Tools and Practices Brian Watkins

Tools and Practices

METHODS, AND MINDSETS THAT HELP LEADERS BUILD WITH GREATER CALM, CLARITY, AND CONFIDENCE

THE GREAT MANAGER TOOLKIT

Practices Shared by Brian Watkins

Most managers are promoted for competence—not prepared for leadership. Over half step into management without training. Nearly 60% are struggling within two years. This toolkit exists to close that gap. Brian Watkins built these practices the hard way—by living through the panic, the missteps, and the learning curve of becoming a manager without a roadmap. What follows is a practical, humane system designed to help managers succeed without their teams paying the price.

The Role of the Manager (Ground Rule)

Before tools, clarity. A manager’s job is simple—but not easy Get results while building and developing people. When you do both, engagement follows. When engagement rises, performance follows. And when performance follows—organizations thrive.(Research backs this: up to 70% of employee engagement is driven directly by the manager.)

The 8 Core Practices of Great Managers

These are not traits. They are behaviors—learnable, repeatable, and practical. Great managers consistently practice:

1. Giving Feedback

2. Building Relationships

3. Setting Expectations

4. Delegating Effectively

5. Developing Individuals

6. Coaching

7. Motivating

8. Making Decisions

TOOL 1: The 20-Second Feedback Tool (BIN): most-used, highest-ROI practice

What It Solves

Fear of giving feedback

Confusion between feedback and criticism

Missed opportunities to reinforce great behavior

The Myth

“Employees don’t want feedback.”

“Feedback = criticism.”

The Reality

Employees want feedback.

Feedback—when done right—improves performance and trust.

How the BIN Tool Works

Use this simple 3-step structure:

B — Behavior
Describe what you observed (facts only).

I — Impact
Explain why it mattered.

N — Next Step
Reinforce what to repeat—or what to change.

⏱ Total time: Under 20 seconds

Example (Positive Feedback)

> “Amanda, I saw how you handled that disappointed customer—maintaining eye contact, listening carefully, and offering solutions. That matters because it shows customers we value them and want to make things right. Keep doing exactly that.”

Why this works:

The behavior is clear

The impact is understood

The employee knows what success looks like

Practice Assignment

Deliver 3 BIN feedback moments per day

Mix positive and corrective feedback

Focus on observable behaviors only

 

TOOL 2: One-Behavior-at-a-Time Development

What Makes This Different

Most training overwhelms managers with concepts they never apply.

This approach:

Teaches one behavior

Allows real-world practice

Builds confidence before moving on

Each behavior can be learned in under one hour.

Practice Rule

Learn → Practice → Reflect → Repeat

No stacking. No rushing.

 

You don’t need to master all eight at once. Progress comes from practicing one behavior at a time.

Brian Watkins

TOOL 3: Relationship-Building with Intention

Purpose

Strong performance rests on trust.

Practice

Schedule consistent 1:1s

Ask:

“What’s working well for you right now?”

“Where do you feel stuck?”

“How can I support you better?”

Engagement doesn’t come from perks.
It comes from being seen and supported.

 

TOOL 4: Expectation Clarity Framework

What to Clarify Every Time

What success looks like

When it’s due

How progress will be measured

Practice

If someone misses expectations, ask: “Was the expectation clear—or just assumed?”

 

TOOL 5: Delegation with Development in Mind

Shift the Mindset

Delegation isn’t dumping work.
It’s growing capability.

Practice

Delegate outcomes, not just tasks

Provide guardrails, not micromanagement

Use feedback loops early and often

 

TOOL 6: Coaching as a Daily Habit

Coaching Is Not an Event

It’s a series of small moments.

Practice

Ask before telling

Guide reflection:

“What do you think worked?”

“What would you do differently next time?”

 

TOOL 7: Motivation Through Meaning

What Actually Motivates People

Progress

Recognition

Purpose

 

Practice

Tie individual contributions to:

Team goals

Customer impact

Organizational mission

 

TOOL 8: Decision-Making with Ownership

Practice

Decide when you must

Empower when others should

Be clear on who owns the outcome

Implementation Philosophy

Immediate behavior change

 

Practice in real work

Feedback loops built in

Progress over perfection

You don’t become a great manager overnight.
You become one through intentional daily practice.

 

The Truth About Great Management

Good news:
Practice even one of these behaviors and you’ll see results.

Hard truth:
Great management requires focus—every day.

You won’t be perfect.
But you can always be great.

 

About Brian Watkins

Brian Watkins is a management and talent development consultant based in the suburbs of Chicago. With over 20 years of leadership experience and more than a decade coaching managers, his mission is simple: Make every manager in the world great—so no team has to suffer under poor leadership.

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