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Leadership Skills |
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- Leadership in the past. The best
predictor of the future is the past. When I was in business, I took
note of any worker who told me he was superintendent of a school or
a deacon in his church or a Boy Scout leader. If he showed
leadership outside of the job, I wanted to find out if he had some
leadership potential on the job.
- The capacity to create or catch
vision. When I talk to people about the future, I want their eyes to
light up. I want them to ask the right questions about what I'm
talking about.
- The founder of Jefferson Standard
built a successful insurance company from scratch. He assembled some
of the greatest insurance people by simply asking, "Why don't you
come and help me build something great?"
- A person who doesn't feel the
thrill of challenge is not a potential leader.
- A constructive spirit of
discontent. Some people would call this criticism, but there's a big
difference in being constructively discontent and being critical. If
somebody says, "There's got to be a better way to do this," I see if
there's leadership potential by asking, "Have you ever thought about
what that better way might be?" If he says no, he is being critical,
not constructive. But if he says yes, he's challenged by a
constructive spirit of discontent. That's the unscratchable itch. It
is always in the leader.
- People locked in the status quo are
not leaders. I ask of a potential leader, Does this person believe
there is always a better way to do something?
- Practical ideas. Highly original
people are often not good leaders because they are unable to judge
their output; they need somebody else to say, "This will work" or
"This won't."
- Brainstorming is not a particularly
helpful practice in leadership, because ideas need to stay
practical. Not everybody with practical ideas is a leader, of
course, but leaders seem to be able to identify which ideas are
practical and which aren't.
- A willingness to take
responsibility. One night at the end of the second shift, I walked
out of the plant and passed the porter. As head of operations, I had
started my day at the beginning of the first shift. The porter said,
"Mr. Smith, I sure wish I had your pay, but I don't want your
worry." He equated responsibility and worry. He wanted to be able to
drop his responsibility when he walked out the door and not carry it
home. That's understandable, but it's not a trait in potential
leaders. I thought about the porter's comment driving home. If the
vice-president and the porter were paid the same money, I'd still
want to be vice-president. Carrying responsibility doesn't
intimidate me, because the joy of accomplishment-the vicarious
feeling of contributing to other people-is what leadership is all
about.
- A completion factor. I might test
somebody's commitment by putting him or her on a task force. I'd
find a problem that needs solving and assemble a group of people
whose normal responsibilities don't include tackling that problem.
The person who grabs hold of the problem and won't let go, like a
dog with a bone, has leadership potential. This quality is critical
in leaders, for there will be times when nothing but one's iron will
says, "Keep going." Dale Carnegie used to say, "I know men in the
ranks who will not stay in the ranks. Why? Because they have the
ability to get things done." In the military, it is called
"completed staff work." With potential leaders, when the work comes
in, it's complete. The half-cooked meal isn't good enough.
- Mental toughness. No one can lead
without being criticized or without facing discouragement. A
potential leader needs a mental toughness. I don't want a mean
leader; I want a tough-minded leader who sees things as they are and
will pay the price. Leadership creates a certain separation from
one's peers. The separation comes from carrying responsibility that
only you can carry. Years ago, I spoke to a group of presidents in
Columbus, Ohio, about loneliness in leadership. One participant,
president of an architectural firm, came up afterward and said,
"You've solved my problem." "What's your problem?" I asked. "My
organization's always confused," he said, "and I didn't know why.
It's because I don't like to be lonely; I've got to talk about my
ideas to the rest of the company. But they never know which ones
will work, so everybody who likes my idea jumps to work on it. Those
who don't, work against it. Employees are going backward and
forward-when the idea may not even come about at all." Fearing
loneliness, this president was not able to keep his ideas to himself
until they were better formulated. A leader must be able to keep his
or her own counsel until the proper time.
- Peer respect. Peer respect doesn't
reveal ability, but it can show character and personality. Trammell
Crow, one of the world's most successful real estate brokers, said
that he looks for people whose associates want them to succeed. He
said, "It's tough enough to succeed when everybody wants you to
succeed. People who don't want you to succeed are like weights in
your running shoes." Maxey Jarmen used to say, "It isn't important
that people like you. It's important that they respect you. They may
like you but not follow you. If they respect you, they'll follow
you, even if perhaps they don't like you."
- Family respect. I also look at the
family of a potential leader: Do they respect him or her? Fifteen
years ago, my daughter said, "Dad, one thing I appreciate is that
after you speak and I walk up, you are always attentive to me. You
seem proud of me." That meant a lot to me. If respect isn't there,
that's also visible. The family's feelings toward someone reveal
much about his or her potential to lead.
- A quality that makes people listen
to them. Potential leaders have a "holding court" quality about
them. When they speak, people listen. Other people may talk a great
deal, but nobody listens to them. They're making a speech; they're
not giving leadership. I take notice of people to whom others
listen.
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