I've been gradually sliding a supervisory role in my job (mainly by dint of everyone else with similar levels of seniority not being interested) and it's been a bit of a challenge because I'm an academic and a research nerd and not a manager. My supervisees are all good folks but they haven't been getting important parts of their jobs done and it's negatively impacting the org. I need to learn how to get them finish their crap but the descriptions of most management books stick to my skin in a way that feels hard to wash off. Does anyone know of good books/etc that won't make me talk like an MBA program replaced my soul with foam packing peanuts?
Edit: Thanks for all the really thoughtful responses, it's a huge help.
Help them do the work and you'll find out why they aren't getting it done. Don't make your deliverables their problem, make being happy and productive their job.
Yeah, actually doing what they're doing will instantly put you in the top 10% of managers.
20-40% of your time spent doing your subordinates' job will make you a phenomenal manager. Ideally you're doing it as much as you can get away with.