FREE online courses on Great Managers - A GENERAL APPROACH - LEADERSHIP
There is a basic problem with the style of leadership
advocated in this article in that nearly every historic "Leader" one can name
has had a completely different approach; Machiavelli did not advocate being a
caring Protector as a means of becoming a great leader but rather that a Prince
ought to be happy with "a reputation for being cruel in order to keep his
subjects unified and loyal". Your situation, however, is a little different. You
do not have the power to execute, nor even to banish. The workforce is rapidly
gaining in sophistication as the world grows more complex. You cannot
effectively control through fear, so you must try another route. You could
possibly gain compliance and rule your team through edict; but you would lose
their input and experience, and gain only the burdens of greater decision
making. You do not have the right environment to be a despot; you gain advantage
by being a team leader.
A common mistake about the image of a manager is that they
must be loud, flamboyant, and a great drinker or golfer or racket player or a
great something social to draw people to them. This is wrong. In any company, if
you look hard enough, you will find quiet modest people who manager teams with
great personal success. If you are quiet and modest, fear not; all you need is
to talk clearly to the people who matter (your team) and they will hear you.
The great managers are the ones who challenge the existing
complacency and who are prepared to lead their teams forward towards a personal
vision. They are the ones who recognize problems, seize opportunities, and
create their own future. Ultimately, they are the ones who stop to think where
they want to go and then have the shameless audacity to set out.