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| The Five C's of Management |
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By John Wright
I was flying home several months ago from
a management-leadership program I was teaching
for a company in Phoenix, and I struck up
a conversation with the gentleman next to
me on the plane. During the conversation,
I asked him if he considered his boss to
be a good manager, and he said, "Yes,
he is." I then asked him if he thought
his boss was a good leader, and after thinking
a moment, he said, "No, he isn't."
This man was not alone in the
way he thought.
According to a survey by the
marketing information
company TSN, "Less than
one-third of
all supervisors and managers
are perceived
to be strong leaders." As
a result,
increasingly larger percentages
of our workforce
are disengaged. According to
the survey
- " 40% of workers feel disconnected from
their employers
- " Two out of every three workers do
not identify with or feel motivated to drive
their employer's business goals and objectives
- " 25% of employees are just " showing
up to collect a paycheck"
There is a tremendous opportunity
for managers
and supervisors to set themselves
and their
companies apart from their competition.
So
what does it take for a manager
to be "perceived
as a strong leader?"
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THE FIVE "C'S" OF LEADERSHIP
Character
People will not follow someone
for long if
they can't trust them. Not long
ago a well
known CEO was "ousted"
after a
probe into a personal relationship
with a
female executive at the same
firm. "The
board concluded that the facts
reflected
poorly on his judgment and would
impair his
ability to lead the company…his
actions were
inconsistent with our code of
conduct."
Leaders have to be trustworthy
to produce
sustainable results.
Caring
The old cliché is true: "People
don't
care how much you know until
they know how
much you care." When Lou
Holtz was coach
at Notre Dame, the second question
he used
to ask every player before being
selected
to play after "Can I trust
you?"
was "Do you CARE about me,
your teammates,
and Notre Dame?" If a player
had a selfish
motive for being on the team
and didn't care
enough to put the team interests
first, he
didn't want that young man on
the team. He
also said if the young man didn't
believe
that he could trust the coach
and feel cared
about in return, he shouldn't
want to be
on the team. Leaders show they
care about
their team personally and professionally.
Commitment
There's a poster on the gym wall
in Clint
Eastwood's movie Pretty Baby
that says "Winners
do what losers won't do."
Leaders are
like that also. They DO things
poor managers
won't do. Arguably, one of the
greatest business
leaders of our time was Sam Walton.
What
was his number one rule for business
success?
COMMIT to your business. "Believe
in
it more than anybody else. I
think I overcame
every single one of my personal
shortcomings
by the sheer passion I brought
to my work.
I don't know if you're born with
this kind
of passion, or if you can learn
it. But I
do know you need it."
Confidence
Leaders know where they are going
and demonstrate
by their words and actions that
there is
no doubt that they will arrive.
Furthermore,
they make you want to go with
them. They
instill confidence in you as
well. They get
you to believe in yourself and
your team
and to see yourself as winners
before it
actually occurs. In his book
Reagan on Leadership,
James Strock lists Ronald Reagan's
accomplishments
while in office and concludes
"Above
all, Reagan restored America's
belief in
itself."
Communication
Leaders have crystal clear compelling
visions
and communicate those visions
repeatedly.
In his book Leadership, the first
principle
Rudolph Giuliani shares is his
insistence
on his routine morning meeting.
"I consider
it the cornerstone to efficient
functioning
within any system…We accomplish
a great deal
during that first hour, in large
part because
the lines of communication were
so clear."
In addition to letting people
also know clearly
where they stand, leaders are
also exceptional
listeners. In his book Team Bush
- Leadership
Lessons from the Bush White House,
author
Donald Kettl discusses how President
Bush
"makes sure he listens"
to his
top advisors. The lesson? "Make
sure
you get unfiltered information.
Top managers
need all sorts of information,
good and bad…especially
bad. This is why it is crucial
to have a
mechanism in place that insures
a steady
stream of information from all
quarters."
Managers that develop these qualities
will
create an environment where their
team will
willingly do what they would
not otherwise
do.
John Wright is a speaker and
trainer for
High Impact Leaders Management
Training.
He specializes in leadership
and management
programs for all levels throughout
organizations.
He can be reached at 1-800-872-7830
x107.
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