in the middle is the unrecognized edge of an organization. From my experience of “living in the middle” of a health system leading a marketing function, I have learned a few things through trial and error on how to keep a marketing team engaged. Some lessons were learned the hard way, like pushing too hard for results without enough resources to sustain momentum. Other lessons learned were through pure serendipity; like finding a champion for a new marketing initiative with a hallway conversation. Teresa Amabile’s research puts these day to day interactions in a new light. So what can a marketing director in health care do to create this edge in their organization? Speak Two Languages and Translate |
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To increase creativity, try new ways to organize the work. For example, hold off-site brainstorming to develop the marketing response to the organizational strategies. Different surroundings can stimulate creativity and foster risk-taking in thinking. Also, designating remote work days (work from home, coffee shop, and library) are great for getting more time with fewer interruptions. This is good for writing projects and marketing plan development and can do wonders for staff morale.
Power Up Competing priorities, limited budgets, and stressed teams are the reality. But through strength in the middle, you can bring strategy to life with an engaged and enthused team. |
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Other Articles in the July 2008 Issue of The Market Tenor
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