
Some leaders hit their stride early in their career, others find
their path later in life, and regrettably, far too many leaders never
seem to get their footing. Great leaders discover pivot points and
transitions that create a certain rhythm and balance, while average
leaders tend to be somewhat tone deaf and awkward. We all recognize
great leadership when we see it, but many fail to see what it is that
actually makes the leader great.
Following are 5 key transitions great
leaders make that average leaders do not.
Find Purpose– Purpose is the one thing all great
leaders have in common. Great leaders have a clearly defined purpose,
while average leaders just show up to work. Purpose fuels passion and
work ethic. It is these characteristics that afford great leaders a
competitive advantage over those who don’t understand the dynamics of
this linkage.
The best leaders recognize a common purpose, shared values, and
aligned vision are the hallmarks of any great organization. These three
elements set the foundation for a sustainable culture. Leaderswho fail
to bring people together around these three constructs sentence their
company first to the chaos of mediocrity, and ultimately to the pain of
obsolescence. Great leaders create culture by design, while average
leaders allow culture to evolve by default.
A lesson lost on many is profit doesn’t drive purpose, but purpose
certainly drives profit – great leaders understand this; average leaders
do not. Leaders who are driven by profit will find they may be
successful for a season, but they’ll eventually come to realize a pure
profit agenda is not sustainable over the long haul.
Great leaders make
the transition from profit to purpose and are handsomely rewarded for
doing so. A unified purpose can endure all things.
People First– Leaders are nothing without people.
Put another way, people will make or break you as a leader. You’ll
either treat them well, earn their trust, respect and loyalty, or you
won’t. You’ll either see people as capital to be leveraged or humans to
be developed and fulfilled. You’ll either view yourself as superior to
your employees, or as one whose job it is to serve them, learn from
them, and leave them be better off for being led by you.
The best leaders don’t put people in a box – they free them from
boxes. Ultimately, a leaders job isn’t to create followers, but to
strive for ubiquitous leadership. Average leaders spend time scaling
processes, systems, and models – great leaders focus on scaling
leadership.
Develop Awareness– Great leaders are self aware,
organizationally aware, culturally aware, contextually aware, and
emotionally aware. They value listening, engaging, observing, and
learning over pontificating.
They value sensitivity over insensitivity
and humility over hubris. Leaders who come across as if they know
everything haven’t fooled anyone – except themselves.
Great leaders avoid the traps, gaps, and blind spots average leaders
so easily step into. Leaders who choose to live in the bubble of their
own thinking rather than understanding the benefits of seeking others
input and counsel make things harder on everyone. The willingness to
allow your positions and opinions to be challenged is a sign of strength
not weakness. I’ve often said the most powerful and overlooked aspect
of learning is unlearning. Leaders never willing to change their mind
ensure only one outcome – a lack of growth and development.
Shun Complexity– Complexity is a leader’s enemy not
their friend. Great leaders live to eliminate or simplify the complex,
while average leaders allow themselves and those they lead to be
consumed by it.
Complexity stifles innovation, slows development, gates
progress, and adversely impacts culture.Complexity is expensive,
inefficient, and ineffective.
I’m not minimizing the fact we live in a complex world, and I’m not
suggesting that profit cannot be found in complexity. But great leaders
understand opportunity and profits are extracted from complexity through
simplification, not by adding to the complexity. While many think it
was Einstein who said, “Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication,” the
statement was actually borrowed from Leonardo de Vinci – both gentlemen
were correct.
Get Personal– If I only had a nickel for every time
I’ve heard someone say, “It’s not personal; it’s just business.” Great
leaders understand nothing is more personal than leadership, and they
engage accordingly. The best leaders understand a failure to engage is
in fact a failure to lead. Average leaders remain aloof and distant –
great leaders look to know and care for their people.
Average leaders are viewed as business executives, the best leaders
are viewed as great human beings.The best leaders understand it’s not a
weakness to get personal, to display empathy, kindness, and compassion –
it’s the ultimate strength. Peak performance is never built on the
backs of others, but by helping others become successful. Treat your
people as if your life depends on it – it does.
The reality is anyone can lead, but very few lead well. Will you just
show up for work and check the box, or will you lead well? Thoughts?
Follow him on Twitter @mikemyatt
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