Since my field of study is in pharmacy, I decided to interview a pharmacy manager at the local pharmacy. For the purposes of anonymity, he will be referred to as Harry. Harry has been a manager at the pharmacy for three years and was promoted from within, having previously served as a pharmacy tech. In this interview, Harry was asked a variety of questions, such as what his typical day at work was like and what important skills he found most useful in his role. This paper will summarize the interview results and provide a summary of what I learned from the interview
Harry first described his typical day at work as responding to a number of emails and messages from upper management and then having a meeting with employees about goals that have been set and how to achieve them. As the manager of a retail pharmacy, Harry is in a position between two poles—on the one hand, he is dealing with employees, techs, and customers; on the other hand, he is dealing with upper management and is responsible for performance, productivity, customer satisfaction, and so on. It can be a very stressful job because of the high level of demand encountered from all sides and one has to keep one’s wits about oneself in order to satisfy the various demands that come day in and day out. Throughout the course of the day, he will engage with workers, answer questions, engage with customers, fill prescriptions, monitor output, report to upper management, give advice about medication and offer helpful suggestions to clients who want alternative solutions to prescriptions. Each and every day is very busy and offers its own unique challenges, but Harry noted that he always tried to make time for everybody no matter who it was because that, he found, was what made the workplace environment a happy one and that was what made customers happy as well. This aligns with what Seppala (2006) has noted about managers, who do give equal opportunity to one and all: “Bosses who show they are fair also inspire greater dedication, citizenship, and productivity.”
Harry stated that what he enjoyed most about his job was being in responsible for the pharmacy’s operations. Having a degree of autonomy while being accountable to someone higher up the chain of authority was gratifying to him; it signified to him at this point in his life that he was doing something meaningful—that he had achieved something, he noted. It was clear that leading others gives him a feeling of satisfaction, knowing that others will look to him for guidance, answers, and that he is routinely able to offer comfort and assistance while maintaining order and productivity within the pharmacy. He identified stress as the only thing about managing that he did not like, but that he was willing to accept the good with the bad in order to do this job. He felt that he played an active role in leading the team at the pharmacy and took pride and pleasure in motivating them to do their jobs well. An example he gave of this was that he tried to get his team members to be relationship-focused and pragmatic in dealing with customers, answering questions and being helpful but also being mindful that many others are waiting with their own needs as well. As Winsborough and Chamorro-Premuzic (2017) point out, this is one of the ways in which team managers can get teams to...
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