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By Ron Fory
The art of leadership is sought by virtually
everyone. It is claimed by many, defined
by a few, and exercised by the unheralded,
depending on the source you use. In fact,
we know a lot about leadership; it is the
application of leadership that creates confusion
for most.
In spite of all the leadership texts, containing
a veritable plethora of theories about leadership
(each of which is THE KEY), leadership remains
a very individual concept, exercised in many
diverse yet successful ways. Indeed, successful
application always results in leadership.
Unsuccessful application is invariably counter-productive.
So, is this another theory? No, but I will
share with you some of my observations about
where to look for leadership. It's my belief
that although we may not be able to define
it very precisely, we can recognize it when
we see it.
We know that there are people called "formal
leaders" and "informal leaders"
in some of the literature. I am not going
to talk about those "formal leaders,"
because they are by definition occupying
positions of authority (i.e., a supervisory
position) and that is their sole claim to
leadership. "Informal leaders,"
on the other hand, exercise leadership from
positions not formally designated for leadership,
thus causing a problem for the organization.
How the informal leader arises is curious,
but it can often be caused by the lack of
leadership in the "formal" position.
But that doesn't mean that the "great
man" theory takes place (that's the
one that says when a crisis occurs and there's
no one prepared to deal with it, someone
will rise to the occasion and deal with it).
Why is someone not in a leadership position
given authority by the group in which they
work to exercise leadership?
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There are, of course, several
answers to
that question, so let's examine
some of them.
It may be that the one who is
the leader
is a confident (at least confidently-acting)
person with a bit of charisma,
thus one who
offers logical answers to questions
from
the group, and who may have the
ability to
demonstrate that they have good
ideas. We
often see this in groups that
begin by discussing
particular problems; if no one
is specifically
"in charge," the leader
who emerges
is often the person who demonstrates
the
most passion about the topic.
Or, they may simply be someone
who is impatient
for action, and goads others
into a particular
action that appears to achieve
some common
goals. In this case, the group
tends to rally
behind the "visionary."
Sometimes,
the visionary doesn't have much
of a vision,
but that doesn't mean they aren't
capable
of pursuing one (or of having
one in the
first place).
Another possibility is that one
of this group
recognizes that things can be
done in a way
to benefit everyone involved,
much like the
development of John Nash's gaming
theory
(the basis for the movie, "A
Beautiful
Mind"). The concern is not
for the betterment,
enrichment or even recognition
of the leader,
rather for the achievement of
group goals,
including the entire organization.
When we find this leader of the
latter sort,
John Collins, in his book Good
to Great,
calls them "Level 5"
leaders. They
are the ones who are passionate
about achievement
of the whole, not of themselves
individually.
These leaders aren't heralded,
because they
don't blow their own horns. They
are too
busy working toward meaningful
goals to be
distracted by something so counter-productive.
Yet they do some particular things
that we
can see "proves" their
leadership.
Some of those things are where
I'd like to
focus this discussion.
Leaders who are passionate about
their vision
(they ALWAYS have a vision),
are careful
to make sure everyone in the
organization
knows what that vision is. They
will indoctrinate
everyone so that it is not simply
a vision,
but a tangible part of the environment,
so
much so that it will go home
with employees
at night. Everything that flows,
then, is
a reflection of that vision,
because the
vision becomes the beacon that
guides the
actions of everyone in the organization.
Those leaders know their people
well: their
personalities, their histories,
their passions.
The leader knows them because
of the leadership
involved in attracting and retaining
the
right people to "get the
job done."
They reach back to the theory
of W. Edwards
Deming, not necessarily for Statistical
Process
Control techniques (although
they are valuable),
but for Deming's "14 Points,"
one
of which is to insure adequate
and continuous
training. If the right people
are in the
job and they are given the resources
to get
the job done, cheerleading is
a waste of
time, because these workers already
get out
of bed in the morning excited
about going
to work. Motivation? It's boiling
inside
each one of them, and they don't
need slogans
or mantras, or group meetings
to cheer about
history, because the "self-actualized"
person is also self-motivated.
They know
their jobs, they know what's
expected of
them, and they know that they
have a responsibility
to the rest of the employees
to do the best
job they possibly can. One reason
that happens
is that the individual has been
involved
in development of their job and
their responsibilities
for that job, they've been informed
about
how their job fits into the overall
scheme,
and they are intimately involved
in changes
that occur in the company. Revolutionary?
No, it's been in the books for
decades.
When leaders develop this kind
of employee
and the managers to supervise
those employees,
they are freed up to do the visionary
tasks:
keeping the goal in sight, and
making the
course corrections necessary
when changing
conditions require them. Tweaking
is a skill
these leaders have that is taught
in no school,
which makes it that much more
valuable.
In my history is a ten-year stint
as a division
controller for a manufacturing
firm. The
division manager was a true visionary,
who
brought the division from a lackluster,
poorly
motivated, money losing operation
to an energetic,
proud organization that had attained
ISO
9000 certification on its way
to becoming
profitable as well. Over those
ten years,
I watched that manager steadfastly
steer
the division in the direction
his vision
so clearly defined. Not all of
his actions
were exactly right, but that
didn't keep
us from learning from them. And
the division
became a model for the corporation,
while
the division manager became a
regional manager
so his skills could be used in
other divisions
as well. He had learned that
putting the
team together was his biggest
job, but once
that was done, the team drove
the progress.
He simply got out of the way.
His time was
not spent showing what he'd done,
it was
spent in providing the tools
to the team
members so they could get where
he wanted
faster. If he needed to do something
that
should be done by one of the
team members,
that team member was, by definition,
unnecessary,
and was eliminated. That doesn't
mean that
mistakes weren't tolerated, nor
that effort
wasn't made to insure the team
member was
adequately placed and trained.
But when it
became obvious that change was
necessary,
it occurred quickly and cleanly.
It was truly
a joy to work there, but especially
to observe
that unsung leadership in action.
There are some things we as individuals
can
do, if we want to develop our
own leadership:
- Keep focused on the primary goal for your
company. Never let yourself be distracted
from that.
- Surround yourself not with those who only
agree with you, but with the right people
for the job you need done, then train them
and provide them the tools to do the job.
- Recognize the benefits of having different
personalities around you. Not only do separate
skill sets come with different personalities,
but different approaches that are essential
to your company's success.
- Having hired the right people, get out of
their way. If you must micromanage them,
you don't need them. This is not a big problem,
however, since they won't stay anyway, if
you treat them with so little respect.
- Remember always to consult your feedback
loop in all your processes, to make sure
things are working as you expect, and that
you can make appropriate changes timely.
Failure to do this will hasten the failure
of your organization in total. Recall that
your feedback loop is only as valuable as
the people from whom you get feedback. Listen
to them.
- Know when you have exceeded your limitations,
and acknowledge it. Then get help to overcome
it.
Each of us has the capability
to be a leader.
We will only become effective
leaders, however,
when we lose our fear of making
mistakes,
and share responsibility for
achievement
of the goals of the organization.
If those
goals are our individual measures
of achievement,
then the organization will work
to succeed
and achieve; if they are not,
we will be
the transient leader that gets
things going,
but fails by failing to share
credit and
push for only the good of the
organization.
Dare to achieve.
Ron Fory is an instructor and trainer for The Leader's Institute and specializes in public speaking and leadership
development. Ron can be reached at 1-800-872-7830
x105.
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