By Paul Bertrand
May 26, 2015Recently I have been fortunate to be able to help young leaders in their new roles of being accountable for others. I want to take this opportunity to recognize my clients who are investing in their leaders, especially offering some form of training or instructional basics to those who have never managed people.
Most of us have, at one point or another, read or heard the
importance of strong leadership in business or organizations. A common and imperative competency for many
management roles, but yet I find it concerning that with new supervisors or
managers this skill is often developed through his or her own experiences of
seeing the skill, good or bad, by someone else.
Just imagine learning on how to ride a bike by simply looking at others
on the bike path peddling along, and then one day someone tells you: “Get on
the bike and make your way.” Great way to get a few
bruises and falls.
It is sad to say that too often the individual with a new
task of managing people is placed in a similar dilemma. They behave the same manner that has been
shown through their previous boss and hope for the best. Depending on the leaders we
worked with, it could have included a prevailing harsh atmosphere, with low
appreciation. In some cases, a
leadership style simply unacceptable. An outdated command and control approach
inherited from the industrial age.
This may help us understand why in so many organizations
leadership is understood to be a core value, but yet when employees are
surveyed, so often this point is rated at a much lower level than expected.
Leadership development programs have proven
to be among the most effective measures, providing lasting and measurable
results. In a positive organization, every person promoted to a leading role would
receive support through a coaching program.
New leaders need to know basic
understanding built on respect and appreciative social interactions. The key success factors of leadership
explained and understood are essential for giving them the necessary confidence
and certainty right from the beginning.
The key goal is to allow a new leader to
understand people's motivators, hopes and difficulties and to create the right
circumstances and support mechanisms to allow people to live up to their full
potential.
Is this not a correlation in
improving profitability and productivity?
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