Ready To Lead: Five Leading Indicators of Leadership Effectiveness
Ready To Lead: Five Leading Indicators of Leadership Effectiveness
Ready To Lead: Five Leading Indicators of Leadership Effectiveness
The three
different styles of leadership are Directing, Participating, and Delegating.
For better or worse, many of the executives with whom I work were “developed” in
this manner and believe that what “worked for me” will work for everyone else.
2. “Over-Intellectualized” Development
Other companies pursue a complex, competency-based approach to identifying and
developing future leaders. This is well-intentioned, but typically these lists are long,
with 10 (or more) “must haves.” (See example from KIPP, right).
The problem: if everything is important, nothing is. Even
more, as competency models grow in complexity it becomes increasingly difficult to
know what matters most when it comes to leading others well.
Through my work with rising leaders I have learned that we can more accurately
assess a person’s ability to lead others by asking this, more basic, question: how well
does he lead himself?
A “ready” leader has a personal strategy complete with goals and a plan for achieving
them.
She what she wants to learn and accomplish, personally and professionally, and how
she intends to make it happen.
A “ready” leader must know enough about money and personal finance to not fear it.
I’ve learned that even the most intelligent men and women can under-invest in
building personal financial awareness and, as a result, worry about money to such an
extent that it affects their performance, and decision-making, at work.
It’s hard to lead from a fearful state. It’s hard to make the tough, courageous choices
required to move a company forward if you are worried about paying bills, or making
“ends meet.”
A “ready” leader needs followers. And followers need to be “sold” on the leader.
Of course I’m not talking about a snake-oil / used car-type sales. No, I mean a
leader has to be able influence others to her way of thinking; she must be able to
sell herself and her ideas.