Exceptional leadership inspires
the best effort in others
There is a steady stream being
written and taught about leadership these days. There are tips about
leadership, courses about leadership, books, retreats, and continuing
education – all focused on leadership. While all of this material is
useful and can certainly enhance one’s leadership knowledge, for the
most part it avoids asking and answering two questions:
1. Why does better leadership make a
difference? , and 2. How does better leadership achieve those
differences?
Imagine if everyone at work felt
satisfied, productive, proud, focused, and committed! What would the
consequences be? The consequences would be that everyone would create
greater productivity, higher profits, lower turnover, greater job
satisfaction, and more loyalty! The key then, to better performance,
is helping people feel more satisfied, productive, proud, focused, and
committed. Notice the absence of any technical or intelligence issues?
Notice that we’ve haven’t brought up the idea of “motivating”
people? We haven’t touched on motivating people for one simple
reason… people can’t be motivated! Trying to motivate someone is
analogous to physically trying to get them to do something they
don’t want to do. You won’t succeed. What really works is when
we’re self-motivated – when we do something because we want to.
When we’re inspired, we enjoy our work. We’re productive and proud
of our efforts. We remain focused and committed to the task at hand.
In short, we put forth out best effort.
How is this accomplished? The
foundation of exceptional leadership – of inspiring others –
comprises thee areas - Effective Leadership Philosophies (for yourself
and your organization), Effective Purpose, Mission and Values, and
Effective People Skills.
* EFFECTIVE LEADERSHIP PHILOSOPHIES
Leading by Example - Whether we
acknowledge it or not, we always lead by example. In our words (what
we say or don't say), in our actions (what we do or don't do), and in
our expressions (what we show or don't show). The things we do and
say, during moments of “apparent insignificance”, make an
impression on those around us.
Servant Leader Philosophies - In our
leadership workshops, I'll ask participants who the most important
person is to a company. The answer, of course, is the customer. The
question that follows next is, "Who is the most important person
in the company to that customer?" Most people get that the person
most important to the customer is the one they come in contact with -
the "frontline". The question that follows is the real key
to a better understanding of servant leadership. This question is,
"What, then, is the job of the manager of those frontline
people?" The job of the managers of the frontline folks is to
make their job as easy and as effective as possible so that the
customer has the best experience possible! If this leadership
philosophy is adopted throughout an organization, it ends up with an
organizational chart that looks like an inverted pyramid. It is an
organization that acknowledges the importance of the frontline and
reflects the philosophy of service throughout.
* EFFECTIVE PURPOSE, MISSION AND
VALUES
An organization which inspires the
best effort in its people will attract the kind of employees it wants
and needs, and will retain them. It has a Purpose, a Mission, and a
set of Values that it lives by, it effectively communicates them, and
it measures its actions and decisions against them.
- Purpose is the "WHY" of
the equation. It defines why we do what we do. Each decision and
policy should take the company closer to achieving its
"WHY". When a company has a clearly defined purpose it
begins to act as a magnet, attracting the kind of people who will
further the purpose; people who are like-minded. Not only will having
a purpose attract the right people, but it will also act to retain
them.
- Mission is the "WHAT" of
the equation. It defines what the company will be doing to achieve its
Purpose. A mission can be fairly narrow or be somewhat broad. However,
one that is too narrow can unduly restrict an organization from
considering opportunities that would otherwise be an excellent fit and
one that is too broad offers no guidance at all.
- Values are the "HOW" of
the equation. Values define how the Mission will be carried out in an
effort to achieve the Purpose. They define the “rules of the
game”. Some of them will come to mind quite easily, things like
honesty, courtesy, kindness, and ethics. But some other important
values will only surface when brainstorming takes place - when
different perspectives and voices are heard.
* EFFECTIVE PEOPLE SKILLS
I’ll often ask clients or workshop
attendees for the traits of the best boss they ever had and the traits
of the worst boss. Inevitably, I’ll get answers like: (Best)
respected my ideas, worked to develop me, challenged me, listened,
empowered me and let me make my own mistakes,… and (Worst)
micro-managed, was overly demanding, poor communicator, mistrustful,
… What’s interesting is that in no case were the technical skills
or the intelligence of a boss either praised or condemned. All the
notable traits, both good and bad, had to do with people skills. The
goal of effective people skills is good Relationship Management.
Relationship Management encompasses the ability to develop others,
inspire others, influence others, resolve conflict, and build teamwork
and collaboration.
CONCLUSION
The essence of exceptional leadership
is the ability to inspire the best effort in others. When people
choose to give their best effort, satisfaction increases, pride
develops, innovation is born, productivity improves, stability
prevails, and profitability increases. The keys to a highly performing
organization are creating an inspiring environment and personally
becoming an exceptional leader. We can create an inspiring environment
by adopting effective leadership philosophies and clarifying a
Purpose, Mission and set of Values. We can personally become a more
effective leader by honing and acquiring effective people skills.
Become a leader who inspires the best effort in others.
About the
author
Written by Michael Beck, President of Exceptional Leadership,
Inc., a leadership development and executive coaching firm
dedicated to creating exceptional leadership for higher
profits and greater job satisfaction. Michael can be reached
at 877-977-8956 or mbeck@XLeaders.com , and you can learn more
about the company and these ideas at www.XLeaders.com
Permission to reprint with full attribution. Copyright 2004,
Exceptional Leadership, Inc. |