The paper’s practical insight: **Never let a problem become yours u...
#### TL;DR Who's Got the Monkey? argues that managers lose lever...
Every job is a bundle of **"monkeys": next actions, decisions, appr...
Today we need a new category: **agent-imposed time**. This is the t...
The **monkey moves when the next move moves.** The manager does not...
> ***Most managers spend much more time dealing with subordinates’ ...
Modern equivalents include Slack threads, Jira tickets, pull reques...
When a monkey sits on two backs, it tends to fall onto the person w...
This predicts a major risk of AI-agent work. The danger is that hum...
This system is very similar to an AI-agent autonomy scale.
In the AI economy workers gain leverage when they control the flow ...
Copyright © 1999 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College. All rights reserved. 3
by William Oncken, Jr., and
Donald L. Wass
Management Time:
Whos Got
the
Monkey?
Commentary by Stephen R.Covey
HBR CLASSIC
The burdens of subordinates
always seem to end up on
the manager’s
back. Here’s
how to get
rid of them.
W
HY IS IT THAT MANAGERS ARE
typically running out of time
while their subordinates are typically
running out of work? Here we shall ex-
plore the meaning of management time
as it relates to the interaction between
managers and their bosses, their peers,
and their subordinates.
Specifically, we shall deal with three
kinds of management time:
Boss-imposed time –used to accom-
plish those activities that the boss re-
quires and that the manager cannot dis-
regard without direct and swift penalty.
System-imposed time–used to accom-
modate requests from peers for active
support. Neglecting these requests will
also result in penalties, though not al-
ways as direct or swift.
Self-imposed time –used to do those
things that the manager originates or
agrees to do. A certain portion of this
HBR CLASSIC
Management Time: Whos Got the Monkey?
kind of time, however, will be taken
by subordinates and is called subor-
dinate-imposed time. The remain-
ing portion will be the managers
own and is called discretionary time.
Self-imposed time is not subject to
penalty since neither the boss nor
the system can discipline the man-
ager for not doing what they didn’t
know he had intended to do in the
first place.
To accommodate those demands,
managers need to control the timing
and the content of what they do.
Since what their bosses and the sys-
tem impose on them are subject to
penalty, managers cannot tamper
with those requirements. Thus their
self-imposed time becomes their ma-
jor area of concern.
Managers should try to increase
the discretionary component of
their self-imposed time by minimiz-
ing or doing away with the subordi-
nate component. They will then use
the added increment to get better
control over their boss-imposed and
system-imposed activities. Most
managers spend much more time
dealing with subordinates’ problems
than they even faintly realize. Hence
we shall use the monkey-on-the-
back metaphor to examine how sub-
ordinate-imposed time comes into
being and what the superior can do
about it.
Where Is the Monkey?
Let us imagine that a manager is
walking down the hall and that he
notices one of his subordinates,
Jones, coming his way. When the
two meet, Jones greets the manager
with, “Good morning. By the way,
we’ve got a problem. You see….” As
Jones continues, the manager recog-
nizes in this problem the two char-
acteristics common to all the prob-
lems his subordinates gratuitously
bring to his attention. Namely, the
manager knows (a) enough to get in-
volved, but (b) not enough to make
the on-the-spot decision expected of
him. Eventually, the manager says,
“So glad you brought this up. I’m in
a rush right now. Meanwhile, let me
think about it, and I’ll let you know.”
Then he and Jones part company.
Let us analyze what just happened.
Before the two of them met, on
whose back was the “monkey”? The
subordinate’s. After they parted, on
whose back was it? The managers.
Subordinate-imposed time begins
the moment a monkey successfully
leaps from the back of a subordinate
to the back of his or her superior and
does not end until the monkey is re-
turned to its proper owner for care
and feeding. In accepting the mon-
key, the manager has voluntarily as-
sumed a position subordinate to his
subordinate. That is, he has allowed
Jones to make him her subordinate
by doing two things a subordinate is
generally expected to do for a boss
the manager has accepted a responsi-
bility from his subordinate, and the
manager has promised her a progress
report.
The subordinate, to make sure the
manager does not miss this point,
will later stick her head in the man-
ager’s office and cheerily query,
“How’s it coming?” (This is called
supervision.)
Or let us imagine in concluding a
conference with Johnson, another
subordinate, the managers parting
words are, “Fine. Send me a memo
on that.”
Let us analyze this one. The mon-
key is now on the subordinate’s back
because the next move is his, but it
is poised for a leap. Watch that mon-
key. Johnson dutifully writes the re-
quested memo and drops it in his
out-basket. Shortly thereafter, the
manager plucks it from his in-basket
and reads it. Whose move is it now?
The manager’s. If he does not make
that move soon, he will get a follow-
up memo from the subordinate.
(This is another form of supervi-
sion.) The longer the manager de-
lays, the more frustrated the subor-
dinate will become (he’ll be spinning
his wheels) and the more guilty the
manager will feel (his backlog of
subordinate-imposed time will be
mounting).
Or suppose once again that at a
meeting with a third subordinate,
Smith, the manager agrees to provide
all the necessary backing for a public
relations proposal he has just asked
Smith to develop. The manager’s
parting words to her are, “Just let me
know how I can help.”
Now let us analyze this. Again the
monkey is initially on the subordi-
nate’s back. But for how long? Smith
realizes that she cannot let the man-
ager “know” until her proposal has
the manager’s approval. And from
experience, she also realizes that her
proposal will likely be sitting in the
manager’s briefcase for weeks before
he eventually gets to it. Who’s really
got the monkey? Who will be check-
ing up on whom? Wheel spinning
and bottlenecking are well on their
way again.
A fourth subordinate, Reed, has
just been transferred from another
part of the company so that he can
launch and eventually manage a
newly created business venture. The
manager has said they should get to-
gether soon to hammer out a set of
objectives for the new job, adding, “I
will draw up an initial draft for dis-
cussion with you.”
Let us analyze this one, too. The
subordinate has the new job (by for-
mal assignment) and the full respon-
sibility (by formal delegation), but
the manager has the next move. Un-
til he makes it, he will have the mon-
key, and the subordinate will be im-
mobilized.
Why does all of this happen? Be-
cause in each instance the manager
and the subordinate assume at the
outset, wittingly or unwittingly, that
the matter under consideration is a
William Oncken, Jr., was chairman
of the William Oncken Corporation
until his death in 1988. His son,
William Oncken III, now heads the
company.
Donald L. Wass was president of the
William Oncken Company of Texas
when the article first appeared. He
now heads the Dallas–Fort Worth
region of The Executive Committee
(TEC), an international organiza-
tion for presidents and CEOs.
This article was originally pub-
lished in the November–December
1974 issue of HBR and has been one
of the publication’s two best-selling
reprints ever.
For its reissue as a Classic, the Har-
vard Business Review asked Stephen
R. Covey to provide a commentary.
4
harvard business review
November–December 1999
joint problem. The monkey in each
case begins its career astride both
their backs. All it has to do is move
the wrong leg, and presto! the sub-
ordinate deftly disappears. The man-
ager is thus left with another acqui-
sition for his menagerie. Of course,
monkeys can be trained not to move
the wrong leg. But it is easier to pre-
vent them from straddling backs in
the first place.
Who Is Working for Whom?
Let us suppose that these same four
subordinates are so thoughtful and
considerate of their superior’s time
that they take pains to allow no more
than three monkeys to leap from
each of their backs to his in any one
day. In a five-day week, the manager
will have picked up 60 screaming
monkeys – far too many to do any-
thing about them individually. So
he spends his subordinate-imposed
time juggling his “priorities.”
Late Friday afternoon, the manager
is in his office with the door closed
for privacy so he can contemplate
the situation, while his subordinates
are waiting outside to get their last
chance before the weekend to re-
mind him that he will have to “fish
or cut bait.” Imagine what they are
saying to one another about the man-
ager as they wait: “What a bottle-
neck. He just can’t make up his
mind. How anyone ever got that high
up in our company without being
able to make a decision we’ll never
know.”
Worst of all, the reason the man-
ager cannot make any of these “next
moves” is that his time is almost en-
tirely eaten up by meeting his own
boss-imposed and system-imposed
requirements. To control those tasks,
he needs discretionary time that is
in turn denied him when he is pre-
occupied with all these monkeys. The
manager is caught in a vicious circle.
But time is a-wasting (an understate-
ment). The manager calls his secre-
tary on the intercom and instructs
her to tell his subordinates that he
won’t be able to see them until Mon-
day morning. At 7pm, he drives
home, intending with firm resolve
to return to the office tomorrow to
get caught up over the weekend. He
returns bright and early the next day
only to see, on the nearest green of
the golf course across from his office
window, a foursome. Guess who?
That does it. He now knows who
is really working for whom. More-
over, he now sees that if he actually
accomplishes during this weekend
what he came to accomplish, his
subordinates’ morale will go up so
sharply that they will each raise the
limit on the number of monkeys
they will let jump from their backs
to his. In short, he now sees, with
the clarity of a revelation on a moun-
taintop, that the more he gets caught
up, the more he will fall behind.
He leaves the office with the speed
of a person running away from a
plague. His plan? To get caught up
on something else he hasn’t had
time for in years: a weekend with his
family. (This is one of the many vari-
eties of discretionary time.)
Sunday night he enjoys ten hours
of sweet, untroubled slumber, be-
cause he has clear-cut plans for Mon-
day. He is going to get rid of his sub-
ordinate-imposed time. In exchange,
he will get an equal amount of dis-
cretionary time, part of which he
will spend with his subordinates to
make sure that they learn the diffi-
cult but rewarding managerial art
called “The Care and Feeding of
Monkeys.”
The manager will also have plenty
of discretionary time left over for
getting control of the timing and the
content not only of his boss-imposed
time but also of his system-imposed
time. It may take months, but com-
pared with the way things have
been, the rewards will be enormous.
His ultimate objective is to manage
his time.
Getting Rid of the Monkeys
The manager returns to the office
Monday morning just late enough so
that his four subordinates have col-
lected outside his office waiting to
see him about their monkeys. He
calls them in one by one. The pur-
pose of each interview is to take a
monkey, place it on the desk be-
tween them, and figure out together
how the next move might conceiv-
ably be the subordinate’s. For certain
monkeys, that will take some doing.
The subordinate’s next move may be
so elusive that the manager may de-
cide just for now merely to let
the monkey sleep on the subordi-
nate’s back overnight and have him
or her return with it at an appointed
time the next morning to continue
the joint quest for a more substan-
tive move by the subordinate. (Mon-
keys sleep just as soundly overnight
on subordinates’ backs as they do on
superiors’.)
As each subordinate leaves the of-
fice, the manager is rewarded by the
sight of a monkey leaving his office
on the subordinate’s back. For the
next 24 hours, the subordinate will
not be waiting for the manager; in-
stead, the manager will be waiting
for the subordinate.
Later, as if to remind himself that
there is no law against his engaging
in a constructive exercise in the in-
terim, the manager strolls by the
subordinate’s office, sticks his head
in the door, and cheerily asks,
“How’s it coming?” (The time con-
sumed in doing this is discretionary
for the manager and boss imposed
for the subordinate.)
When the subordinate (with the
monkey on his or her back) and the
manager meet at the appointed hour
the next day, the manager explains
the ground rules in words to this
effect:
“At no time while I am helping you
with this or any other problem will
your problem become my problem.
The instant your problem becomes
mine, you no longer have a problem. I
cannot help a person who hasn’t got
a problem.
“When this meeting is over, the
problem will leave this office exactly
the way it came in on your back. You
may ask my help at any appointed
time, and we will make a joint deter-
mination of what the next move will
harvard business review
November–December 1999
5
Management Time: Whos Got the Monkey?
HBR CLASSIC
In accepting the
monkey, the manager
has voluntarily assumed
a position subordinate
to his subordinate.
When Bill Oncken wrote this article
in 1974, managers were in a terrible
bind. They were desperate for a way to
free up their time, but command and
control was the status quo. Managers
felt they weren’t allowed to empower
their subordinates to make decisions.
Too dangerous. Too risky. Thats why
Oncken’s message – give the monkey
back to its rightful owner involved a
critically important paradigm shift.
Many managers working today owe
him a debt of gratitude.
It is something of an understate-
ment, however, to observe that much
has changed since Oncken’s radical
recommendation. Command and con-
trol as a management philosophy is all
but dead, and “empowerment” is the
word of the day in most organizations
trying to thrive in global, intensely
competitive markets. But command
and control stubbornly remains a com-
mon practice. Management thinkers
and executives have discovered in the
last decade that bosses cannot just give
a monkey back to their subordinates
and then merrily get on with their own
business. Empowering subordinates is
hard and complicated work.
The reason: when you give problems
back to subordinates to solve them-
selves, you have to be sure that they
have both the desire and the ability to
do so. As every executive knows, that
isn’t always the case. Enter a whole
new set of problems. Empowerment
often means you have to develop peo-
ple, which is initially much more time
consuming than solving the problem
on your own.
Just as important, empowerment
can only thrive when the whole orga-
nization buys into it when formal
systems and the informal culture sup-
port it. Managers need to be rewarded
for delegating decisions and develop-
ing people. Otherwise, the degree of
real empowerment in an organization
will vary according to the beliefs and
practices of individual managers.
But perhaps the most important les-
son about empowerment is that effec-
tive delegation the kind Oncken
advocated depends on a trusting rela-
tionship between a manager and his
subordinate. Oncken’s message may
have been ahead of his time, but what
he suggested was still a fairly dictato-
rial solution. He basically told bosses,
“Give the problem back!” Today, we
know that this approach by itself is too
authoritarian. To delegate effectively,
executives need to establish a running
dialogue with subordinates. They need
to establish a partnership. After all, if
subordinates are afraid of failing in
front of their boss, they’ll keep coming
back for help rather than truly take
initiative.
Oncken’s article also doesn’t address
an aspect of delegation that has greatly
interested me during the past two
decades – that many managers are ac-
tually eager to take on their subordi-
nates’ monkeys. Nearly all the man-
agers I talk with agree that their people
are underutilized in their present jobs.
But even some of the most successful,
seemingly self-assured executives
have talked about how hard it is to give
up control to their subordinates.
I’ve come to attribute that eagerness
for control to a common, deep-seated
belief that rewards in life are scarce
and fragile. Whether they learn it from
their family, school, or athletics, many
people establish an identity by com-
paring themselves with others. When
they see others gain power, informa-
tion, money, or recognition, for in-
stance, they experience what the psy-
chologist Abraham Maslow called “a
feeling of deficiency” a sense that
something is being taken from them.
That makes it hard for them to be gen-
uinely happy about the success of oth-
ers even of their loved ones. Oncken
implies that managers can easily give
back or refuse monkeys, but many
managers may subconsciously fear
that a subordinate taking the initiative
will make them appear a little less
strong and a little more vulnerable.
How, then, do managers develop the
inward security, the mentality of
“abundance,” that would enable them
to relinquish control and seek the
growth and development of those
around them? The work I’ve done with
numerous organizations suggests that
managers who live with integrity ac-
cording to a principle-based value sys-
tem are most likely to sustain an em-
powering style of leadership.
Given the times in which he wrote,
it was no wonder that Oncken’s mes-
sage resonated with managers. But it
was reinforced by Oncken’s wonderful
gift for storytelling. I got to know On-
cken on the speaker’s circuit in the
1970s, and I was always impressed by
how he dramatized his ideas in color-
ful detail. Like the Dilbert comic strip,
Oncken had a tongue-in-cheek style
that got to the core of managers’ frus-
trations and made them want to take
back control of their time. And the
monkey on your back wasn’t just a
metaphor for Oncken – it was his per-
sonal symbol. I saw him several times
walking through airports with a
stuffed monkey on his shoulder.
I’m not surprised that his article is
one of the two best-selling HBR arti-
cles ever. Even with all we know about
empowerment, its vivid message is
even more important and relevant
now than it was 25 years ago. Indeed,
Oncken’s insight is a basis for my own
work on time management, in which I
have people categorize their activities
according to urgency and importance.
I’ve heard from executives again and
again that half or more of their time is
spent on matters that are urgent but
not important. They’re trapped in an
endless cycle of dealing with other
people’s monkeys, yet they’re reluc-
tant to help those people take their
own initiative. As a result, they’re of-
ten too busy to spend the time they
need on the real gorillas in their orga-
nization. Oncken’s article remains a
powerful wake-up call for managers
who need to delegate effectively.
Stephen R. Covey is vice chairman
of the Franklin Covey Company, a
global provider of leadership devel-
opment and productivity services
and products. He is the author of
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective
People (Simon & Schuster, 1989)
and First Things First (Simon &
Schuster, 1994).
by Stephen R. Covey
Gor i llas
for
Making
Time
HBR CLASSIC
Management Time: Whos Got the Monkey?
6
harvard business review
November–December 1999
be and which of us will make it.
“In those rare instances where the
next move turns out to be mine, you
and I will determine it together. I
will not make any move alone.”
The manager follows this same
line of thought with each subordi-
nate until about 11am, when he real-
izes that he doesn’t have to close his
door. His monkeys are gone. They
will return but by appointment
only. His calendar will assure this.
Transferring the Initiative
What we have been driving at in this
monkey-on-the-back analogy is that
managers can transfer initiative back
to their subordinates and keep it
there. We have tried to highlight a
truism as obvious as it is subtle:
namely, before developing initiative
in subordinates, the manager must
see to it that they have the initiative.
Once the manager takes it back, he
will no longer have it and he can kiss
his discretionary time good-bye. It
will all revert to subordinate-im-
posed time.
Nor can the manager and the sub-
ordinate effectively have the same
initiative at the same time. The
opener, “Boss, we’ve got a problem,”
implies this duality and represents,
as noted earlier, a monkey astride
two backs, which is a very bad way to
start a monkey on its career. Let us,
therefore, take a few moments to ex-
amine what we call “The Anatomy
of Managerial Initiative.”
There are five degrees of initiative
that the manager can exercise in re-
lation to the boss and to the system:
1. wait until told
(lowest initiative);
2. ask what to do;
3. recommend, then take
resulting action;
4. act, but advise at once;
5. and act on own, then routinely
report (highest initiative).
Clearly, the manager should be pro-
fessional enough not to indulge in
initiatives 1 and 2 in relation either
to the boss or to the system. A man-
ager who uses initiative 1 has no
control over either the timing or the
content of boss-imposed or system-
imposed time and thereby forfeits
any right to complain about what he
or she is told to do or when. The
manager who uses initiative 2 has
control over the timing but not over
the content. Initiatives 3, 4, and 5
leave the manager in control of both,
with the greatest amount of control
being exercised at level 5.
In relation to subordinates, the
manager’s job is twofold. First, to
outlaw the use of initiatives 1 and 2,
thus giving subordinates no choice
but to learn and master “Completed
Staff Work.” Second, to see that for
each problem leaving his or her office
there is an agreed-upon level of ini-
tiative assigned to it, in addition to
an agreed-upon time and place for
the next manager-subordinate con-
ference. The latter should be duly
noted on the managers calendar.
The Care and Feeding
of Monkeys
To further clarify our analogy be-
tween the monkey on the back and
the processes of assigning and con-
trolling, we shall refer briefly to the
manager’s appointment schedule,
which calls for five hard-and-fast
rules governing the “Care and Feed-
ing of Monkeys.” (Violation of these
rules will cost discretionary time.)
Rule 1. Monkeys should be fed or
shot. Otherwise, they will starve to
death, and the manager will waste
valuable time on postmortems or
attempted resurrections.
Rule 2. The monkey population
should be kept below the maximum
number the manager has time to
feed. Subordinates will find time to
work as many monkeys as he or she
finds time to feed, but no more. It
shouldn’t take more than five to 15
minutes to feed a properly main-
tained monkey.
Rule 3. Monkeys should be fed by
appointment only. The manager
should not have to hunt down starv-
ing monkeys and feed them on a
catch-as-catch-can basis.
Rule 4. Monkeys should be fed
face-to-face or by telephone, but
never by mail. (Remember with
mail, the next move will be the man-
ager’s.) Documentation may add to
the feeding process, but it cannot
take the place of feeding.
Rule 5. Every monkey should have
an assigned next feeding time and
degree of initiative. These may be re-
vised at any time by mutual consent
but never allowed to become vague
or indefinite. Otherwise, the mon-
key will either starve to death or
wind up on the manager’s back.
“Get control over the timing and
content of what you do” is appropri-
ate advice for managing time. The
first order of business is for the man-
ager to enlarge his or her discre-
tionary time by eliminating subordi-
nate-imposed time. The second is
for the manager to use a portion of
this newfound discretionary time to
see to it that each subordinate actu-
ally has the initiative and applies it.
The third is for the manager to use
another portion of the increased dis-
cretionary time to get and keep con-
trol of the timing and content of both
boss-imposed and system-imposed
time. All these steps will increase
the manager’s leverage and enable
the value of each hour spent in man-
aging management time to multiply
without theoretical limit.
Reprint 99609
To place an order, call 1-800-988-0886.
harvard business review
November–December 1999
7
Management Time: Whos Got the Monkey?
HBR CLASSIC
The manager can
now see, with the
clarity of a revelation
on a mountaintop,
that the more he gets
caught up, the more
he will fall behind.

Discussion

This system is very similar to an AI-agent autonomy scale. Today we need a new category: **agent-imposed time**. This is the time humans spend reviewing AI drafts, approving minor steps, fixing tool failures, correcting hallucinations, handling exceptions, or answering repeated clarification questions. AI does not eliminate monkeys; it creates new ones. The paper’s practical insight: **Never let a problem become yours unless it truly belongs to you.** In the age of AI agents, the labor market will increasingly reward people who can manage initiative rather than merely perform tasks. The valuable worker is not the one who keeps every monkey, but the one who knows which monkeys to delegate to agents, which to escalate, which to kill, and which must remain human. The **monkey moves when the next move moves.** The manager does not need to take formal ownership of the entire project; it is enough to say something like "let me think about it." At that moment the manager has become the bottleneck. > ***Most managers spend much more time dealing with subordinates’ problems than they even faintly realize.*** This predicts a major risk of AI-agent work. The danger is that humans become full-time supervisors of fragile automations: watching dashboards, approving small steps, debugging failures, and chasing stuck or inefficient processes. The worker becomes the servant of the agentic workflow. When a monkey sits on two backs, it tends to fall onto the person with more authority. In the AI economy workers gain leverage when they control the flow of initiative among themselves, agents, tools, and organizations. **A relevant question: as AI agents become capable of taking more next actions, what remains valuable for humans to own?** Every job is a bundle of **"monkeys": next actions, decisions, approvals, exceptions, and accountabilities.** AI agents will take over more executable monkeys while humans will remain valuable when they can define, delegate, supervise, evaluate, and own the right ones. Modern equivalents include Slack threads, Jira tickets, pull requests, customer escalations, AI-generated briefs, and automated status reports. **In human-agent teams the system must preserve state: who owns the next action, what decision is needed, and when the next checkpoint occurs?** #### TL;DR Who's Got the Monkey? argues that managers lose leverage when they take ownership of their subordinates' unresolved next actions. A "monkey" is not the whole task; it is the next move attached to a responsibility. When a subordinate brings a problem and the manager says "Let me think about it" the monkey jumps to the manager. The subordinate waits, the manager becomes the bottleneck, and the direction of supervision quietly reverses The solution is to keep ownership clear. A manager should help define the next action, assign the right level of initiative, and schedule a follow-up. The paper's five levels of initiative, from "wait until told" to "act independently and report," are an autonomy ladder. In the age of AI agents this lesson becomes especially relevant. Every job is a bundle of monkeys: next actions, decisions, approvals, exceptions, and accountabilities. AI agents increasingly take over the executable monkeys - drafting, searching, summarizing, coding, scheduling, reporting - but humans will remain valuable when they can define goals, delegate work, supervise agents, judge outputs, handle exceptions, and own consequences. The future worker is not just someone who does tasks manually. The future worker is someone who knows which monkeys to keep, which to give to agents, which to escalate, and which to eliminate.