
Let’s start with what leadership is not: Leadership is not a monologue,
a speech, a lecture or a filibuster. Leadership is not talking at or over
people. Leadership is not sequestered, does not live in a bubble or operate in
a vacuum. Leadership is not exclusive or arrogant. Leadership is not about the
leader.
What we see all too often in today’s leaders are little more than
egocentric talking heads. They are so enamored with seeing themselves on camera
or listening to themselves talk they have forgotten it’s their job to solve
problems not create or exacerbate them.
History’s best examples of leaders are of those leaders who were/are
highly engaged, very inclusive, deeply caring, and highly empathetic. They
don’t fear being proven wrong, but are deathly afraid about the thought of
being wrong and not knowing it.
The best leaders are not interested in who is right, but what is right.
They not only embrace dissenting opinions, but they seek them out at every
opportunity. Real leaders are just as at ease when unlearning as they are when
learning. And perhaps most importantly, they never pass up an opportunity
discuss, converse, dialog, or debate. They know that their leadership is only
as good as their ability to engage, listen, discern, and to act.
Here’s the thing – what politics and business would like us to picture
as the perfect image of a leader bears little resemblance to the genuine
article. Following are eight ways to spot real leadership:
1. Not about the platform: I’ve always said,
but for the people there is no platform. You don’t lead a platform you lead
people. It’s easy to spot real leaders – they focus on people not things. They
understand without great talent and a vibrancy of culture even the best strategy
will fail. Productive leaders understand platforms don’t solve problems, people
do. Any leadership problem is a people problem at some level, and any
leadership victory is a win for the people. As my friend Jim Kouzes says, “Love ‘em and lead ‘em.
2. The art of and not or: The best
leaders don’t fall into the trap of either/or thinking. The best leaders
realize there’s rarely a good reason to juxtapose one option against another in
a vacuum. This is simply a false paradigm created by intellectually
dishonest rationalizations. The use of A/B frameworks as a decision making
model unnecessarily limit opportunity by impeding creative thought and
innovation. You will time and again observe the best leaders think and not either/or. The job
of a leader is to create, expand and preserve options – not limit them.
3. Ubiquity: I’ve often said the
only place an army of one exists is in a movie. There is no doubt a good leader
can accomplish much, but there’s also no doubt a culture of leadership can
accomplish much more. Leadership that can’t be scaled isn’t really leadership.
You can always spot great leaders because they don’t overshadow others –they
elevate others. When in doubt, think ubiquity not scarcity. Leadership
isn’t, or at least shouldn’t be, a scarce commodity. Far too many companies
wrongly treat leadership as an esoteric role reserved for a privileged
few. However healthy organizations realize leadership must be a
ubiquitous quality that pervades every aspect of day-to-day operations. They
understand every person must lead; even if people are only responsible for
leading themselves, they must lead.
4. Not tone Deaf: You’ll rarely come
across successful leaders who have a tin ear. The best leaders are tuned in to
the emotional needs of those whom they serve. They engage, they listen,
they empathize, and they acknowledge. They treat you as a colleague not a
subordinate. They seek to understand not direct. They are the not tone
deaf – they are relevant because they show they care. Anyone can add
value to your world if you’re willing to listen. How many times have you
dismissed someone because of his or her station or title when what you should
have done was listen? Wisdom doesn’t just come from peers and those above you –
it can come from anywhere at anytime, but only if you’re willing to
listen. Expand your sphere of influence and learn from those with
different perspectives and experiences – you’ll be glad you did.
5. Willing to take the hit: Real leaders are
not afraid to give credit, nor are the fearful of taking blame. They are more
than willing to admit their faults and mistakes. Nobody is flawless, blameless
or perfect, so why even bother pretending that you are (nobody will believe you
anyway). Let me be clear – I appreciate savvy and finesse as much as the next person,
but not as a substitute for courage. We have too many people in leadership
positions who can’t or won’t accept responsibility for anything. Sane people
don’t expect perfection from leaders, but they do expect leaders to be
transparent and accountable. Accepting responsibility for your actions, or the
actions of your team makes you honorable, and trustworthy – it also humanizes
you. People don’t want the talking head of a politician for a leader, they want
someone they can connect to, and relate with. Put simply, leadership is about
accountability, and not only being willing to take the hit, but also being
capable of surviving the hit. Leadership IS ownership…
6. Understand Compromise: A my way or the highway attitude is not an attitude
that serves leaders well. Choosing a side is not as important as understanding
both sides in a way that finds common ground and brings people together by
closing positional gaps. A leaders job is not to draw lines in the arbitrary
lines in the sand, but to get people to step across lines and continue the
journey. Remember this, compromise that doesn’t create forward movement is
little more than useless gamesmanship. Real leaders understand they don’t have
to compromise core values in order to reach a compromise. You’ll never see a
great leader who is not highly skilled in the art of meaningful compromise that
moves the needle.
7. No paralysis: Leadership begins
at the end of your comfort zone. It’s not hard to spot good leaders, as they’re
the ones who not only live outside their comfort zone, but they inspire others
to do the same. They encourage and empower others to challenge institutional
thinking, dominant logic, and conventional practices. If your organization is
always finding reasons to manage risk and not opportunity, to fear change
rather than embrace it, or to rest on your past accomplishments rather than
create new ones, your leadership may be suffering from the paralyzing effects
of stasis. The best way to spot real leadership is to look at the
scoreboard. As much as some don’t want to hear this, leadership without results
is little more than a charade.
8. Alignment: I’ve often said,
managing expectations is gamesmanship, but aligning them is leadership. The
best leaders inspire a one company, one agenda mindset. They don’t create
internal competitors, but rather they focus on creating an ethos of internal
collaboration. The best leaders are those who operationalize values, vision,
mission and strategy – this only happens through an understanding an alignment
of a shared purpose. No purpose = no passion = no leadership.
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