Leadership is about taking risks, seeing opportunities others don’t see, unleashing your passion, being entrepreneurial, working with a generous purpose and strengthening the promise of a better workplace culture. It is concerning when leaders focus more on their titles and positions of authority – rather than acting upon the responsibilities and duties they get paid for and doing what their employees expect and need from them.
We don’t always get what we want in life or work. That is why we need good leadership – to help solve problems and provide guidance, navigate unexpected circumstances, cultivate growth and overcome hardships. Leaders are not hired to monitor situations, play it safe and keep quiet when things get complicated.
Leaders make bad decisions for many reasons – because they rely too much on past experiences, are addicted to corporate politics, mismanage resources, don’t see opportunity – but especially when they don’t trust themselves enough to lead and decide to follow.
To help you evaluate the strength of your company’s leadership team (or your own progress as a leader), take a moment to observe if any of the following five characteristics are evident.
- Signs of Complacency
Leaders that play it too safe have grown complacent. They may not be aware of it yet – but their complacency is losing them respect, trust and loyalty from their employees as well as other leaders in the organization.
- Risk Adverse
Leaders must view risk as their best friend. It’s a natural part of leadership and real leaders are confronted with it each day. Great leaders make difficult decisions every day. They know how to make 30 decisions in 30 minutes.
How many times has your gut told you to take action during times of adversity but you didn’t? Instead, you waited for those around you to take the calculated risks that you were hesitant to take yourself? If this sounds familiar, trouble awaits.
- Not Original
Leaders know how to instinctually lead and lift others to be better and they are original in how they go about it. Followers are afraid to be original and thus become leaches and loafers throughout their careers.
Are you more of a supplier or a distributor of great leadership? Do you supply great leadership that is original, trustworthy and authentic? Or are you a distributor of someone else’s leadership content, ideas, style and approach? Have you created your own distinction as a leader?
Being original is critically important for the sustainable success of a leader. How do you measure your originality? Though you can be both a supplier and a distributor of great leadership, set a goal to be a supplier – at least 70% of the time.
- Don’t Share Their Momentum
Great leaders share the harvest of their momentum with others. Sharing begins with trust and trusting yourself is a critical success factor in anyone’s career.
The wise man knows he will forfeit his fortune if he does not trust himself. Followers lose their momentum because they don’t share it and thus stay stuck in a self-serving process.
Real leaders understand the importance of having everyone’s best interests at heart.
- Deflect Accountability
Leadership is about protecting your employees and helping them be successful. Employees deserve to be led by leaders who understand that success comes most to those who are surrounded by people who want their success to continue. Great management boils down to accountability and this is something that must always be clearly evident as you serve in a leadership role.
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