(Cont'd)
This
is not an article about being tough on your employees. It is
an article about being honest with your self. Whether you are
the leader in an organization, a family, a church, or a committee,
there is no “them”. Your choices set a tone. What
you say and what you don’t say send a message.
A
leader is an architect. Your mind including your assumptions,
beliefs, and perceptions, is your design tool. The behavioral
choices you make each day come from the way you think. These
choices, combined with the choices of others, become “the
way we do things.” Therefore, organizational change and
growth do not happen at the level of behavior, but at the level
of thought. Behavior originates in thought. Emotion is your
body’s response to thought. Emotion is the driving force
behind all choices. Negative or positive, excited or bored,
emotion is the energy of a group of people. Leaders contribute
to the energy of the group via the way they feel. The energy
at Schuler’s was caring, helpful, and enthusiastic. The
energy at Steak and Shake was apathetic and slow moving. If
you are going to be an excellent leader/architect, you need
to understand how you think and how your thinking makes you
feel.
A
great many people see themselves as victims. They are either
expecting others to do something to them, or expecting others
to do something for them. If you are expecting others to do
something to you, you spend time shoring up your defenses, planning
your counter attacks, planning your preemptive attacks, or avoiding
certain people altogether. If you are waiting for others to
do something for you, you are helpless and powerless until someone
takes care of you. If you are not being cared for or treated
in the way you think you should be, then you feel under appreciated,
or mistreated, resentful, or the victim of selfish people.
If
you are a leader and you think like a victim, your thoughts
and emotions, and their resulting choices will serve to create
a structure that encourages confusion and conflict. For example,
the manager who avoids talking to the underperforming employee
creates a structure that encourages poor performance. The message
sent, even though it isn’t intended, is: “Your performance
is acceptable to me.” The manager who constantly criticizes
someone sends the message: “I expect you to do poorly.”
Whatever your opinion of someone else may be, that becomes your
vision for them. These thoughts will generate emotions and behaviors
that will serve to promote the behaviors you say you don’t
want.
Leaders
who are self aware recognize when they feel victimized or uncomfortable.
They recognize that their discomfort and their behaviors are
out of alignment with their vision and with who they are as
a person. This acknowledgment and recognition must be nonjudgmental.
That is, you don’t condemn yourself for how you feel.
You accept it and clarify who you are, what you want, and the
vision for your organization. You determine what your next steps
will be in order to come into alignment with your intentions.
You determine what actions will best serve the highest good
for all concerned. As humans, we are always susceptible to feeling
like victims. Excellent leaders move themselves out of the neighborhood
of victim-hood and into the high-rise of personal responsibility.
To
summarize, the thoughts, emotions and choices of leaders become
the structure of an organization. As structure is reinforced,
it influences behavior. The place to begin growth or correction
is within yourself. Your shift in thinking radiates outward
and influences the structure. Leadership is not about getting
people to do things your way. Leadership is influence. Whatever
thoughts and emotions you are bringing to the table--that is
your influence. This is true at your place of work, in your
home, in your spiritual community, and in any other group in
which you are involved. Choosing to shift your thinking away
from victim-hood is not easy. It’s easier to be a victim.
Your intention and willingness will move you forward. Your ability
to reflect honestly on your own contribution to your conditions
and to the conditions of your organization will serve you well.
Your commitment to who you are, to the well-being of others,
and to the vision of the organization will define you as a great
leader. Leadership is a choice that is made moment by moment.
Leadership is a practice and this is how you practice it.
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About
The Author
William
Frank Diedrich is a speaker, executive coach, and
the author of Beyond Blaming: Unleashing Power
and Passion in People and Organizations. William
offers keynotes and workshops on leadership and
moving beyond blaming. William has developed the
Leaders' Edge, an online leadership class. Learn
more about William at http://noblaming.com.
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