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What’s Leadership Anyway?
By Maya Townsend, MSOD Google search on leadership yields 914 million hits. Amazon lists over 17,000 leadership books. And every company seems to have a leadership development program. Despite all of the resources we have, it’s difficult to understand exactly what leadership is. Often people can’t describe leadership, but they know it when they see it. Three local leaders have seen a lot of leadership, both good and bad. Here’s what they think about the best leadership-not in theory, but in practice in today’s organizations.Leadership is Trust
Marilyn Smith, President of Life Companies at The Hanover Insurance Group, had a daunting leadership challenge. She needed to retain and motivate staff as they transitioned an entire line of business to another company. Employees knew that completing the project would mean the end of all of their jobs. Yet, 95% stayed on through the transition. Clearly, leadership had something do with these remarkable results. Marilyn credits much of the success to honesty and trust. She says, “People need to trust you for the organization to be successful.” That means sending the tough messages and being straight with people, even when it’s difficult. Employees appreciate the honesty and work harder knowing they can trust their leaders to tell them the truth. Underlying the practice of being truthful and honest is a tendency to consider people. The business comes first, and leaders need to make good decisions to support the business, Marilyn explained. But those decisions can also be good for people. For example, Marilyn and her leadership team found opportunities during the closure process to promote people, broaden their skill bases, and provide them with learning that they wouldn’t have otherwise received. The opportunities made it worthwhile for many of employees to stay with the company. They also showed employees that their leaders cared about them. As one walked out the door on the last day, she told Marilyn that she was leaving the best job she had ever had. Build Trust in Your Leadership Leaders of nonprofit organizations have a specific challenge: work within limited budgets to engage a broad range of stakeholders around a common cause. Charlie McDermott is Deputy Director of the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency that supports hundreds of nonprofit cultural organizations in Massachusetts. He talked about how leaders succeed through alignment. For one thing, leaders must be able to align the highest vision and goals of an organization with the details of day-to-day operations. Says Charlie, “Leaders see the through-line. They keep the big picture in focus, but they are rigorous in assessing what resources are needed to advance their goals – and dogged in securing those resources.” But alignment isn’t just about resources and goals. It’s also about people. “It’s important for there to be alignment between constituents,” Charlie explained. Especially in nonprofit organizations, there are often gaps between the perspectives and priorities of staff and board. The leader’s job is to help bridge those gaps, encouraging a common direction despite differences. Create Alignment through Your Leadership- Articulate the common vision and spread it throughout constituent groups
- Find the common thread between constituent groups: what do they all care about?
- Connect tactics and tasks to the big picture. Make sure that all activities align with the vision of the organization. If not, reassess whether the activity is necessary.
- Subscribe to several magazines and journals, at least 2 of which are outside your area of focus.
- Make a practice of meeting and listening new people, especially those outside your focus area.
- Practice articulating the viewpoints and needs of various constituent groups. Then experiment with adapting your message to address to their interests.
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