Wednesday 23 July 2014

Show them who’s Boss!



This was the title of a UK TV programme featuring Gerry Robinson, formerly of Granada fame. It probably goes a long way to demonstrate his style of leadership yet, here in 2014, this style seems to have lost its place in the Leadership of today’s talent. With generation Y fast becoming the majority of potential employees, the need for change is even more pronounced. Time magazine described them as the Me, Me, Me generation. They don’t want to be told what to do, they want to be a part of it, in fact, they’re probably less interested in running your business, they’re far more likely to be interested in running a business of their own. They want leadership in the workplace, but they want it their way. Therefore it follows that the autocratic styles of leadership of our youth are no longer relevant in today’s employer market and as leaders we have to find new ways of engaging employees in our projects and businesses, ways that serve to seek the new ideology of our fast emerging workforce.
I call it the “show them who the Boss is” approach.
What makes great leaders is somewhat of an enigma and as such individuals have adopted their own approach, making Leadership quite a personal matter. A great many leaders are remembered not for their skills but for what they achieved and how they behaved. Great leaders, of which in my opinion, there are truly very few, managed to lead effectively by developing followers. Getting people to do the things required of them, not because they were asked or told to, but because they wanted to. It all seemed to come down to a matter of personal taste as to who you followed, yet one thing remains true, people always followed people and less so their job title or position. Therefore in order to inspire followership, Leaders more and more will need to show who they are as people, to demonstrate that they can be trusted and that they are the right person to follow, given the circumstances. They need to demonstrate their credibility whilst not railroading followers in doing things their way, they need to show empathy and a broad perspective, including the ability to change direction given access to the knowledge and experiences of the people that they lead. In truth, this is probably a lot different to the approaches they adopted to get in to a position of leadership, but once there, the new leader needs to adapt.
The essence of Leadership lies in the ability to align, engage and harness the skills, personal energy, creativity and commitment of the people in their teams. In short, getting people to willingly take the actions necessary to fulfil the organisations’ goals because they want to.  Because they TRUST you.


The Show them who the Boss is approach requires a certain amount of  self-disclosure, an analysis of who they are and what defines them. Much of what defines who we are is driven by our own personal values set. Those tenets and beliefs that we have crafted since childhood taking influence from our parents and grandparents, siblings, close friends, the church, school and more often today, the media. As with any strong organisation, these values form the strong foundation of our approach to leadership. Herb Kelleher’s, Chairman of Southwest Airlines, Leadership always held true to a value of always treating each person as an equal, something he adopted from his mother. Take a look at Southwest today and you’ll see exactly the same principle applied across the organisation.
This self-disclosure is not a one-time event, rather a discipline that will allow the leader to adapt their communication each time they need to lead an initiative or project. Identifying the appropriate facets of who they are and using those as the basis of their communications. The analysis acts as your internal coach, asking the questions that others would ask of you, so that you can provide the fullest possible description of your initiative together with the reasons why others may want to follow you. The analysis can be broken down in to four interrelated sections.
Credibility and Content
Content forms the basis of the organisation, initiative or project. What is it that you are seeking to do or achieve. Often this is a reason why people join an initiative, to do something new or exciting or challenging. How exciting would it have been to be "landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to the Earth" in 1961 or “…breaking the land speed record for diesel-powered vehicles” for JCB?
Being able to paint a compelling picture of a desired future state is at the cornerstone of Content. Whilst we don’t all get the chance to create a future so exciting as those above, it is still important to give people a sense of what’s in store for the future, to give followers something to work towards, an idea, a dream, a Vision.
The content of the tasks and projects that people lead needs to have some significance, some importance to those that you intend to follow you. This may be a sense of a ‘New’ future, a new paradigm, or to outstrip the competition or simply create a sense of urgency.
Character
The second principle of credibility follows the fact that people follow people not job titles, so determining your character, again, no different for women, will be an important factor in generating followership. What does so often happen is that women work so hard to attain a leadership role, they can over use their positional power now that they have achieved it. It is important for all leaders to let followers and potential followers know who they are, their strengths, weaknesses and their own personal motivations. Knowing how to answer the question, ‘why do you care?’ in a way that personally connects them to the task is a great way to demonstrate your own personal character.
And to top it all, signalling your own commitment to the changes that you are advocating, showing that you have real personal commitment to success and that you have some ‘skin in the game’. Declare to followers, what you have got at stake in the project or task and what you are willing to do regardless of others.
Competence
Demonstrating that you’re good at your job with stories of success, learning, previous track record, career history are all important factors to weave in to ones communications. Again it is tempting to overplay this and subtlety and humility is vital to avoid sounding like a know-it-all.

Communication
Finally, the last principle is communication. Communication to engage others in the journey you’re advocating. Anticipating and recognising others’ concerns, not everyone we lead will feel like us, think like us and that needs to be spoken and the reasons for our journey spelled out to them. Show them the maths about how you came to the conclusions that you did, spell out the benefits and the consequences of action/inaction. Acknowledge the risks in the journey so that everyone else has the same history and context of the changes that you’re advocating. And last but not least, tell followers every day, why their work is important to success. Make their work worthwhile and meaningful, thank them sincerely for their input and be specific. If I had a job where I couldn’t make the link between what I do every day and the definition of success, I’d find that work meaningless.
What managers’ need is belief and backbone, belief that they can be a great leader and achieve success through others and not through themselves, which ironically is how we get the senior roles,

we the need to change the way we lead. And backbone, giving the leader the courage to make that change to show up personally at work and to begin leading from the heart!

Wednesday 9 April 2014



Show them who’s Boss!

This was the title of a UK TV programme featuring Gerry Robinson, formerly of Granada fame.  It probably goes a long way to demonstrate his style of leadership yet, here in 2014, this style seems to have lost its place in the Leadership of today’s talent. With generation Y fast becoming the majority of potential employees, the need for change is even more pronounced. Time magazine described them as the Me, Me, Me generation. They don’t want to be told what to do, they want to be a part of it, in fact, they’re probably less interested in running your business, they’re far more likely to be interested in running a business of their own. They want leadership in the workplace, but they want it their way.  Therefore it follows that the autocratic styles of leadership of our youth are no longer relevant in today’s employer market and as leaders we have to find new ways of engaging employees in our projects and businesses, ways that serve to seek the new ideology of our fast emerging workforce.  

I call it the “show them who the Boss is” approach.

What makes great leaders is somewhat of an enigma and as such individuals have adopted their own approach, making Leadership quite a personal matter. A great many leaders are remembered not for their skills but for what they achieved and how they behaved. Great leaders, of which in my opinion, there are truly very few, managed to lead effectively by developing followers. Getting people to do the things required of them, not because they were asked or told to, but because they wanted to. It all seemed to come down to a matter of personal taste as to who you followed, yet one thing remains true, people always followed people and less so their job title or position. Therefore in order to inspire followership, Leaders more and more will need to show who they are as people, to demonstrate that they can be trusted and that they are the right person to follow, given the circumstances. They need to demonstrate their credibility whilst not railroading followers in doing things their way, they need to show empathy and a broad perspective, including the ability to change direction given access to the knowledge and experiences of the people that they lead. In truth, this is probably a lot different to the approaches they adopted to get in to a position of leadership, but once there, the new leader needs to adapt.

The essence of Leadership lies in the ability to align, engage and harness the skills, personal energy, creativity and commitment of the people in their teams. In short, getting people to willingly take the actions necessary to fulfil the organisations’ goals because they want to.

The 4 principles.

The Show them who the Boss is approach requires self-disclosure, an analysis of who they are and what defines them. Much of what defines who we are is driven by our own personal values set.  Those tenets and beliefs that we have crafted since childhood taking influence from our parents and grandparents, siblings, close friends, the church, school and more often today, the media. As with any strong organisation, these values form the strong foundation of our approach to leadership.  Herb Kelleher’s, Chairman of Southwest Airlines, Leadership always held true to a value of always treating each person as an equal, something he adopted from his mother. Take a look at Southwest today and you’ll see exactly the same principle applied across the organisation.
This self-disclosure is not a one-time event, rather a discipline that will allow the leader to adapt their communication each time they need to lead an initiative or project. Identifying the appropriate facets of who they are and using those as the basis of their communications. The analysis acts as your internal coach, asking the questions that others would ask of you, so that you can provide the fullest possible description of your initiative together with the reasons why others may want to follow you.  The analysis can be broken down in to four interrelated sections. The Four Principles – Content, Character, Credibility and Communication.

Content

Content forms the basis of the organisation, initiative or project. What is it that you are seeking to do or achieve. Often this is a reason why people join an initiative, to do something new or exciting or challenging. How exciting would it have been to be "landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to the Earth" in 1961 or “…breaking the land speed record for diesel-powered vehicles” for JCB?
Being able to paint a compelling picture of a desired future state is at the cornerstone of Content. Whilst we don’t all get the chance to create a future so exciting as those above, it is still important to give people a sense of what’s in store for the future, to give followers something to work towards, an idea, a dream, a Vision.
The content of the tasks and projects that people lead needs to have some significance, some importance to those that you intend to follow you. This may be a sense of a ‘New’ future, a new paradigm, or to outstrip the competition or simply create a sense of urgency.

Character

The second principle follows the fact that people follow people not job titles, so determining your character, again, no different for women, will be an important factor in generating followership. What does so often happen is that women work so hard to attain a leadership role, they can over use their positional power now that they have achieved it. Men can do the same and it is important for all leaders to let followers and potential followers know who they are, their strengths, weaknesses and their own personal motivations. Knowing how to answer the question, ‘why do you care?’ in a way that personally connects them to the task is a great way to demonstrate your own personal character.
And to top it all, signalling your own commitment to the changes that you are advocating, showing that you have real personal commitment to success and that you have some ‘skin in the game’. Declare to followers, what you have got at stake in the project or task and what you are willing to do regardless of others.

Credibility

Third is credibility or competence, demonstrating that you’re good at your job with stories of success, learning, previous track record, career history are all important factors to weave in to ones communications. Again it is tempting to overplay this and subtlety and humility is vital to avoid sounding like a know-it-all.

Communication

Finally, the last principle is communication. Communication to engage others in the journey you’re advocating. Anticipating and recognising others’ concerns, not everyone we lead will feel like us, think like us and that needs to be spoken and the reasons for our journey spelled out to them. Show them the maths about how you came to the conclusions that you did, spell out the benefits and the consequences of action/inaction. Acknowledge the risks in the journey so that everyone else has the same history and context of the changes that you’re advocating. And last but not least, tell followers every day, why their work is important to success. Make their work worthwhile and meaningful, thank them sincerely for their input and be specific. If I had a job where I couldn’t make the link between what I do every day and the definition of success, I’d find that work meaningless.
What managers’ need is belief and backbone, belief that they can be a great leader and achieve success through others and not through themselves, which ironically is how we get the senior roles, we the need to change the way we lead.  And backbone, giving the leader the courage to make that change to show up personally at work and to begin leading from the heart!

Email me for our self-assessment tool and use this every time you need to lead a new initiative, team or project. The answers will vary from project to project but it's a great way to ensure you communicate early about your plans in a compelling way. 



OR - contact me for a 30 minute free telephone assessment of your project leadership. awallbridge@gmail.com


Monday 12 September 2011

Is this time to break some paradigms for the Pub Industry?

In one of our oldest industries and one in which we have worked, is it about time somebody shifted a few paradignms?

An interesting read and an even bigger problem!

http://www.linkedin.com/share?viewLink=&sid=s580212531&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.telegraph.co.uk%2Ffoodanddrink%2Ffoodanddrinknews%2F8756037%2FSupermarket-beer-sales-overtake-pub-beer-sales-for-first-time.html&urlhash=lJnA&pk=nhome-chron-split-realtime-updates&pp=2&poster=40281619&uid=5518982003782848512&trk=NUS_UNIU_SHARE-title

Saturday 10 September 2011

Aspire, Innovate & Lead


There was a time when an entrepreneur, inventor or leader would create some vision of the future and see that that vision became reality.  The telephone, space travel, the internet for example.  Today, whilst  some new is still created, often people are finding new ways to do the same thing, internet banking, mobile phones, bagless vacuum cleaners.  More often than not, it is not the leaders themselves who break or shift the paradigms, it’s those people who work inside organizations that find faster, better, lower cost ways of working.

The pace of change has also made it harder for organizations to maintain their market share or dominance, and innovations are necessary just to stand still. In recent months we have seen the once dominant Nokia overtaken by Apple and Blackberry.  Nokia admit it, they took their eye off the ball.  Google are a great case in point.  Each employee, as part of their day to day work, is to seek out new ideas or innovations.  From these employees came products such as Google Maps and Google Chrome.

The challenge then for leaders is to leverage internal knowledge, expertise and desire by creating compelling aspirations and with cultures that encourage innovation through strong leadership.

Aspire, Innovate and Lead will encourage attendees to create a new future for their business and to seek out new opportunities or ways of working that will set them apart from their competition.  They will pursue the innovations required to make their aspirations a reality and lead their organization from idea through implementation to inspiration.

This program is available to experience across Europe and Asia and for early interest Dunamis Leaders are offering significant discounts.  For more information please click on the link or check out the 2011 Program Calendar.


  

Wednesday 7 September 2011

Inspirational Leadership is a critical factor in business success


The role of the leader, at the most fundamental level, is to inspire others to follow, willingly. This is not an administrative or management issue – it’s a human issue. It bypasses the faceless and anonymous ‘workforce’ and should tap directly into the hearts and minds of every individual.

Holding a leadership position in a business does not automatically confer leadership ability, nor is leadership the same as management. An effective manager may skillfully run the day to day business whilst things are at a constant, and simultaneously be incapable of enlisting worker support for change.

A leader has a choice, either to rule by force or they can attempt to inspire voluntary ‘followership’ thereby leveraging employee discretionary effort – leadership by intimidation or inspiration.

The only tool a leader has at his or her disposal is the ability to communicate, well! Right at the heart of a leader’s ability to inspire, ignite, excite employees is emotional intelligence.  The skill of assessing ones own emotions relating to the organisation or a task, and then using those to ignite those same emotions in others.

The journey to Inspirational leadership involves:
Self knowledge of why you care about your business, project or task and why you care about the constituents that you seek to lead
Being able to provide both clarity and meaning to others about the problem and the potential solution – clarity alone will not provide the ‘line of sight’ employees need to ensure that they feel that their contribution is meaningful and worthwhile.
Understanding and applying the concept of emotional connection whenever you need to inspire others.
Re-align to others concerns, both spoken and unspoken, prepare for challenges in a way that makes you, the leader, ‘bigger’ and less defensive.

Leadership Programmes in the Middle East and Asia

SinclairPeters are working together with Dunamis Leaders to provide a series of open Leadership Offerings in Dubai and Kuala Lumpur.  Check out what's on offer at
http://dunamisleaders.com/index.php
All enquiries should be channeled through Dunamis Leaders.