Developing
the Leaders Around You
By John C. Maxwell
Developing other leaders is what great leaders do. Every
day you are having an impact on individuals, over time, will have
an impact on thousands of others. You will have the most
impact if you have a plan and a framework for developing leaders.
Read John Maxwells book to spark your thinking and broaden
your view of what developing leaders is all about. It is
easy and common sense reading.
The quotation that gets at what I found most important in this
book is: People think that personal growth is a
natural result of being alive. Well its not.
Growth is not automatic; it does not necessarily come with
experience, nor simply as a result of gathering information.
Personal growth must be deliberate, planned, and consistent
(p. 116). One of the best things that you can do for your
subordinates is to help them develop personal developmental plans.
Work with them to help identify their strengths and weaknesses,
and put in writing what they plan on actually doing over the next
six months to grow as a leader. Provide them feedback and
assessment along the way, and help create challenging experiences
to help them develop. Furthermore, take this concept all
the way down to the team leader level in your team. Your
example along with a commitment to teaching your young leaders
practical ways to develop others will make all the difference in
the world.
The following are the key points that jumped out at me when I
read the book. The bold text highlights my own thoughts and
recommendations to company commanders.
- Coach
Wooden (UCLA Basketball) believed that in order to
develop leaders you must (p.1):
- Appreciate
them for who they are.
- Believe
that they will do their very best.
- Praise
their accomplishments.
- Accept
your personal responsibility to them as their leader.
- The
greatest leadership principle that I have learned in over
twenty-five years of leadership is that those closest to
the leader will determine the success level of that
leader
Stop for a moment and think of the five or
six people closest to you in your organization. Are
you developing them? Do you have a game plan for
them? Are they growing? Have they been able to lift your
load? (p.3). These people are probably
your supervisors what are you actually doing to
develop them? What is the developmental plan for
each of them? Remember that it wont magically
happen!
- "The
determination of the outcome depends upon my ability as a
leader to develop those closest to me...Also depends upon
my ability to recognize the value that others can give my
organization" (p.3).
- "The
strength of any organization is a direct result of the
strength of its leaders. Weak leaders equal weak
organizations. Strong leaders equal strong
organizations. Everything rises and falls on
leadership" (p.6).
- "Leaders
create and inspire new leaders by instilling faith in
their leadership ability and helping them develop and
hone leadership skills they don't know they possess"
(p.11).
- "A
leader's success can be defined as the maximum
utilization of the abilities of those under him" (p.15).
- The
attitude of the leader, coupled with a positive
atmosphere in the organization, can encourage people to
accomplish great things. And consistent
accomplishment generates momentum. Many times
momentum is the only difference between a winning,
positive growth climate and a losing, negative growth
climate (p. 18). Momentum is a critical
concept to understand. You want to create momentum
early (small wins) and then exploit it. I heard one
leader describe it like an infectious disease that builds
into an epidemic. Although this is a negative
example, it can also work in the positive direction.
- Focus
on the potential of the leader. Find the one
thing that you believe is the potential leaders
greatest asset, and then give 100 percent encouragement
in that area. Focusing on a persons strengths
promotes positive growth, confidence, and success as a
potential leader (p. 21).
- Great
leaders know the desires of the people they lead
people
dont care how much their leaders know until they
know how much they care
about their needs, their
dreams, their desires. Once a leader is genuinely
interested in the well-being of those around him, the
determination and drive of the people in that group are
activated in a remarkable way (p. 22). If
you want to really impact your leaders, you must get to
know what makes them tick. Instead of figuring out
what you want and getting your leaders to get it, how
about figuring out what they want and doing everything
you can to help them get it. Although you might
think this sounds contrary to normal operations, I ask
you to think about how much more motivated to work and
accomplish great things you would be if you had a boss
who did this. Why dont you be that boss?
- Create
opportunities for growth (p.25). Once you
start thinking about leader development, you will see
many developmental opportunities that are available for
your subordinate leaders. In order to develop, your
leaders need challenging experiences where they are
required to lead. Help create these situations for
them.
- Do
big things! Winston Churchill said: If
you are doing big things, you attract big men. If
you are doing little things, you attract little men.
Little men usually cause trouble (p. 28). Dream
and envision a bold and exciting future for your team.
Share your thoughts with your leaders and challenge them
to be a part of creating a great team. What is your
dream for the team?
- On
Character flaws: Character flaws cannot
be ignored. They will eventually make a leader
ineffective
warning signs of a character flaw (p. 48):
- A
persons failure to take responsibility for
his actions or circumstances
- Unfulfilled
promises or obligations
- Failure
to meet deadlines
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- I
recommend putting these warning signs on a PowerPoint
slide and displaying them in your office. Refer to
it when you counsel team members.
- You
can tell much about a persons ability to lead
others from how well he manages his own life (p. 48).
- A
leader who decides not to allow other peoples
actions to dictate his reactions experiences an
empowering freedom (p.56). You can decide
how you feel, regardless of external circumstances.
Remember that your positive attitude in all
types of situations will breed a positive and confident
team.
- Nurturing
potential leaders (BEST):
- Believe
in them.
- Encourage
them.
- Share
with them.
- Trust
them.
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- Although
this sounds very basic, I challenge you to evaluate
whether you are doing this with your key team members.
Furthermore, share the concept with your leaders and
challenge them to do the same with their subordinates.
- I
have learned that trust is the single most important
factor in building personal and professional
relationships
Followers want to be able to say,
Someday I want to be like him or her.
If they dont trust you, they cannot say it.
People first must believe in you before they will follow
your leadership (p. 67).
- How
to break trust (p. 67):
- Break
Promises.
- Gossip.
- Withhold
Information.
- Be
Two-Faced.
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- A
key feature of solid developmental plans are goals.
A set of goals can become a map that a
potential leader follows in order to grow
It is the
goal that shapes the plan; it is the plan that sets the
action; it is the action that achieves the result; and it
is the result that brings the success. And it all
begins with the simple word goal. We, as equipping
leaders, must introduce our people to the practice of
setting and achieving goals (p. 95).
- Leaders
who are equipping others have the greatest possibility of
success, no matter what type of organization theyre
in. When a leader is dedicated to the equipping
process, the whole level of performance within the
organization rises dramatically (p. 110).
- The
success of any organization will not reach beyond the
character of its leaders. Excellence breeds
character, and character breeds excellence. Demand
excellence from our people, and they will develop into
people who also demand excellence of themselves and the
people they lead (p.124).
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