Thursday, November 14, 2019
Leadership - Show Your Office You Can Lead - The Muse
Leadership - Show Your Office You Can Lead - The Muse Leadership - Show Your Office You Can Lead Itâs possibly the toughest transition youâll make in your career: the shift from doing to leading. If youâve made a name for yourself as a rock star high performer and are recognized as a high-potential emerging leader, the day will soon come when youâll have to stop doing everything youâre great at and discard the strengths that got you to where you are today to become an effective leader. You see, those skills- things like your subject matter expertise, your âjust do itâ track record of execution, and your ability to take a task and run with it without close supervision- can actually derail you as a manager if you keep trying to accomplish things the way youâve always done them. As a leader, itâs no longer your responsibility to âdo.â Itâs your job to help others do the tasks- and do them well. Leading and doing are polar opposites, and it can be hard to âswitch hitâ and start swinging in the other direction- but swing you must if youâre ever to be more than just a doer. Even if youâre not in a management position yet, you can start learning this skill. To give you a head start, here are three things you can learn- and apply- immediately about the transition from doing to leading: 1. Become an Ex-Specialist and a Well-Rounded Generalist Leading is all about marshaling your resources and stepping out of your comfort zone. Lisa Walsh, vice president at PepsiCo Sales, says, âYouâve probably built success as a specialist who is adept at knowing your topic or your area of the business. Itâs one of the reasons youâve gotten promoted. But as you go higher, you will be valued for understanding the business and how various pieces of the business integrate into the whole.â So, those company-wide email updates that youâve been ignoring? Itâs time to stop hitting delete and start mining them for information that can contribute to your knowledge of whatâs going on outside your department. In addition, start networking outside your team, looking for people like yourself who are subject matter experts trying to broaden their exposure to other areas of the business. As you begin to trade knowledge, youâll become each othersâ go-to people. If you work in finance, for instance, recruit some smart new friends in research, engineering, manufacturing, and marketing. Then, you wonât only have an expert contact in each of those areas, but by collaborating with them, youâll begin to learn that knowledge yourself and become more well-rounded within the company. 2. Own Your Failures, Not Your Successes Until now, youâve probably made a point of showcasing your accomplishments and promoting your value up the chain of command. Itâs how you got recognized as a high-potential emerging leader in the first place. Well, get ready for that to change. In the transition from doing to leading, youâll have to re-evaluate how you deal with successes and failures. Walsh says, âMost of us work on high-powered teams, but every team needs a leader. You have to be willing to put yourself out there, take risks, and take responsibility for both successes and failures. Thatâs what makes a great leader.â The Chinese philosopher Lao Tzu once said, âWhen the best leaderâs work is done, the people say, âWe did it ourselves.ââ To be a great leader, youâll need to get in the habit of letting your team own the wins, while you assume responsibility for risks and failures. According to a CFO with Bank of America, true leaders are humble enough to apologize publicly and gloat privately. âYou donât see leaders bragging about their success,â she says. âThey talk about their team and their teamâs contributions. And if they feel really good about themselves, they boast at home or with a close friend, but not publicly.â Whatâs more, a leader will apologize and take accountability for his or her actions when things go wrong. So, how can up-and-coming leaders display this skill, even if theyâre not in a leadership role yet? Next time a group youâve worked with achieves a big win, publicly acknowledge each individual for his or her effort. And next time the team suffers a setback, donât play the blame game. Instead, raise your hand to be the one to deliver the bad news to management, along with a plan for how the team can move forward. 3. Turn Your To-Do List Into a To-Lead List The best way to learn leadership skills is not to wait until you are promoted, but to take on a management challenge first, regardless of whether youâre in a supervisory position. Your challenge is this: Identify a task or a project that is currently on your to-do list, such as an assignment at work or, if thereâs nothing suitable on-site, a project outside of work, such as a charitable drive or a professional association event. Then, try to achieve the end result by leading- not doing- the work. For example, if you work in HR, you might be the go-to person to stay up late finessing the PowerPoint deck the night before a big presentation to the executive team. But is this something you could accomplish by leading someone else on the team, rather than doing the work yourself? Those are the questions youâll find yourself answering in a leadership position- questions you can practice answering now. To do this well at work, youâll need to get to know your peers, the things that motivate them, and their career aspirations. And let your manager know that youâre looking for ways to practice your people management and project leadership skills. (To be clear: This is not about mindlessly pushing your workload off onto others!) Get clear on the goal or end result of the project, share your goal with your manager, and offer to include colleagues who would be excited to get involved. Tie your request to your colleagues to something that you know would benefit them, like âItâs not just another presentation; we have the opportunity to change the way our company handles flex workingâ or âHereâs an opportunity to show off your graphic design skills.â They key to success is to make it personal and meaningful. Donât tell them what to do, but work together to create clear goals, expectations, and accountability by asking questions like âHow will we measure success?â âWhat steps do we need to take to make that happen?â âHow will we hold ourselves accountable?â and âHow will we celebrate when we achieve this?â By shifting the focus away from yourself and onto a team member, youâll learn the valuable art of leadership while still working one-on-one with a trusted collaborator. So there you have it: To make the leap from employee to leader, move from specialist to generalist, let the team own the wins while you own the failures, and turn your to-do list into a to-lead list. In short, donât just do it- lead it! Photo of flock of birds courtesy of Shutterstock.
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