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By: Samantha Whitten

"...A good manager understands that six months of steady growth is a greater accomplishment than two months of stellar performance and four months of mediocrity..."

In the time I have worked in rent-to-own I have known a lot of managers. I’ve seen a lot of different management styles and techniques, a lot of successes and failures. Lately I have taken a hard look at those stories, and filtered through them to find their morals. I have found that while the personalities, styles and approaches are as diverse as the players themselves, there are a few constants present in every success story.

  • Consistant A great manager is generally pretty predictable. You know what he’s going to be doing at 5:00 on Tuesday, because it’s what he does at 5:00 every Tuesday. A good manager understands that six months of steady growth is a greater accomplishment than two months of stellar performance and four months of mediocrity. The people who form his work-group; his bosses, his peers, his employees and his customers, know that he will treat them with equanimity and fairness in all situations. The rules are always the same, regardless of his numbers or his mood, and so are the rewards and the consequences.
     
  • Proactive A successful manager is forward-thinking, planning for contingencies and preparing for the unexpected. She is ahead of the game. She will stock up on refrigerators going into summer, because she knows they will be in demand. She can read the trends of the business and the attitudes of the people she deals with, and will move in anticipation of the needs that she knows will arise. Being proactive means not only knowing what needs to, or is going to happen, but taking action to solve problems or take advantage of opportunities in their earliest and most pliable stages.
     
  • Communication A great manager communicates clearly and effectively with all his contacts. He understands that communication is more than just talking, it’s presenting his message with every aspect of his personality. He gets others to see his vision and motivates them to help him achieve it. He also knows that communication is a two-way street, that listening communicates a far stronger message than constant verbalizing. He recognizes that his actions and reactions are truer indicators of his intentions and his message than are his words.
     
  • Integrity A successful manager realizes that he can’t just talk the talk, that his values must be clear and strong and his actions must reflect them. She must be honorable and trustworthy in her contacts with all people. She must adhere to the rules and the standards to which she holds all others. She must recognize that it does matter how she behaves outside of work, especially in an industry as prone to public scrutiny as rent-to-own.
     
  • Adaptability A good manager has the ability to change with the times, to roll with the punches this industry hands out in plenty. He knows how to meet the needs of each of his employees, how to deal with changes in the structure of his company, how to take a new idea and make it work. He can overcome obstacles and face challenges because his thinking is quick and flexible. He can look at a situation from many directions and decide the best approach to take. Instead of viewing change with trepidation he welcomes it and incorporates it into his overall vision in a positive way.
  • After considering these traits I realized that there is one other aspect of successful management, one fundamental state that is at the core of every great manager: passion. Without passion the rest is meaningless. It is absolutely impossible to succeed if one does not believe in the greatness of what we do. This industry is not the place for half-heartedness; you can’t just come here to collect a paycheck. You have to feel it. It’s all or nothing.

    Samantha is a Store Manager for Arkansas based Furniture and Appliances Now (FAN).