culled from:microsoft.com
But in business, plotting long and hard to climb into a leadership role often is indistinguishable from inadvertently falling into one. The fact is, whether you take a deliberate step toward an objective or immediately trip on a shoelace, you may end up in the same spot. Put another way, many people who have a laser focus on getting to the top make it there no faster than those who have a leadership opportunity thrust upon them.
Yet knowing the difference between thoughtful business leadership and the kind that happens seemingly by accident is critical—not only in your ability to grow and develop as a leader, but to establish a pattern of success that's deliberate, not miraculous.
Here, then, are eight attributes that separate genuine leadership from leadership that's more a matter of chance:
1. Real leadership means leading yourself.
Passing out orders is as easy as passing out business cards. But a
prudent leader also knows how to lead himself or herself—not merely to
provide a genuine example to others, but to become a working element of
the overall machinery of your business. "It's important that leaders
have the ability to focus and motivate themselves as they motivate
others," says Larraine Segil, an author and consultant who teaches
executive education at the California Institute of Technology in
Pasadena.
2. Don't be a monarch. Thoughtful leadership
likely means you already have a talented work force in place. That's
terrific. But be careful not set up a throne room in the process.
Accidental leaders often inadvertently establish a system of guidance
that's unnecessarily restrictive. Guide employees, but don't implement
more parameters than are absolutely necessary. "It's important to
influence the people with whom you work," says Segil. "Don't see your
business as a hierarchy."
3. Be open to new ways of doing things. One
potential land mine of a prosperous operation is to repeat anything that
proves successful. It's hard to argue against that, but an inadvertent
leader will put far too much stock in sticking with what always works.
By contrast, thoughtful leadership acknowledges success but also
recognizes there are always ways to do things better.
4. Remember that white males are fast becoming a minority.
Statistics show that white males now make up only a small fraction of
the workplace population. Couple that with growing partnerships across
borders, and it becomes obvious that blending a variety of cultures and
backgrounds in a work environment is an essential leadership skill. A
thoughtless leader will try to cope with this as best as he can. One
with more vision will work to take advantage of differences.
"Competition—the constant push for faster, better, cheaper — mandates
that we learn to effectively deal with differences in the workplace,"
says career consultant Susan Eckert of Advance Career and Professional
Development in Brightwaters, N.Y. A company that weaves an appreciation
of diversity into its cultural fabric will make itself "unbeatable,"
Eckert says.
5. Establish a genuine sense of commitment. I
must admit this is a personal sore point with me. I've seen too many
company slogans and catch phrases whose import is no deeper than the
paper they're written on. Want to be "committed to superior service"?
More power to you, but a genuine leader will see that as words and
little else. Instead, put some meat on those bones—establish how to
quantify excellence, design a cogent plan to achieve it, and set a
reasonable but real timetable for its completion.
6. Finish the job. Many business leaders yak
about their complete game, but how many actually finish what they say
they're going to start? A thoughtless leader who never genuinely
finishes anything loses the confidence of clients and customers. That
lack of follow-through isn't going to be lost on his or her employees,
either. Instead, set goals and establish pragmatic, accountable measures
to actually finish what you start. "The ability to complete things is
critical," Segil says. "Nothing's useful unless you actually complete
it."
7. Show genuine appreciation. Thoughtless leaders
must have forearms like Popeye's, what with all the back-slapping they
do. That's fine, but good performance requires a more substantive
response. Leaders with an eye to the future hand out praise but augment
it with real rewards: promotions, raises, bonuses, and other tangible
tokens of appreciation. That motivates your people, not only to apply
themselves with enthusiasm but to stick around your company longer than
they might otherwise.
8. Know that leadership skills come from learning, too.
Far too may business executives believe leadership skills stem from
some sort of wondrous epiphany or other such flash of insight. Sure,
great ideas can come to any of us, but being a bona fide leader also
means study. Read books on effective leadership, attend seminars, and
pick the brains of colleagues to see what works for them. It can be a
long education, but one with rewards that multiply with the more
knowledge you have under your belt.
Oniyere Yetunde Janet
ReplyDeleteA true leader will always be a true listener
It is better to lead from behind and to put others in front, especially when you celebrate victory when nice things occur. You take the front line when there is danger. Then people will appreciate your leadership
ReplyDeleteleaders most be self discipline and listen to others.
ReplyDeleteOkon imaobong, a true leader is a person who go first and motivate others to follow
ReplyDeleteNneoma John. they must have fore arms
ReplyDeleteTrue leader always show concern to all issues. OLADELE RASAQ
ReplyDeleteBe a part of all tasks you give to your followers,
ReplyDelete