Leadership Minute: Grow Others

grow

Jack Welch said, “Before you are a leader, success is all about growing yourself. When you become a leader, success is all about growing others.” The growth and goal of any leader is about growing others. It is the privilege of leadership. Realizing the necessity of your own growth is important too. The early years tend to bend toward growing yourself and perhaps a larger emphasis on your own success. But as you grow and mature as a leader the focus shifts toward the growth and development of those around you. Grow yourself. Grow others. Grow daily.

If you enjoy reading the “Leadership Minute” you will especially enjoy reading Doug’s books, Leaders Without Borders & Great Leaders Wanted! Visit Doug’s website to order your copies today!

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Leadership Minute: Simplify

simplify

Colin Powell said, “Great leaders are almost always great simplifiers, who can cut through argument, debate, and doubt to offer a solution everybody can understand.” This is one of the most admirable qualities I see in leaders. Like you, I’ve seen my share of leaders who can take the complex and build on it. But it’s refreshing when a leader can simplify the complex, build a consensus around a solution, and put in place a plan of action along with the right people to solve it. One of the best and most underused tools in your leadership toolbox is simplicity. Don’t be afraid to use it.

 

 

 

If you enjoy reading the “Leadership Minute” you will especially enjoy reading Doug’s books, Leaders Without Borders & Great Leaders Wanted! Visit Doug’s website to order your copies today.

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Leadership Minute: A Day of New Beginnings

newday

Nido Qubein said, “Your present circumstances don’t determine where you can go; they merely determine where you start.” The circumstances you face today are nothing more than starting points to something great. You must be careful not to allow your present circumstances to define your future in a negative way. Everyone has a starting point and an end point on this day. Today is a gift that you have been given to lead, serve, give, overcome, build, and be the leader you were destined to be. It’s a day of new beginnings. Get started!

 

 

 

If you enjoy reading the “Leadership Minute” you will especially enjoy reading Doug’s books, Leaders Without Borders & Great Leaders Wanted! Visit Doug’s website to order your copies today.

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The Human Touch Makes the Difference

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Always render more and better service than is expected of you, no matter what your task may be.” – Og Mandino

In the book, “It’s Not About the Coffee”, Howard Behar, the former president of Starbucks International, relates an observation during a store visit. A customer approached a barista and explained that he didn’t like the drink he had just purchased. The customer wanted a new drink.

To make the customer feel satisfied, the barista opened the till and handed the customer a cash refund and then commenced to make the customer a new drink. Was that the best response? From a purely economic point of view, obviously not.

Behar says the way they teach people to handle a situation like that is to apologize and offer to remake the drink. There’s a good chance the customer would have been satisfied and everyone would have benefited. He didn’t have to give the money back. But this response was better than a lot of others. It was an honest, care-filled exchange, and the barista demonstrated that he understood and appreciated the most important element of his role: human service. In the business of life, what can be wrong with that?

Behar concluded the story with the simple reminder that as long as you know why you’re here, as long as all of you together know why the organization exists; you’ll get to where you need to go.

If you have a desire to be a player in the competitive marketplace that exists today then you must acknowledge the need for and re-engage your team in this leadership skill known as the human touch. With it you can excel and without it you will be at a distinct disadvantage. Here are three characteristics of leaders who have the human touch.

They know what business they are in. No business will succeed or prosper without people. Without people you will fail. As Behar likes to say, ““At Starbucks, I’ve always said, we’re not in the coffee business serving people, we’re in the people business serving coffee.” The philosophy is profoundly simple yet so hard to embrace. Until you have a day of reckoning whereby you understand this leadership principle you will always struggle.

Leaders who understand the human touch know that people are the driving force of your business. How you treat people, serve them, and respect them makes all the difference in the world to your success. Take care of people and they will take care of you.

They are problem solvers. At the closest point of contact between your team members and your customers should come the highest degree of problem solving skills. When team members are allowed to act and solve problems without having to jump through multiple hoops to get there it is a positive reflection of your leadership. This can only happen in a corporate culture where the skills of the human touch are given priority and when your people are empowered.

The lifeblood of your business is people. The problems people bring you are simply opportunities to showcase your skills and to prove them right by choosing to come to you with their needs. Leaders with the human touch welcome new challenges and are always looking for ways to make things better. In business it’s a simple rule – people love problem solvers.

They are creative thinkers. Excelling at the human touch requires non-conventional thinking. It necessitates making an effort to see things with a creative eye and fresh perspective. Creative thinkers are not bound by the dictates of the rule book but prefer the flexibility of crating new opportunities for success that at times may be unwritten.

The barista in Behar’s experience is but one example of creativity at work in which the human touch was more important than the rule book. It’s when you empower your team with the skills of the human touch that you begin to transcend from success to significance.

Leaders with the human touch do this by knowing what business they are in, excelling at problem solving, and are creative thinkers. Human service is not always easy, but in order to get ahead you must command that leadership skill. The human touch makes the difference.

What do you say?

 

© 2013 Doug Dickerson

 

If you enjoy reading Doug’s columns you will especially enjoy reading his books, Leaders Without Borders & Great Leaders Wanted! Visit Doug’s website to order your copies today!

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Leadership Minute: Walk Lightly

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Seneca said, “He who has great power should use it lightly.” There is great responsibility attached to your leadership. Regardless of the title you have and the importance of the daily decisions that you make it comes down to humbly accepting the responsibility and learning how to walk lightly with that mantle. Just as it’s important to use your power lightly so should you carry yourself lightly as well. Having power is a privilege, walking lightly is a choice, leading wisely is a necessity. Servant leadership is how you do it.

 

 

If you enjoy reading the “Leadership Minute” you will especially enjoy reading Doug’s books, Leaders Without Borders & Great Leaders Wanted! Visit Doug’s website to order your copies today.

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Leadership Minute: People Business

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Howard Behar (former president, Starbucks Intl.) said, “At Starbucks, I’ve always said, we’re not in the coffee business serving people, we’re in the people business serving coffee.” Until we understand this concept as leaders we will always miss the mark of our true potential. Until we understand that we are in the people business we will have misdirected motives, and thus, unmet expectations. As leaders we are in the people business first. When you take care of people, they will take care of your product (whatever your product might be). When you make people your priority you will act different, think different, lead different, and succeed in a different way. Are you in the people business?

 

 

If you enjoy reading the “Leadership Minute” you will especially enjoy reading Doug’s books, Leaders Without Borders & Great Leaders Wanted! Visit Doug’s website to order your copies today!

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Leadership Minute: Experience Happens

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Aldous Huxley said, “Experience is not what happens to you; it’s what you do with what happens to you.” As a leader you will have many experiences that will be your teachers. What you do with those lessons will determine the style and future of your leadership. From your experiences you will learn from mistakes, chart new courses, and hopefully be a better leader as a result. While you may not choose every experience you go through you can choose each lesson you learn. Lead with humility, learn with grace, and go forward with confidence. Experience happens. Make it count.

 

 

If you enjoy reading the “Leadership Minute” you will especially enjoy reading Doug’s books, Leaders Without Borders & Great Leaders Wanted! Visit Doug’s website to order your copies today.

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Leadership Minute: Understand Your Calling

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Harvey S. Firestone said, “The growth and development of people is the highest calling of leadership.” As a leader it is important to understand this one practical and functional component of your leadership. It’s as you commit yourself to the growth and development of those around you that you fully embrace the calling of your leadership. The good news is that it can take place in a variety of different ways. It does not have to be in a formal setting. Just the manner in which you conduct yourself and how you treat others is a formidable way to demonstrate good leadership. Never underestimate the power of your influence. Understand the high calling of your leadership.

 

 

If you enjoy reading the “Leadership Minute” you will especially enjoy reading Doug’s books, Leaders Without Borders & Great Leaders Wanted! Visit Doug’s website to order your copies today.

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Are You In Over Your Head?

in over your head

If you’re going through hell, keep going. – Winston Churchill

A story is told of a group of friends who went deer hunting and paired off in twos for the day. That night one of the hunters returned alone, staggering under the weight of an eight-point buck.

“Where’s Harry?” he was asked. “Harry had a stroke of some kind. He’s a couple miles back up the trail,” In disbelief the others replied, “You left Harry laying there and carried back the deer?” “Well,” said the hunter, “I figured no one was going to steal Harry.”

That humorous story sets up a not so funny real life scenario involving the state of mind of many of corporate leaders in today’s workplace. Writing in Forbes (http://onforb.es/122XxYT), Susan Adams opined about a recent Booz &Co. survey that revealed that “many corporate leaders are not able to keep their priorities straight. They are also pursuing strategies they don’t believe in, and many of their strategies fail to build on the things their companies are especially good at, compared with competitors. It’s like everything that can go wrong already has gone wrong for them.”

More than 3,500 managers from around the world took part on the Booz survey. Here is a sampling of the results:

  • A majority, 64%, said their biggest frustration was having too many conflicting priorities.
  • 54% said they don’t believe that both employees and customers understand their strategy.
  • Only 33% said they thought the company’s “core capabilities” support their company’s strategy.
  • Just 21% said all their businesses “leverage their core capabilities.’
  • Only 20% said they think their company has a “right to win” in all markets where it competes.

From these findings we get an idea as to why so many corporate leaders feel the way they do and the need for strong leadership to correct it. The issues are complex and the solutions are varied. If you feel like you are in over your head then here are three solutions worth considering.

Organizational values should be shared not sacrificed. At the heart of your business is a set of values that define who you are, the product you deliver, the customers you serve, and how your will conduct your affairs. It’s the creed of your business that transcends ‘what’ you do and answers the question of ‘why’.

Until everyone is on the same page as it relates to your values you will never carry out your priorities. If managers and leaders are feeling the tension of competing priorities then it’s time revisit your values in order to get to the root of the problem. Values are the glue that binds you together and without them you will always have tension.

Organizational priorities should complement not be in conflict. Not even the best corporate leaders will be able to execute their plans successfully if the company’s priorities are not in harmony with its values and embraced by everyone. When competing agenda’s and ego’s interfere with what’s best of the company then there will be problems.

Everyone has priorities as it relates to individual performance. That being said, those priorities should not run contrary to the overall values and priorities of the organization. They should complement it. If you don’t fully embrace your core values then you will never fully execute your priorities. Why? Priorities flow out of values.

Organizational communication should give clarity not lend to confusion. The lifeblood of your organization is clear communication –on all levels. Many of the concerns expressed by the survey respondents can be traced back, and in part attributed to, poor communication. If the lines of communication are not open and clear it makes keeping priorities straight much more difficult.

Tony Robbins said, “To effectively communicate, we must realize that we are all different in the way we perceive the world and use this understanding as a guide to our communication with others.” This is a great point to consider going forward. Wise leaders will make every effort possible to communicate core values clearly so that they are known and embraced internally, and as a result known and appreciated by your customers.

The challenges of corporate leadership are as complex as they’ve ever been. But in the search for solutions we must not be our own worst enemy by engaging in approaches that are self-defeating. Values should be clear. Priorities should be mutual. Communication must be clear.

What do you say?

 

 

© 2013 Doug Dickerson
If you enjoy reading Doug’s columns you will especially enjoy his books, Leaders Without Borders & Great Leaders Wanted! Order today in time for Father’s Day!

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Leadership Minute: Signs of Leadership

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Max de Pree said, “The signs of outstanding leadership appear primarily among the followers. Are the followers reaching their potential? Are they learning? Serving? Do they achieve the required results? Do they change with grace? Manage conflict?” These are all great questions worth examining because they have less to do with how many people you lead and has more to do with the quality of your leadership. As you consider the above questions as it relates to your leadership you can identify your strengths and your weaknesses and make adjustments as needed. Remember, leadership is a journey. Navigate with strength. Lead with clarity. Pay attention to the signs.

 

 

If you enjoy reading the “Leadership Minute” you will especially enjoy reading Doug’s books, Leaders Without Borders & Great Leaders Wanted! Both will make great Father’s Day gifts! Visit Doug’s website and order your copies today!

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