learning to lead...skills and principles you can use everyday

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[email protected] Learning to Lead… Skills and Principles You Can Use Every Day

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Page 1: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

[email protected]

Learning to Lead…

Skills and Principles You Can Use Every Day

Page 2: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

Today’s Vision:

Everyone can learn to lead!

Today’s Mission:

Develop a personal set of

leadership characteristics

you can use every day.

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Learning to Lead

Topics for Today…

1. Examine the difference between management and leadership

2. Explore the wide variety of leadership definitions

3. Consider integrity as a leadership skill

4. Understand mistakes as learning experiences

5. Identify a set of leadership skills/principles we can use every day

Page 3: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

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Introducing: The Upstanding Professional of Action

The Upstanding Professional of Action is a series of discussions meant to

encourage critical thinking.

Discussion #1: Open Your Mind

Page 4: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

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The Upstanding Professional of Action

Open Your Mind

Harriet Taylor was attracted to, and eventually married, John Stuart Mill because he was “the

first man she had met who treated her as an intellectual equal” (John Mill, Spartacus Educational

Publishers). Mill was dedicated to women’s equality and wrote in favor of women’s right to vote

and against domestic abuse. Writing in the nineteenth century his thoughts were considered to be

extremely radical.

Exchanging Error for Truth

In his essay On Liberty Mill provides the ultimate call for inclusion when he offers this

challenge: “If all mankind minus one, were of one opinion, and only one person were of the

contrary opinion, mankind would be no more justified in silencing that one person, than he, if he

had the power, would be justified in silencing mankind” (2001, p.1). Mill also offers that an

opinion held in the absence of understanding its opposition is weakened and “deprived of the

opportunity of exchanging error for truth” (2001, p. 1).

The lesson here is that even our most strongly held beliefs are strengthened when opened to

debate and criticism. Our willingness to “exchange error for truth” also opens our minds to new

concepts.

Resource: Mill, John Stuart. On Liberty: New York. Bartleby.com, 2001, John Mill. Spartacus

Educational Publishers Ltd. Retrieved from: http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/PRmill.htm

Discussion:

What did Mill mean when he suggested we

take every opportunity to exchange effort for

truth?

How might exchanging error for truth

change our current viewpoint?

Page 5: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

Management and Leadership Two distinctly different - but complementary roles

Managers… Leaders…

control inspire

ask how and when ask what and why

budget take risks

plan innovate

think short-term think long-term

Discussion: which of these roles is more important to the day to day operations of a business?

Source: Hughes, Ginnett, and Curphy; Leadership Enhancing the Lessons of Experience5

“Progress always involves risks. You

can’t steal second base and keep your foot on first.”

F.B. WilcoxAuthor

Page 6: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

Management and Leadership

Managers… Leaders…

expect you to enable people to workcome to work together towards aon time common goal

enforce change modify attitudes and behaviors

present annual reviews encourage 360 degree feedback

focus on the goal focus on the vision

can go it alone truly need followers

Discussion: When is a leader not a manager?

Source: Hughes, Ginnett, and Curphy; Leadership: Enhancing the Lessons of Experience6

“There’s an enormous number of managers

who have retired on the job.”

Peter Drucker

Page 7: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

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The Upstanding Professional of Action

Practical Wisdom

“Practical wisdom is the combination of moral will and moral skill” - Aristotle

Barry Schwartz is a widely published psychologist who has focused a great deal of

work on the nature of wisdom. In a Ted Talk originally presented in 2009, Schwartz

offers the concept of “practical wisdom” by outlining the job description of a hospital

janitor.

While the job description lists all the responsibilities one might expect including

mop, sweep, clean, and re-stock, there is nothing about engaging with other human

beings. However when psychologists interviewed hospital janitors about their jobs, they

consistently heard about caring for patients. “Mike” for example stopped mopping the

floor because Mr. Jones was walking slowly up and down the hall trying to get some

much needed exercise. They also heard from “Charlene” who ignored her supervisor’s

admonition to vacuum the visitors lounge because there were family members who were

there all day, every day and were just then taking a nap.

While Schwartz admits that not all janitors show this kindness, care and empathy, he

points out that those who do have the moral will (to do right) and the moral skill (to

figure out what doing right means).

Retrieved from: http://www.ted.com/talks/barry_schwartz_on_our_loss_of_wisdom.html

Discussion:

What is moral will?

How does it differ from moral skill?

Do you know anyone who has both moral

will and moral skill?

Page 8: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

Towards a personal definition of leadership…

“Leadership is a process, not a position.”

“Leadership is the process of influencing an organized grouptoward accomplishing its goals.”

“The leader’s job is to create conditions for the team to beeffective.”

Source: Leadership: Enhancing the Lessons of Experience; Hughes, et al.

Leadership is the “ability to effectively devise and execute aplan.”

Leaders “set a compelling destination for your organization.”

“Outstanding leaders develop a clear picture of where they want to goand strategize how to get there.

Source: Lessons on Leadership; Jack Stahl, Former President of Coca-Cola

Discussion: The Hughes and Stahl quotes might suggest that goodmanagement over time = leadership. But do you have to be in a management role to be a leader? 8

“The less people know, the more they yell.”

Seth GodinAuthor

Page 9: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

Towards a definition of leadership…

“One of the things that distinguishes a good manager from a good leader is vision.”

“There is no one ‘right’ way to lead that suits all situations that you will encounter.”

“To be a successful leader, it’s critical to have superb verbal and written communicationskills.”

“It’s important to dream big and go out on a limb and take a risk every now and then.”

“Creating a vision is very different than meeting sales quotas, producing a commercial…or supervising client accounts. It’s coming up with the big picture – a creative way of looking at the future.”

“A visionary does not follow a path; instead she goes where there is no path and leaves a trail.”

Source: The Little Black Book of Success: Laws of Leadership for Black Women

Discussion: What is the difference between vision and innovation?

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“Innovation distinguishes between a leader and a follower.”

Steve Jobs

Page 10: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

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The Upstanding Professional of Action

Steve Jobs

Leader? Or Just a Great Innovator?

In his book Grow: How Ideals Power Growth and Profit at the World’s Greatest Companies;

Jim Stengel concludes that the world’s fifty best businesses are guided by an ideal that permeates

throughout the organization. He supports his findings claiming that “an investment in the Stengel

Fifty would have outperformed the Standard & Poor’s index by four hundred percent. Not

surprisingly one of the Stengel Fifty is Apple, Inc. Their ideals statement is “Apple exists to

enable freedom of choice, exploration, and discovery,” and it is Steve Jobs’ incredible vision and

entrepreneurial genius that was responsible for both Apple’s unique ideal, and ongoing profit

performance. Whether he communicated well within his organization depends on one’s tolerance

for his style. That he transformed how consumers view much of their world is without question.

While Jobs was responsible for transforming as many as seven industries, he was also

abusive and mean spirited to the people who threw themselves into their work on his behalf. In

her Guide to Managerial Communication text, Mary Munter provides a communications scale

that ranges from tell, to sell, to consult, to join, all of which indicate ever increasing desire for

collaboration. Jobs’ approach was clearly at the bottom of the scale in which he would bluntly

“tell” and therefore better control his staff. Munter goes on to suggest that one’s use of the tell

style should be when “you want your audience to learn from you” and “you do not need to hear

others’ opinions, ideas, or input.” While this style clearly worked for Steve Jobs, it did so only

because of his remarkable genius as an innovator and marketer.

Discussion:

Do you have the innovative genius to manage

people from the “tell” level of communication?

Which communication level (tell, sell, consult,

join) would work best for you?

Page 11: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

Towards a definition of leadership…

“The most effective leaders…have emotional intelligence.”

The five skills of emotional intelligence are:

Self-awareness knowing one’s own strengths and weaknesses

Self-regulation controlling or redirecting disruptive impulses and moods

Motivation relishing achievement for its own sake

Empathy understanding other people

Social Skill building rapport

Source: On Leadership; Harvard Business Review 10 Must Reads What Makes a Leader? Daniel Goleman Consortium for Research on Emotional Intelligence in Organizations, Rutgers University

Activity: Each of us have strengths and weaknesses within these five skills of emotional intelligence

Take 5 minutes… and rate yourselves on a scale of 1-5…

…1 being “I really need to work on this one”…

…and 5 being “this is really my best trait” 11

“Consideration and self-control…give a

certain polish to life”

On DutiesMarcus CiceroAncient Roman Philosopher

Page 12: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

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The Upstanding Professional of Action

Incentives, Integrity, and Capitalism

The Story of Gyges Ring

Marcus Tulius Cicero (106 – 43 BC) is a highly studied, often quoted, ancient Roman

lawyer, orator and philosopher who wrote On Duties as a series of letters to his son who was

away at school. His purpose was to provide a “how-to” on leading a good life. At the same time,

being a caring father, Cicero provided his son with what was for its day an extravagant

allowance which his son used most gratefully to do what many college kids would…he partied.

It was not until later in his life that Cicero’s son recognized the value of his father’s words. There

are two lessons here…first incentives are excellent tools, but need to be employed judiciously;

and second, parents seem to get a lot smarter when their children become adults.

Cicero also recounted to his son Plato’s story of Gyges Ring. Turning “the ring inwards

toward the palm of his hand, [Gyges] became invisible to everyone, while he himself saw

everything” (2005, p.305). Since Gyges could not be seen he could do as he pleased without fear

of retribution. Cicero’s remarkably high standards brought him to conclude that a wise person

“with just such a ring…would not imagine he was free to do wrong any more than if he did not

have it; for good [people] aim to secure not secrecy but the right” (2005, p. 307).

With this story, Plato questioned whether justice and virtue would be possible without fear

of retribution. How would we act if we each possessed the precious ring? While fear of

retribution is a strong motivator, honor is a more satisfying accomplishment. It’s not enough to

avoid doing harm, Cicero told his son we must also strive to do good.

Discussion:

What would the typical business person do if

s/he possessed Gyges ring?

Can free-market capitalism succeed in the

absence of integrity?

Page 13: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

Towards a definition of leadership…

“Leadership has nothing to do with having charisma.”

“Leadership and management are two distinctive and complementary systems of action.”

“Dozens of people can play important leadership roles in a business organization.”

“The real challenge is to combine strong leadership and strong management and use each to balance the other.”

“Leadership skills are not innate. They can be acquired and honed.”

A leader’s “visions and strategies [do not] have to be brilliantly innovative.”

“Planning is a management process, deductive in nature and designed to produce orderly results. Setting a direction is more inductive. Leaders gather a broad range of data [looking] for patterns. The direction-setting aspect of leadership does not produce plans; it creates vision and strategies.

Source: On Leadership; Harvard Business Review 10 Must ReadsWhat Leaders Really Do. John P. Kotter; Professor of Leadership; Harvard Business School

Discussion: If leadership can be found throughout the organization, regardless a person’s role, where should managers look for new leaders?

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“The only thing more painful than learning from experience is not learning from experience.”

Archibald MacLeishLibrarian of Congress

Page 14: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

Towards a definition of leadership…

“The most reliable predictor of true leadership is an individual’s ability to find meaning in negative events and to learn from even the most trying circumstances.”

Source: On Leadership; Harvard Business Review 10 Must ReadsCrucibles of Leadership. Warren G. Bennis, Professor, UCLARobert. J. Thomas, Professor of Leadership, Tufts University

“Only when leaders come to see themselves as incomplete – as having both strengths and weaknesses – will they be able to make up for their missing skills by relying on others.”

“The incomplete leader…knows that leadership exists throughout the organizational hierarchy – wherever expertise, vision, new ideas, and commitment are found.”

Source: On Leadership; Harvard Business Review 10 Must ReadsIn Praise of the Incomplete Leader. Deborah Ancona, MIT’s Sloan School of ManagementThomas M. Senge MIT’s Sloan School of Management

Discussion: Which emotional skills (see slide 10) best define the “incomplete leader”?

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“No person will make a great business who wants to do it all himself, or get all the credit.”

Andrew Carnegie

Page 15: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

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The Upstanding Professional of Action

On Being Wrong and Making Decisions

Kathryn Schulz is a self-proclaimed “Wrongologist.” In a Ted Talk presentation, that has

been viewed almost 3 million times, she asks “how does it feel to be wrong.” Her audience

responses are “awful”, “dreadful”, “embarrassing”, and “disappointing.” Then she says “no you

just told me how it feels after you’ve realized you were wrong.”

Just like the cartoon coyote who chases the roadrunner off the cliff but doesn’t realize he

was wrong until he looks down, we make mistakes knowing (or at least thinking) we are right.

Being wrong feels at the time like being right. Far worse, our cultural experiences teach us that

to succeed in life we must never make a mistake. We learn in school that we are penalized for

wrong answers and rewarded for correct ones. So we learn to avoid making mistakes…which

encourages us to avoid making decisions, and considering we might be wrong, which might lead

us to the correct decision.

Ms. Schulz also suggests that when someone disagrees with us, we typically make three

assumptions:

1. They must be ignorant (so I’ll educate them)

2. They must be stupid (I’ve educated them and they still don’t get it)

3. They’re not stupid, they get it – but they are distorting the truth for their own purposes.

As she closes her talk, Schulz suggests that instead of those assumptions, we consider

this…”Wow, I don’t know, maybe I’m wrong.”

Discussion:

How might we make better decisions by

more frequently considering that we might

be wrong?

Would we ask more questions?

Would we more readily accept criticism?

Page 16: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

Leadership Principles

Activity: let’s go back through all of the several definitions of leadership we’ve reviewed today…and identify 10 leadership principles…

(note: in the handout, this slide will be filled in by each participant

see next slide for 10 possibilities…)

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“The first rule of leadership: everything is your fault.”

A Bug’s Life

Page 17: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

Leadership Principles

Activity: let’s go back through all of the several definitions of leadership we’ve reviewed today…and identify 10 leadership principles…

1. Vision (a creative way of looking at the future) separates managers from leaders.

2. Vision does not necessarily require brilliant innovation.

3. Leaders have great communication skills.

4. Leaders have emotional intelligence.

5. Leadership and management are complementary roles.

6. Leadership skills can be learned and developed.

7. Leaders don’t avoid making mistakes, they learn from them.

8. Leaders see themselves as incomplete, having strengths and weaknesses.

9. The “incomplete” leader seeks out other leaders throughout the organization.

10. Leaders are everywhere in the organization, regardless their role.

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“The first rule of leadership: everything is your fault.”

A Bug’s Life

Page 18: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

Leadership Skills We Can Use Every Day

1. Leaders make a difference…at any level in the organization.

2. Leaders don’t need to be brilliant, just different.

3. Leaders listen...especially to their customers and their colleagues.

4. Leaders communicate…briefly and enthusiastically.

5. Leaders collaborate…they are motivated to share ideas for the sake of the

achievement

6. Leaders stay in control…and always keep a sense of humor.

7. Leaders develop a personal Board of Directors to mentor them

8. Leaders take great satisfaction in mentoring others.

9. Leaders make mistakes…but always learn from them.

10. Leaders make a list of their strengths and weaknesses…and work on improving

both.

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“Success is going from failure to failure without loss of enthusiasm.”

Winston Churchill

Page 19: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

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The Upstanding Professional of Action

Yogi Berra – Philosopher / Leader

The Yogi Berra Museum, on the Montclair State University campus tells of the

exploits of one of the greatest New York Yankees of all-time. Yogi is regarded by many

as one of the best major league catchers of all time. He was also a feared batter who was

known as a “junk-ball” hitter, often swinging successfully at pitches that were outside the

strike zone. Since he was equally adept at hitting pitches that were over the plate, he

became a very difficult out.

The museum also includes a section on the many witticisms for which Yogi is

famous. Absorbed individually these Yogi-ism’s tickle our funny bone, but when taken

collectively they advance a true American philosopher, with a real flair for leadership.

What Yogi said: “Nobody goes there anymore, it’s too crowded.”

What leaders know: Leaders always adapt and innovate.

What Yogi said: “You can observe a lot by just watching.”

What leaders know: Research and pay attention to the details

What Yogi said: “It gets late early out there.”

What leaders know: Prepare for…and embrace change

What Yogi said: “If the world were perfect, it wouldn’t be.”

What leaders know: Be an incomplete leader.

What Yogi said: “If people don’t want to come out to the ballpark, nobody’s

going to stop them.”

What leaders know: Be an incomplete follower too.

What Yogi said: “When you come to the fork in the road, take it.”

What leaders know: There’s opportunity in both directions. Go for it!

What Yogi said: “I usually take a two hour nap from one to four.”

What leaders know: Life is short, take time to relax.

What Yogi said: “I really didn’t say everything I said.”

What leaders know: Combine your qualities with humility for a truly rewarding

life.

Page 20: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

Learning to Lead

Suggested Reading

HBR’s 10 Must Reads: On Leadership. (2011) Boston, MA. Harvard University Press

Offers 10 articles that will help guide you from role player to leader. Read it for Peter Drucker’s “What

Makes an Effective Executive.” It offers straightforward insights into the responsibilities of leadership.

Hughes, R., Ginnett, R., Curphy, G. (2009) Leadership: Enhancing the Lessons of Experience. NewYork, NY: McGraw Hill Irwin.

This is a masters level text that defines leadership as a process rather than a position. It provides an excellent

overview of leadership skills and traits. Read it for the chapter on the Rocket Model of Team Effectiveness.

Brown, E., Haygood, M., McLean, R. (2010) The Little Black Book of Success: Laws of Leadershipfor Black Women. New York, NY. Ballantine Books.

Read this book regardless your sex or race. I had the pleasure of working with one of the authors

at Time Inc. Magazines in New York and I will always remember her as a delightful combination

of dignity and warmth. Read it too for practical advice on emotional intelligence and

understanding your very real leadership potential.

Cicero, Marcus Tullius. On Duties. Edited by Jeffrey Henderson. Cambridge, MA:Cambridge University Press, 2005.

On Duties is a secular bible for leading a life of integrity. It was written by the ancient Roman Cicero to his

son while he was away at school. Impress your friends…the book is presented in Latin, along with the English

translation. Read it to better understand your parents and the life-lessons you will try to impart on your children.

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Page 21: Learning to Lead...Skills and Principles You Can Use Everyday

Learning to Lead

This seminar was developed based on a 40+ year career in consumer marketing in the hopes that it will inspire the boldness to turn an innovative idea into a cutting-edge vision.

Please feel free to share.

Questions or feedback – please contact me:

Paul [email protected]

(201) 741-0401

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“Celebrate your successes times 10 and your failures times 1.”

Paul Mahler