Art’s Weekly Leadership Message-Engage With Purpose

Note from Art: Starting with this post, the Weekly Leadership Message is a new Monday feature here at Management Excellence. Use them in good health and great leadership!

The only way I let myself watch football is from the action-side of an elliptical. I love the game, but don’t love the time investment or potential for calorie consumption.

Yesterday, while working out and watching the Saints chew up the Chicago Bears, one of the announcers commented on the work of ethic of Saints team leader, star quarterback and seemingly great guy, Drew Brees. His words were something to the effect, of, I watched Drew in practice this week, and no matter what he was doing, it seemed like he did it with purpose. He brings the same intensity to practice that he does to game situations. 

Blog enough, and you’ll hear a post in just about everything. He had me at, “purpose” on this one.

No Timeouts in The Life of a Leader:

You don’t get time off from your role as a leader. There are no timeouts, no after hours hang-up-your-hat and become one of the gang situations.  I’ve attended too many company after-hours events where the boss made an ass of himself or herself to know that NO ONE really wants to see the boss take a timeout.

The most effective leaders I’ve worked for, with and now coach, understand that every encounter, from the greeting in the parking lot to the hallway conversation to lunch to participation in meetings, represents an opportunity to do something positive for someone or some group. 

Prepare Your Mind to Lead Effectively-Before You Walk in the Door:

One of my favorite examples is the senior manager who spends a few extra moments “prepping” for the day in her car in the parking lot before walking into the office.  She’s not putting on makeup or fixing her hair. She’s preparing her mind to engage, to lead, and to remember that her focus is on others and helping them solve problems in pursuit of their priorities.  This professional engages with purpose every single minute of her day.

7 Ways You Can Engage with Purpose Everyday:

  1. Your polite but focused questions help teach.
  2. Your thoughtful (never rushed or harassed) responses show respect.
  3. Your willingness to listen shows that you care.
  4. Your encouragement at a moment of failure accelerates learning and helps grow confidence.
  5. Your fair and constant reinforcement of accountability sets performance expectations.
  6. Your willingness to delegate decisions shows trust.
  7. Your interest in helping others advance and grow builds fierce loyalty and great teams.
  8. Your management of yourself models the values and behaviors of an effective leader.

The Weekly Leadership Message:

Manage yourself by focusing on others first. Make every encounter count as you engage with purpose.

Want More: Sign up for the new, Leadership Caffeine e-Newsletter. I’ll guard your e-mail address with ferocity, while sharing ideas to energize and inspire.

About Art Petty:

Art Petty is a Leadership & Career Coach helping motivated professionals of all levels achieve their potential. In addition to working with highly motivated professionals, Art frequently works with project teams in pursuit of high performance. Art’s second book, Leadership Caffeine-Ideas to Energize Your Professional Development, will be published in late September of 2011.

Contact Art via e-mail to discuss a coaching, workshop or speaking engagement.

Leadership Caffeine Podcast #7: Kevin Eikenberry on Making the Shift from “Bud to Boss”

Cover art for Leadership Caffeine PodcastThe most difficult job in the professional life of any leader may very well be that first role…when he or she moves from individual contributor to suddenly being responsible for the outcomes of others.

For those of you who lived through it, you know that the experience can be uncomfortable, awkward, and even a bit intimidating. Of course, most first-time leaders have a caring, nurturing coach in the form of their direct manager, standing by to help and guide through the difficult patches, right?  Wrong!!

In my own work for my book with Rich Petro, Practical Lessons in Leadership, the feedback was loud and clear:

  • Most first-time leaders earned their position more by accident than plan.
  • A majority of these first-time leaders indicate that they did not receive adequate support from their manager.

Additional research offers that there’s a tremendous first-time leader flame-out problem, with many of these accidental and under-supported professionals flailing and failing in their initial role. That’s not good for anyone…the individual, the team members or the organization.

This truly critical issue receives some much needed attention in the recent book, From Bud to Boss-Secrets to a Successful Transition to Remarkable Leadership by consultants, authors and leadership experts, Kevin Eikenberry and Guy Harris.  While the focus is on helping the first time leader successfully transition from one of the gang to leader, this book is equally important for those responsible for developing and supporting first-time leaders.

Enjoy this high-energy conversation with Kevin Eikenberry.

Show Sound-Bites:

  • The complexity of transitioning from contributor and group member to leader.
  • Understanding the very real transition in relationships when you move into leadership or, “Lunch will never be the same.”
  • Areas where first-time leaders most-often struggle.
  • Those challenging initial conversations with your new direct reports.
  • Advice for getting off to a good start.
  • The need to partner with your boss.
  • How to survive a “promote and run” boss.
  • The importance of “confident humility” when starting out.
  • Dealing with the legacy of your predecessor.
  • Some lessons learned since writing the book.

Kevin is the Chief Potential Officer of The Kevin Eikenberry Group, a leadership and learning consulting company that has been helping organizations, teams and individuals reach their potential since 1993.

Related Podcast for Senior Leaders: Episode #6-Scott Eblin on Successfully Moving to The Next Level.

About The Leadership Caffeine Podcast:

The purpose of this show is to connect with leaders, management thinkers, authors, educators, entrepreneurs and anyone else passionate about improving and innovating in leadership and management. If you are interested in being a guest on the show, contact Art Petty.

About Art Petty:

Art Petty is a Leadership & Career Coach helping motivated professionals of all levels achieve their potential. In addition to working with highly motivated professionals, Art frequently works with project teams in pursuit of high performance. Art’s second book, Leadership Caffeine-Ideas to Energize Your Professional Development, will be published in September of 2011.

Contact Art via e-mail to discuss a coaching, workshop or speaking engagement.

Leadership Caffeine-Always Lead with Context

Overheard from various managers:

“I know it doesn’t make any sense, but corporate wants it done this way.”

“You don’t need to worry about the Why…just do your job.”

“Because I said so.”

Chances are you’ve heard one of those statements or some variant of them at some time during your professional life. They are obnoxious, offensive and importantly, they take a perfectly good opportunity to get the best effort out of someone and stomp all over it and then flush it down the toilet.

The empty orders above are utterances without context.

Context in this case is that not-so-secret ingredient that helps people understand the idea or issue and how it connects to something important in the workplace. Context provides the basis for understanding and assessing a situation or a request to do something. It has the equivalent workplace outcome of adding yeast to the process of making bread.  Without it, everything is flat.

People and teams do their best work when they understand how their efforts fit into the bigger picture of the organization. It’s unfortunate that in the hectic pace of business, too many managers fail to leverage the catalytic power of context, and instead, end up issuing empty orders to their compliant but not fully engaged employees.

The Three Levels of Context in the Workplace:

1. Big Picture…What We’re All About Context (Organizational Context). This is “reason for being” context and it provides that sense of belonging to something meaningful and purposeful.

Inherent in this type of foundational context is a directional component as well.  Mission, Vision and Values are powerful context builders here. Unfortunately, these important concepts are often reduced to meaningless jumbles of framed artwork hanging on conference room walls. Instead, Mission, Vision and Values should be used to offer critical foundational understanding of the purpose and general direction of the organization.

Your Actions:

  • Periodically talk to team members about Mission, Vision and Values. Ensure that new employees understand the relevance of these elements to the broader work and functioning of the organization.
  • Use the values to define acceptable and unacceptable behaviors.
  • Teach people and teams to leverage values in decision-making.
  • Engage senior leaders in the discussions and politely challenge them to make Mission, Vision and Values relevant in the context of the firm’s current situation.

2. What We’re Doing to Win with Customers and Beat Competitors (Strategic Context). Whereas foundational context (Mission, Vision and Values) provide a sense of belonging and general purpose and direction, strategic context gives people the high level understanding of the importance of their actions and how and where they fit in support of helping the firm win customers and beat competitors.

I’ve never understood why so many senior leaders fail to provide adequate strategic context to their broader organizations. One leader kept his firm’s strategy securely locked in a drawer, lest anyone leak it to competitors. Another rationalized that the big picture thinking was for senior leaders only. Both grossly misunderstand how important this context is to helping the organization move forward.

Actions:

  • Talk strategy frequently. Don’t kick off projects, discuss results, set goals or talk about improvements, cost cuts or just about anything, without anchoring the discussion in strategy.
  • Invite front-line professionals (sales, customer service) to talk with your team frequently about marketplace realities and issues.
  • Ensure that all goals discussions are in the context of strategy, and always, always, always link scorecard and other discussions about business performance to strategy.
  • Ask for input. The broader topics of strategy and execution should be bi-directional, with employees offering ideas for improvements and feedback on what’s working and what’s not.

3. “Me” Context.  We all want to understand how we as individuals fit into the picture. We also want to understand at least in general where we might be going as the team or organization succeeds.

“Me” Context provides us with purpose and with a sense of belonging. “I count, and my work here contributes to helping move the team forward and ultimately to helping us win with customers and beat competitors.”

The absence of “Me Context” results in a kind of out of body experience at work, where people go through the motions, but don’t truly engage with their full force and power.

Actions:

  • Always frame positions and job descriptions in terms of how the role is expected to contribute to the firm’s/team’s success.
  • Ensure that goals discussions are anchored in Strategic Context.
  • Deliver behaviorally-focused constructive and positive feedback often and always link it to the business.
  • As identified above, ask for input. Your act of asking and listening…and then acting reinforces the connection that people have with their organizations and teams.
  • Don’t ignore professional development and advancement. A surprisingly large number of organizations that I encounter don’t have anything formal in place for developmental activities and discussions. The absence of this system is not an excuse for you.  Help people grow and they will pay you back many times over.

The Bottom-Line for Now:

One of your core tasks as a leader is to foster an environment where people have the tools and resources to do their best work in support of the firm. Context helps create the effective working environment. Consider this as critical context for your own role.

Leadership Caffeine Podcast #6: Scott Eblin on Succeeding at The Next Level

Cover art for Leadership Caffeine PodcastNavigating the move from one executive level to the next is both exciting and daunting.

Depending upon your career stage, successfully executing on your new responsibilities might require drawing upon a significantly different set of skills than those demanded in prior positions. And while many professionals do successfully navigate the transition, a good number…up to 40% according to one study (Center for Creative Leadership), actually fail during the 18 months following a promotion. That’s a big number by anyone’s measure.

Scott Eblin, co-founder and President of The Eblin Group, and the author of, The Next Level-What Insiders Know About Executive Success, knows more than a few things about helping professionals successfully navigate up the ladder.  His powerful and practical book is an ideal resource for anyone anticipating or involved in this situation.

Scott and I caught up recently to talk about the book (now in its second edition) and the opportunities and challenges that await the Next Level professional. The conversation was filled with ideas, practical advice and more than a few truly important nuggets of gold for executives or executives-in-waiting. Another engaging and fun conversation with a great professional here on The Leadership Caffeine Podcast! Enjoy!

Show Sound-Bites:

  • The critical derailment factors for leaders and executives moving up the ladder.
  • Why the failure to adapt and break old habits might be the most salient challenge faced by these professionals.
  • The habits that Next Level Leaders must “Pick Up” and those that they must “Let Go” to succeed.
  • The power of Peer Coaching and how to do it practically and effectively.
  • The challenge for Next Level Leaders to focus less on day-to-day operations and more on strategic opportunities.
  • The Executive Listening tour made practical
  • An overview of the 2nd edition of The Next Level, including the various tools included in the book.

About The Leadership Caffeine Podcast:

The purpose of this show is to connect with leaders, management thinkers, authors, educators, entrepreneurs and anyone else passionate about improving and innovating in leadership and management. If you are interested in being a guest on the show, contact Art Petty.

About Art Petty:

Art Petty is a Leadership & Career Coach helping motivated professionals of all levels achieve their potential. In addition to working with highly motivated professionals, Art frequently works with project teams in pursuit of high performance. Art’s second book, Leadership Caffeine-Ideas to Energize Your Professional Development, will be published in September of 2011.

Contact Art via e-mail to discuss a coaching, workshop or speaking engagement.

 

 

Leadership Caffeine-Surviving and Thriving Under the Tough Empathy Leader

If you work for a leader who practices what Goffee and Jones described in their HBR classic, “Why Should Anyone Be Led by You,” as Tough Empathy, you can expect to be on edge a good deal.

Respond well to this demanding but respectful leader’s style, and instead of teetering precariously on the bleeding edge of survival, you will be reaching constantly for the high performance edge. Read this leader incorrectly however, and you might be setting yourself up for a miserable experience.

There’s nothing group huggish and puppy dog warm about working for a leader who practices Tough Empathy. In contrast to a good deal of the leadership and management literature you run across, not every effective or inspirational leader is going to be good at small talk, show an intense interest in your outside activities or dress up in costumes and lead the charge around the building firing up the troops.  Often, their behaviors and their demeanor may be quite the opposite.

However, don’t confuse slightly aloof or highly intellectual with someone who doesn’t care intensely about your development and how your work impacts the team. Goffee and Jones viewed this style in a large number of highly successful “inspirational” leaders, and their definition of Tough Empathy, “giving people what they need, not what they want,” underscores the approach.

Four Things You Shouldn’t Expect from Tough Empathy Leaders:

1. Small talk or even a modicum of interest in your personal life.

2. Warmth.

3. Much that feels like praise.

4. “How to.”

Six Career Changing Behaviors You Can Expect from a Tough Empathy Leader:

1. Respect, including a deep, unspoken concern for you as a developing professional.

2. A hefty helping of constructive feedback without the bread (positive praise) that surrounds most feedback sandwiches.

3. The next challenge…and the next…and the next.

4. High performance expectations and an attitude that serves to constantly remind you that you can do better.

5. Extreme questioning. The questions teach you how to think.

6. Freedom to pursue your activities subject to frequent challenges on your approach or direction. Don’t expect the Tough Empathy Leader to micro-manage you, but do expect a lot of questions and challenges about your direction with assignments. The challenges are simply to assess how well you’ve thought through the situation at hand.

Five Success Skills Required When Working for a Tough Empathy Leader:

1. Change your expectations on the level of “warmth” you need from you boss. As the saying goes, “If you want unconditional love, get a dog.”

2. Learn to welcome the questions and challenges. Your gut reaction might be to feel that you are being second-guessed. Your gut is wrong. The questions and challenges are teaching and evaluation tools used liberally by Tough Empathy leaders.

3. Never wait to be told what to do. Don’t hesitate to dive in to your assignments once you’ve clarified objectives and expectations. You’re being evaluated on the quality of your questions as well.

4. Skip the excuses. The best way to piss off a Tough Empathy Leader is to attempt to explain  poor performance with lame excuses. Or, any excuses. Remember, this leader eats and breathes “accountability” and expects you to do the same. There’s room for a screw-up for the right reasons (striving, experimenting, pushing the performance edge), however, offer anything that resembles an excuse and expect to be professionally (and privately) eviscerated.

5. Judge your progress by your assignments. Don’t expect praise as a barometer of how you are doing. Look for praise in the form of your next challenging assignment. The Tough Empathy Leader votes with his/her continued investment in pushing you forward.

The Bottom-Line for Now:

We should all be so fortunate to work for a leader who cares enough to push us to be our absolute best. While the approach may not fit your preferred style, if you find yourself working for one of these characters, be smart enough to recognize the situation and to seize the opportunity to learn and grow.

About Art Petty:

Art Petty is a Leadership & Career Coach helping motivated professionals of all levels achieve their potential. In addition to working with highly motivated professionals, Art frequently works with project teams in pursuit of high performance. Art’s second book, Leadership Caffeine-Ideas to Energize Your Professional Development, will be published in September of 2011.

Contact Art via e-mail to discuss a coaching, workshop or speaking engagement.