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Who works for who, and why it matters to you?

Anthony Kennedy
2 min readMay 31, 2021

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In my career so far, I have managed hundreds of people. I’ve managed small teams and large teams. I’ve lead teams in multiple countries and industries, in one physical location, and virtual and remote teams across multiple offices and timezones.

The critical question is, who works for who?

Most people believe that the team I have work for me, and any org chart or hierarchy would support that. My employer or customer has hired me to do a job. That’s true, just as I’ve hired my team members and contractors to do a job.

But my job, similar to yours, is to enable my team to do their job. We should resource our teams, equip them with software and hardware, tools and platforms, and training. In addition to this, we must shield them from pointless interruptions within the organisation, the demanding customers, and low-value work. We intercept, deflect, and handle the interruptions that they don’t need to avoid slowing them down or distracting them.

By taking this approach, my team can get their job done and deliver on their goals and objectives and the work we have tasked them to do.

I believe that looking at this question in the inverse provides a different perspective. This approach focuses me on enabling my team to do their job. Meaning that team members can do the job…

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Anthony Kennedy
Anthony Kennedy

Written by Anthony Kennedy

An experienced and strategic leader of in-house communications, marketing operations, and creative agency functions in the enterprise. Get in touch!

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