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  February 2009 

‘I’m getting another new boss...’
I’m getting a new boss in the spring, my third in two years. I wish I could feel more confident, but I still find it hard to get started on the right note—and the stakes seem higher with every new boss.

—M.M., Worcester, MA

Here are a few ideas that may sound familiar, but they’re still worth trying. They could work better with some people than with others. And don’t forget that you are growing and changing with each new situation too.

Ignore rumors. Don’t believe everything you hear or repeat to others (including by e-mail) any gossip that you do hear. And if your gossip finds its way back to your new boss (as it probably will), it will only make it harder to form a positive relationship.

Be cooperative.
Offer help in making a new manager’s first few weeks go smoothly. Repeat the offer if she or he does not pick up on it the first time.

Focus on communication.
Find out how a new boss wants to give and receive information: memos, e-mail, in-person reports? Make any adjustments in your style.

Be proactive.
Make sure that your job description fits your new boss’s expectations of what you should or shouldn’t be doing. Request a meeting to clarify your responsibilities.

Don’t assume too much.
Do not expect a new manager to honor every commitment his or her predecessor made to your department or to you personally. At best, it will take time to reevaluate those decisions, particularly if change is in the air at your workplace.

Don’t compare bosses.
Don’t talk about the “good old days” and keep any comparisons between supervisors to yourself.

   

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