From apprenticeships and qualifications to professional development and employability skills. Supporting learners, partners, and centres with tools to deliver, assess, and grow.
Join a professional community committed to excellence in management and leadership. Access exclusive resources, and recognition pathways including Chartered Manager.
Connect, celebrate, and lead with CMI’s vibrant community. From events and awards to networks and campaigns, get involved and help shape the future of management.
Stay informed with expert insights, thought leadership, and the latest in management. From in-depth features to practical guidance, explore the ideas shaping today’s workplace.
Learn about CMI’s mission, values, and impact. From our Royal Charter to governance, careers, and sustainability commitments, discover who we are and what drives us.
04 November 2014 -
Colin Marrs
Sir Cary Lynn Cooper is an American-born British psychologist and professor of organisational psychology and health at Lancaster University Management School. He was knighted in the 2014 Birthday Honours list.
I was born and raised in Hollywood, Los Angeles. I was from a middle class area but worked as a social worker in Watts – one of the most deprived areas of the city – to pay my way through university. It made me realise I wanted to work in a job that helped people.
I originally meant to come to the UK for a year. I met a professor from Leeds who asked me to come over. Then I got funding for a PHD and I am still here 50 years later.
I lived in some dives in Leeds. In those days, Leeds was not the thriving city it is now – it was pretty run down. I didn’t know how to light a coal fire. I thought you could just use matches until someone told me you needed to use kindling.
People get ill if they are dissatisfied with their jobs. Most ways of providing people with job satisfaction are within the power of a line manager – enabling people to have autonomy over their job, giving clarity over job roles, ensuring staff have manageable workloads and not allowing a long hours culture to develop.
Ironically, the recession means that companies are more interested in these issues. Before the recession everyone thought this was the same bullshit you always hear from HR people. But now managers are worried about losing really good people because their firms are so lean. They want to retain and attract the best talent.
I am a manager too. I have a role at the university, and also employ around 15 people through a spin-off company. I hope I take into account what I have learnt through my job. A person naturally becomes more focused on the bottom line when there is pressure and stress. But my research learning helps me check myself sometimes.
I am a father of four kids. When I am involved with someone who is overly negative at work then I ask myself “what if this was one of my kids?” I try and remember that there is usually a reason for their attitude – whether it is fear, insecurity problems at home.
Being knighted is important to me. It is great for a country to say “Thank you for what you have contributed”. The only downside is my parents aren’t around any more to see it – they were Eastern European Jews who emigrated to the USA and never went to school.
Check out a superb recent webinar from Professor Cooper, held in association with Citrix and moderated by Professional Manager editor Ben Walker.
› The persistence of presenteeism and other nuanced nonsense
› A new age of vulnerability: why inclusive leadership matters more than ever
› Ask yourself: "How do I make my employees feel?"
› Finance and the Diversity Dividend
For more information or to request interviews, contact CMI's Press Team on 020 7421 2705 or email press.office@managers.org.uk
› The 5 Greatest Examples of Change Management in Business History
› Four companies that failed spectacularly, and the lessons of their premature demise
› 6 companies that get employee engagement – and what they do right
› 4 Signs That Racism May Be An Issue In Your Workplace
› How to build an Effective Team: focus on just 3 things