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Mark Shead

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<a href="http://blog.markshead.com">Mark Shead</a> helps businesses create better technology systems through software engineering, Agile coaching, and process improvements.

Mark's company provides a diverse set of consulting services to people looking for high efficiency, low communication overhead and a strong focus on people skills. Mark generally works with startups and startup style projects within large established organizations.

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Five Most Important Leadership Traits

By Mark Shead 36 Comments

Some sit and pontificate about whether leaders are made or born. The true leader ignores such arguments and instead concentrates on developing the leadership qualities necessary for success. In this article, we are going to discuss five leadership traits or leadership qualities that people look for in a leader. If you are able to increase your skill in displaying these five quality characteristics, you will make it easier for people to want to follow you. The less time you have to spend on getting others to follow you, the more time you have to spend refining exactly where you want to go and how to get there.

The five leadership traits/leadership qualities are:

  1. Honest
  2. Forward-Looking
  3. Competent
  4. Inspiring
  5. Intelligent

These five qualities come from Kouzes and Posner’s research into leadership that was done for the book The Leadership Challenge.

Your skill at exhibiting these five leadership qualities is strongly correlated with people’s desire to follow your lead. Exhibiting these traits will inspire confidence in your leadership. Not exhibiting these traits or exhibiting the opposite of these traits will decrease your leadership influence with those around you.

It is important to exhibit, model and display these traits. Simply possessing each trait is not enough; you have to display it in a way that people notice. People want to see that you actively demonstrate these leadership qualities and will not just assume that you have them. It isn’t enough to just be neutral. For example, just because you are not dishonest will not cause people to recognize that you are honest. Just avoiding displays of incompetence won’t inspire the same confidence as truly displaying competence.

The focus of each of these five traits needs to be on what people see you do–not just the things they don’t see you do. Being honest isn’t a matter of not lying–it is taking the extra effort to display honesty.

Honesty as a Leadership Quality

People want to follow an honest leader. Years ago, many employees started out by assuming that their leadership was honest simply because the authority of their position. With modern scandals, this is no longer true.

When you start a leadership position, you need to assume that people will think you are a little dishonest. In order to be seen as an honest individual, you will have to go out of your way to display honesty. People will not assume you are honest simply because you have never been caught lying.

One of the most frequent places where leaders miss an opportunity to display honesty is in handling mistakes. Much of a leader’s job is to try new things and refine the ideas that don’t work. However, many leaders want to avoid failure to the extent that they don’t admit when something did not work.

There was a medium size organization that was attempting to move to a less centralized structure. Instead of one location serving an entire city, they wanted to put smaller offices throughout the entire metro area. At the same time, they were planning an expansion for headquarters to accommodate more customers at the main site. The smaller remote offices was heralded as a way to reach more customers at a lower cost and cover more demographic areas.

After spending a considerable amount of money on a satellite location, it became clear that the cost structure would not support a separate smaller office. As the construction completed on the expanded headquarters building, the smaller office was closed. This was good decision making. The smaller offices seemed like a good idea, but when the advantages didn’t materialize (due to poor management or incorrect assumptions) it made sense to abandon the model. This was a chance for the leadership to display honesty with the employees, be candid about why things didn’t work out as expected, learn from the mistakes an move on.

Unfortunately in this situation the leadership told employees that they had planned on closing the satellite location all along and it was just a temporary measure until construction was completed on the larger headquarters building. While this wasn’t necessarily true, it didn’t quite cross over into the area of lying. Within a few months the situation was mostly forgotten and everyone moved on. Few of the employees felt that leadership was being dishonest. However, they had passed up a marvelous opportunity to display the trait of honesty in admitting a mistake.

Opportunities to display honesty on a large scale may not happen every day. As a leader, showing people that you are honest even when it means admitting to a mistake, displays a key trait that people are looking for in their leaders. By demonstrating honesty with yourself, with your organization and with outside organizations, you will increase your leadership influence. People will trust someone who actively displays honesty–not just as an honest individual, but as someone who is worth following.

Forward-Looking as a Leadership Trait

The whole point of leadership is figuring out where to go from where you are now. While you may know where you want to go, people won’t see that unless you actively communicate it with them. Remember, these traits aren’t just things you need to have, they are things you need to actively display to those around you.

When people do not consider their leader forward-looking, that leader is usually suffering from one of two possible problems:

  1. The leader doesn’t have a forward-looking vision.
  2. The leader is unwilling or scared to share the vision with others.

When a leader doesn’t have a vision for the future, it usually because they are spending so much time on today, that they haven’t really thought about tomorrow. On a very simplistic level this can be solved simply by setting aside some time for planning, strategizing and thinking about the future.

Many times when a leader has no time to think and plan for the future, it is because they are doing a poor job of leading in the present. They have created an organization and systems that rely too much on the leader for input at every stage.

Some leaders have a clear vision, but don’t wish to share it with others. Most of the time they are concerned that they will lose credibility if they share a vision of the future that doesn’t come about. This is a legitimate concern. However, people need to know that a leader has a strong vision for the future and a strong plan for going forward. Leaders run into trouble sharing their vision of the future when they start making promises to individuals. This goes back to the trait of honesty. If a leader tells someone that “next year I’m going to make you manager of your own division”, that may be a promise they can’t keep. The leader is probably basing this promotion on the organization meeting financial goals, but the individual will only hear the personal promise.

An organization I was working with was floundering. It seemed like everyone had a different idea about what they were trying to achieve. Each department head was headed in a different direction and there was very little synergy as small fiefdoms and internal politics took their toll.

Eventually a consulting firm was called in to help fix the problem. They analyzed the situation, talked to customers, talked to employees and set up a meeting with the CEO. They were going to ask him about his vision for the future. The employees were excited that finally there would be a report stating the direction for the organization.

After the meeting, the consultants came out shaking their heads. The employees asked how the important question had gone to which the consultants replied, “we asked him, but you aren’t going to like the answer”. The CEO had told the consultant that, while he had a vision and plan for the future, he wasn’t going to share it with anyone because he didn’t want there to be any disappointment if the goals were not reached.

Leaders can communicate their goals and vision for the future without making promises that they may not be able to keep. If a leader needs to make a promise to an individual, it should be tied to certain measurable objectives being met. The CEO in the example didn’t realize how much damage he was doing by not demonstrating the trait of being forward-looking by communicating his vision with the organization.

The CEO was forward-looking. He had a plan and a vision and he spent a lot of time thinking about where the organization was headed. However, his fear of communicating these things to the rest of the organization hampered his leadership potential.

Competency as a Leadership Quality

People want to follow someone who is competent. This doesn’t mean a leader needs to be the foremost expert on every area of the entire organization, but they need to be able to demonstrate competency.

For a leader to demonstrate that they are competent, it isn’t enough to just avoid displaying incompetency. Some people will assume you are competent because of your leadership position, but most will have to see demonstrations before deciding that you are competent.

When people under your leadership look at some action you have taken and think, “that just goes to show why he is the one in charge”, you are demonstrating competency. If these moments are infrequent, it is likely that some demonstrations of competency will help boost your leadership influence.

Like the other traits, it isn’t enough for a leader to be competent. They must demonstrate competency in a way that people notice. This can be a delicate balance. There is a danger of drawing too much attention to yourself in a way that makes the leader seem arrogant. Another potential danger is that of minimizing others contributions and appearing to take credit for the work of others.

As a leader, one of the safest ways to “toot you own horn without blowing it”, is to celebrate and bring attention to team achievements. In this way you indirectly point out your competency as a leader. For example: “Last year I set a goal of reaching $12 million in sales and, thanks to everyone’s hard word, as of today, we have reached $13.5 million.”

Inspiration as a Leadership Trait

People want to be inspired. In fact, there is a whole class of people who will follow an inspiring leader–even when the leader has no other qualities. If you have developed the other traits in this article, being inspiring is usually just a matter of communicating clearly and with passion. Being inspiring means telling people how your organization is going to change the world.

A great example of inspiration is when Steve Jobs stole the CEO from Pepsi by asking him, “Do you want to sell sugar water for the rest of your life, or do you want to change the world?” Being inspiring means showing people the big picture and helping them see beyond a narrow focus and understand how their part fits into the big picture.

One technique to develop your ability to inspire is telling stories. Stories can be examples from your customers, fictitious examples from your customers, or even historical fables and myths. Stories can help you vividly illustrate what you are trying to communicate. Stories that communicate on an emotional level help communicate deeper than words and leave an imprint much stronger than anything you can achieve through a simple stating of the facts.

Learning to be inspiring is not easy–particularly for individuals lacking in charisma. It can be learned. Take note of people who inspire you and analyze the way they communicate. Look for ways to passionately express your vision. While there will always be room for improvement, a small investment in effort and awareness will give you a significant improvement in this leadership trait.

Intelligence as a Leadership Trait

Intelligence is something that can be difficult to develop. The road toward becoming more intelligent is difficult, long and can’t be completed without investing considerable time. Developing intelligence is a lifestyle choice. Your college graduation was the beginning of your education, not the end. In fact, much of what is taught in college functions merely as a foundational language for lifelong educational experiences.

To develop intelligence you need to commit to continual learning–both formally and informally. With modern advances in distance, education it is easy to take a class or two each year from well respected professors in the evening at your computer.

Informally, you can develop a great deal of intelligence in any field simply by investing a reasonable amount of time to reading on a daily basis. The fact is that most people won’t make a regular investment in their education. Spending 30 minutes of focused reading every day will give you 182 hours of study time each year.

For the most part, people will notice if you are intelligent by observing your behavior and attitude. Trying to display your intelligence is likely to be counterproductive. One of the greatest signs of someone who is truly intelligent is humility. The greater your education, the greater your understanding of how little we really understand.

You can demonstrate your intelligence by gently leading people toward understanding–even when you know the answer. Your focus needs to be on helping others learn–not demonstrating how smart you are. Arrogance will put you in a position where people are secretly hopeful that you’ll make a mistake and appear foolish.

As unintuitive as it may seem, one of the best ways to exhibit intelligence is by asking questions. Learning from the people you lead by asking intelligent thoughtful questions will do more to enhance your intelligence credibility than just about anything. Of course this means you need to be capable of asking intelligent questions.

Everyone considers themselves intelligent. If you ask them to explain parts of their area of expertise and spend the time to really understand (as demonstrated by asking questions), their opinion of your intelligence will go up. After all, you now know more about what makes them so intelligent, so you must be smart as well. Your ability to demonstrate respect for the intellect of others will probably do more to influence the perception of your intellect than your actual intelligence.

Summary of the Five Leadership Qualities

By consciously making an effort to exhibit these traits, people will be more likely to follow you. These are the most important traits that people look for in their leaders. By exhibiting them on a regular basis, you will be able to grow your influence to its potential as a leader.

Filed Under: Leadership

Management Quotes

By Mark Shead 2 Comments

In the same spirit as our collection of leadership quotes, here are a number of management quotes for your inspiration and enjoyment.

The conventional definition of management is getting work done through people, but real management is developing people through work. ~ Agha Hasan Abedi

This quote reminds us that people matter–something that many individuals in management quickly forget.

Effective leadership is putting first things first. Effective management is discipline, carrying it out. ~ Stephen Covey

This management quote makes an interesting distinction between leadership or setting a direction and management–the execution of the plan.

If you pick the right people and give them the opportunity to spread their wings—and put compensation as a carrier behind it—you almost don’t have to manage them. ~ Jack Welch

Jack Welch points out that the right people and the right motivation can solve most management problems. Often management is the process of trying to get the wrong individual to perform for less than they are worth.

Good management is the art of making problems so interesting and their solutions so constructive that everyone wants to get to work and deal with them. ~ Paul Hawken

Employees want their jobs to be important and fulfilling. This quote by Hawken is a good reminder that management has the ability to make a problem interesting or boring–often simply in the way the problem is framed and presented.

Because a thing seems difficult for you, do not think it impossible for anyone to accomplish. ~ Marcus Aurelius

This quotation is relevant in a number of different areas. Along with other management quotes it is a good reminder that we need to find the right people for the right jobs. Just because we can’t do something well doesn’t mean there isn’t someone else out there who can do it well and easily. Management is matching those individuals with the right positions.

Just because we aren’t good at something doesn’t mean that our competition is unable to do it.

Organization doesn’t really accomplish anything. Plans don’t accomplish anything, either. Theories of management don’t much matter. Endeavors succeed or fail because of the people involved. Only by attracting the best people will you accomplish great deeds. ~ Colin Powell

People matter. I don’t think Powell lessens the importance of organization and planning, but he does point out that success depends on the people not the plans.

Make your top managers rich and they will make you rich. ~ Robert H. Johnson

I’ve seen management put more effort into trying to figure out how not to reward top performers than trying to figure out how to grow their business. This management quote reminds us that there can be a beneficial two way benefit by making high performers rich.

We cling to hierarchies because our place in a hierarchy is, rightly or wrongly, a major indicator of our social worth. ~ Harold Leavitt

There aren’t many companies that abandon traditional hierarchy structures. This statement may reveal one of the reasons why.

So much of what we call management consists in making it difficult for people to work. ~ Peter Drucker

This is a beautiful management quote and so very true. How many times have you run into all kinds of obstacles thrown up in the name of management.

Men are going to have to learn to be managers in a world where the organization will come close to consisting of all chiefs and one Indian. The Indian, of course, is the computer. ~ Thomas Whisler

This quote is different than the others as it tries to predict the future. I’m not sure that we’ll ever get there, but it is an interesting thought.

The secret of successful managing is to keep the five guys who hate you away from the four guys who haven’t made up their minds. ~ Casey Stengel

This quote is a bit more humorous than the other quotes on this page, but there is still an element of truth it it.

No business in the world has ever made more money with poorer management. ~ Bill Terry

And yet that is exactly what many businesses try when they need to make a better profit.

A good manager is a man who isn’t worried about his own career but rather the careers of those who work for him. ~ HSM Burns

This sums up a lot of management quotes. The role of the manager is to help develop others.

 

Management by objective works – if you know the objectives. Ninety percent of the time you don’t. ~ Peter Drucker

“Top” management is supposed to be a tree full of owls-hooting when management heads into the wrong part of the forest. I’m still unpersuaded they even know where the forest is. ~ Robert Townsend

When a management team with a reputation for brilliance tackles a business with a reputation for bad economics, it is the reputation of the business that remains intact. ~ Warren Buffet

Lots of folks confuse bad management with destiny. ~ Kin Hubbard

Filed Under: Management

Leadership Definition

By Mark Shead 1 Comment

So what is the definition of leadership? Our personal leadership definition can be very different from other’s leadership definition. The goal in this post is to examine some of the different definitions of leadership. No one leadership definition is correct, but the careful analysis of multiple leadership definitions can help us better understand what it means to be a leader.

  • the activity of leading; “his leadership inspired the team”
  • the ability to lead; “he believed that leadership can be taught”

wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn

The first definition of leadership references the activity of leading. It is important to remember that leading is something you do. It isn’t a position you hold, it is an activity. Your position may require you to lead, but it is possible to hol a leadership position without doing any actual leading.

The second definition of leadership above, talks about ability. This helps remind us that leadership is something that requires a skill. Don’t ever assume that you can lead merely because of your position. Leadership requires you to do something and it requires you to have the skills to actually lead.

  • Leadership has been written as the “process of social influence in which one person can enlist the aid and support of others in the accomplishment of a common task.” Definitions more inclusive of followers have also emerged. …

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leadership

Wikipedia’s definition examines that the social influence perspective. This definition of leadership helps point out the importance of influencing others. It isn’t enough to tell people what to do. Your social influence is what determines your ability to actually lead. Having a plan is good, but isn’t very useful unless you have people willing to help you execute your plan.

  • leader – a person who rules or guides or inspires others
  • leader – drawing card: a featured article of merchandise sold at a loss in order to draw customers

wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn

Princeton’s definition of a leader talkes about a person who directs or inspires others. You can lead from a place of power (for example when you can fire an employee) or you can lead from a place of inspiration (where people do what you ask because they believe in you and your mission).

The final definition of a leader from Princeton is the idea of a product that draws people into your store. For example, a loss leader is an item that is priced intentionally below cost inorder to get people to the store so they wil spend money on other things. This idea of a leader is something that attracts people–it draws them in of their own free will because it is attractive and valuable. While this type of leader isn’t a person, it is helpful to think about when examining leadership definitions. being a leader requires that you attract followers in much the same way that a store product leader needs to bring in customers.

Filed Under: Leadership

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Leadership Articles

  • Leadership Quotes
  • Leadership Styles
  • Hiring a Good Leader
  • Five Most Important Leadership Traits
  • Management Quotes
  • Leadership Definition
  • Leading on Purpose
  • Leadership Coach Interviews
  • Leadership and Writing
  • Tips for New Supervisors
  • Leadership Trait Theory
  • The Definition of Management
  • The Functional Leadership Model
  • Leadership of the Future
  • Creating Confidence
  • Vision and Efficiency
  • Setting Goals
  • Leading through Example
  • Management Systems
  • Cultivating Respect
  • Don’t be Reactive
  • Is Your Vision Clear?
  • Teaching Teamwork
  • Your Relationship with the People you Lead
  • Clear Vision
  • Successful People are not Necessarily Good Leaders
  • Recognizing Failure
  • How to Challenge an Organization
  • The Born Leader
  • Leadership vs. Management

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