Jun 29, 2022
We pick up ideas on leadership from multiple sources – books,
training, articles, blogs, guidance from mentors and personal
observation. What we usually fail to do is compile them or
collect them in one place. This sporadic approach is also
completed over a long time span, so we forget more than we
retain. Here are sixteen principles of leadership which we
all know, but which we will benefit from by reminding us of what we
have forgotten and by collecting them in one place.
- The first step toward success is identifying our own
leadership strengths. This is not what we do though is
it? We usually focus on what we are doing poorly. That
is looking into the past. By concentrating on our strengths, we can
build on those and keep growing, rather than beating ourselves up
about being less than perfect.
- Communication is built on trusting relationships. But
what builds trust in relationships? Being fair with staff,
vendors and clients is an integral part of this. Recently we
had a case where there was some international pricing available for
our training, which was higher than what we charge locally.
We could have easily taken the additional money. In straitened
Covid times that cash would have been welcome, but where is the
trust if we do that?
Trust also means doing what you say, when you say it and how you
say it, which sounds easy, but many things get in the way of
executing on these undertakings. Regardless, we need to keep
our eye on our integrity and follow our truth north values
- Motivation can never be forced. People have to want to do a
good job. Imagine one of those cartoon scenes where the
boss is loudly screaming “be motivated, be motivated, be
motivated”, such that the staff members hair is blowing back off
their head. We know that is ridiculous, but what do we do
instead of telling people to be motivated? Aligning the
individual’s values and those of the enterprise is a key
start. Also understanding their individual motivations and
making sure the company can help them achieve their goals is
another one. So here is the million dollar question – do you
know the values and goals of each staff member and do you know
these over time, because goals can certainly change?
- There is nothing more effective and rewarding than showing
a genuine interest in other people. The key word here is
“genuine”. This means no hidden agenda, instead a pure
curiosity about individuals we meet in business and life.
Fake pleasantries to gain a tip and then obvious displeasure with
the insufficient amount of the tip, is a classic example of the
opposite of what we are talking about. In Japan, we refer to
the “eigyo smile”, the fake “sales smile” to win business in the
B2B world. People are fascinating and when you show a pure
interest, you learn so much and they feel the genuine nature of
your interaction. As leaders, let’s be curious.
- Step outside yourself to discover what’s important to
someone else. Deadlines, targets, quotas, the daily email
deluge, bills to be paid, endless meetings – the rough and tumble
of business is relentless. In the process we can be consumed
by our world and forget that there are other worlds which are
impacting the people around us.
As an example, I recently observed a company owner vigorously
networking at an event and another guest make a snide comment about
what they are doing. Maybe that guest sailed through the
pandemic unscathed. The owner however had been clinging on by
the fingernails, but there was no appreciation for that. This
is what happens when the focus is on ourselves.
We lack empathy for others and for leaders that is a disaster,
in particular, in a market where staff can easily jump ship and get
another job, if they don’t feel they are being looked after.
Empathy is not an occasional thing – you are either empathetic or
you are not and as leaders we had better become empathetic if we
want to succeed in modern business.
- Nobody is more persuasive than a good listener. This
sounds so counterintuitive doesn’t it. Often we think being
persuasive means having the gift of the gab, dominating the flow of
the conversation, steering the direction of the content and driving
forward hard, through force of will. This usually presents
itself as finishing others sentences for them or cutting them off,
as we interject our genius contribution.
This is so prevalent, that when someone actually shuts up and
lets us talk, we feel liberated, energised and valued. Dopamine is
flooding through our system and we like that person. We take
a more positive view of who they are, what they have to say and
what they want. Introverts in particular are very open to
this form of communication. So to be listened to yourself as
a leader, let the other person do all the talking.
- Team players are the leaders of tomorrow. I saw a
quote the other day which flagged the three Cs as being critical to
success for leaders – creativity, critical thinking and
collaboration. This element of collaboration is relatively
new. When I was growing up in business, Jack Welch was the
dominant role model. His image was that of the dominant
leader, driving results through force of will, pushing subordinates
hard and casting overboard anyone who didn’t measure up. It
was a Darwinian struggle of zero sum outcomes. Today, we have
a different business world in front of us and the ability to tap
into the collective intellect, energy and commitment of the whole
team is seen as the winning formula.
I can see this weakness in myself. I now tell my son, he
shouldn't think he has to do it all on his own like I did. He
should seek support, mentors and collaborators. I wish I had
been smarter about this, rather than treading the path of the hairy
chested individual, trying to do it all on my own – I have been a
notoriously slow learner!
In Part Two, we will continue with principles 8-16.