Inc.com columnist Alison Green answers questions about workplace and management issues--everything from how to deal with a micromanaging boss to how to talk to someone on your team about body odor.
Here's a roundup of answers to three questions from readers.
1. My employee takes credit for the whole team's work
I'm a fairly experienced manager, but I've only been managing my current team for a few months.
I've been in a couple meetings with one of my team members that I've asked her to take the lead on, and she reports out at every meeting. Twice now, as she's reporting I've heard her change her sentence from "we're doing..." to "I'm doing..." But she's not! The whole team is pitching in ideas and support, and sometimes they or I am actually doing the things she's talking about. It seems like a really low-stakes thing, but we've had to have a couple of other conversations about working on a team, like making sure she's not getting out ahead of my direction and being aware of how she talks about workload around her teammates. It's been a lot, so I also don't want to be focus unnecessarily on something that could really be minor. But she's taking credit for other people's work, and that's not fair to them, and I don't know if it makes her look particularly good, either. Should I bring it up or let it slide?