There’s a thin line
between leadership and manipulation.
Both can be defined as influencing others. Both deal with trying to get
someone to do what you want them to do. Both use many of the same tools. Both
try to leverage an individual’s beliefs and feelings to elicit a desired
behavior. So how do you know if you’re leading or just being manipulative?
The difference lies in your heart. Ask yourself: Why am
I doing this? Your motives determine whether you’re leading or
manipulating. Are you looking out for yourself or are you serving a greater
good? Are you seeking your own comfort or challenging someone to realize their
potential? Where is your heart?
When your leadership is infested with selfishness, it’s easy to become a
manipulator. Sometimes this is subtle; sometimes it’s obvious. Either way, when
leadership morphs into manipulation, people and organizations suffer. The
victims include:
1. Those who are manipulated. They end up hurt,
disillusioned, and discouraged. Worst of all, their ability to trust is
diminished—which handicaps their ability to lead and function moving
forward.
2. Those who witness manipulation. Their ability to trust is
also degraded. They carry self-protective attitudes forward into future
relationships—especially leader-follower relationships. When we see what others
are capable of doing to us, it makes us wary. It makes us wince and pull
ourselves in.
3. The organization as a whole. It suffers because
collaboration, problem solving, decision-making, and synergy are all diminished
in real-time. The result? Poor solutions. Over time the erosion of trust created
by manipulative leadership is a cancer that will threaten the stability of the
entire organization.
4. The manipulator himself. He will never reach his full
potential, never find that place of maturity, confidence and peace. He will
never know the fullness of satisfaction that comes from using your gifts to
serve others. Some may say he deserves this ongoing turmoil, but remember, he
may be you! We are all naturally self-centered and without conscious effort, our
leadership will naturally slide to serve our own interests.
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