A Cup of Leadership CaffeineFresh from a weekend of rediscovering the lawn and gardening muscles that clearly took the winter off, I found myself happy that I was able to quickly access freshly sharpened, well-oiled tools. As any good tradesman or craftsman (or weekend gardener) will tell you, there is no substitute for the right tool, properly maintained, when you need it.  The same goes for leaders.

While there is no substitute for experience when it comes to leading, the role is a composite of activities, knowledge and skills that unless properly developed and maintained will quickly dull. Proper maintenance includes regularly revisiting fundamentals, challenging yourself with exposure to new tools and situations and broadening your knowledge of other critical elements of leading in this emerging world.

3 Tools to Master and Skill Sets to Sharpen that Will Improve Your Leadership Effectiveness:

1.  Revisit the fundamentals regularly. I’ve yet to conduct a workshop with experienced leaders where a number of them didn’t comment on how helpful it was to revisit some of the fundamentals, including: the role of a leader, feedback basics, active listening skills, presentation skills, the art of asking questions and others.

As you gain experience, remember that it’s remarkably easy to develop an overly strong and false sense of self-confidence that leads to shortcuts and bad habits. Revisiting the fundamentals can prevent that decay and keep you in top condition.

2.  Learn to negotiate. One of the areas of glaring weakness in many otherwise good leaders is the lack of negotiation skills.  While almost all of us probably think that we know how to negotiate, we’re likely making critical and costly mistakes with alarming regularity.

It’s quite possible to move through your education and career without being exposed to formal negotiation training, yet this is in large part what leaders spend much of their time doing.  If you think that your BATNA is a statistic calculated in baseball or something that you swing at a round object coming your way, it’s time to invest some time in learning the art and science of negotiating.  Failure to do so is a commitment to leaving money and performance on the table.

3.  Improve your Cultural IQ. Great leaders and professionals develop culture sensing and coping skills through deliberate preparation and practice.  As your organization stretches globally and your involvement with suppliers, partners, employees and customers around the globe increases, you’ll want to be culturally aware. Your competitors are!

If Hofstede’s Cultural Dimensions sounds like a band that your kid listens to or a summary of the weight differences of people across different cultures, you need to invest time and energy in developing your Cultural IQ.

The Bottom-Line for Now:

Hey, this leadership role is hard work.  The title is generally not much more than a learner’s permit that requires you to develop and cultivate your skills to succeed as well as to avoid disaster.

Regardless of your age and experience, the laws of entropy apply and the only way to prevent decay is to keep growing, keep learning and keep moving.  You owe it to yourself, your firm and your team to keep the skills sharp.  Set the pace for your team with your own professional development and watch as others follow your lead.