Part 3 (2/2)
To change from a Level 1 leader to a Level 2 leader, you must first change the way you think about leaders.h.i.+p. No one has to remain a positional leader, though the longer you have relied on your position, the longer it may take you to change the way you lead and the way others see you. You will have to earn your way up from Level 1.
Here are four statements you must embrace internally before you will be able to change from a positional leader to a permissional one.
1. t.i.tles Are Not Enough We live in a culture that values t.i.tles. We admire and respect people with t.i.tles such as doctor, CEO, chairman, PhD, Academy Award winner, director, n.o.bel Prize winner, salesman of the year, president, poet laureate. But t.i.tles are ultimately empty, and you must learn to see them that way. Who the person is and the work he does are what really matter. People who make career goals out of attaining certain t.i.tles are not setting themselves up to be the best leaders they can be.
If the work is significant and adds value to people, then it doesn't need to come with a t.i.tle. For every person who has received recognition, there are thousands of others working without recognition who perhaps deserve even greater honor. Yet they continue to work without credit because the work itself and the positive impact on others are reward enough.
Developing an awareness that t.i.tles have little real value and that Position is the lowest level of leaders.h.i.+p brings a healthy sense of dissatisfaction with Level 1 as well as a desire to grow. A position is not a worthy destination for any person's life. Security does not give purpose. Leaders.h.i.+p is meant to be active and dynamic. Its purpose is to create positive change. Do whatever you have to do to identify less with your t.i.tle and position and more with how you contribute to the team or organization.
2. People-Not Positions-Are a Leader's
Most Valuable a.s.set
If you want to become a better leader, you can't focus on rules and procedures to get things done or keep things going. You must develop relations.h.i.+ps. People get things done, not the playbook they use.
It takes some time to develop the people skills needed to become a better leader, but it takes no time at all to let others know that you value them, to express appreciation for them, and to take interest in them personally. So that's a change you can make quickly. Go out of your way to communicate how much you value each person you lead. People are the most valuable and appreciable a.s.set of any organization. You must be certain to treat them that way. And here's the immediate benefit: the moment people notice the s.h.i.+ft in your att.i.tude, you'll notice a positive s.h.i.+ft in their response to you. They'll begin to help you, which allows you to help them.
3. A Leader Doesn't Need to Have All
the Answers
Positional leaders often believe that they need to have all the answers. After all, if they admit that they don't know something, it shows weakness. And if they show weakness, how are they going to stay on top of the hill and maintain their precious position? To get off of Level 1, a leader has to think differently.
A leader's job is not to know everything but to attract people who know things that he or she does not. One of us is not as smart as all of us. Stop bringing people together to give them the answers and start calling on them to help you find the answers. That will transform your leaders.h.i.+p, not only because you can be yourself and stop pretending that you know more than you do but also because it harnesses the power of shared thinking.
When people ask you something that you don't know, admit it. Then ask for the opinions of the people on your team. If they don't have the answers to questions, ask them if they know people who do. Make problem solving collaborative.
4. A Good Leader Always Includes Others Because positional leaders often work alone, standing atop the hill of leaders.h.i.+p while their subordinates work together at the bottom, their teams work far below their capabilities. Why? Stand-alone leaders.h.i.+p doesn't lead to teamwork, creativity, collaboration, or high achievement. What a shame, and what a waste of potential.
Successful leaders.h.i.+p is all about others. It means relating well to other people. It requires leaders to be examples for other people. It challenges them to develop and equip people. The higher you go up the levels of leaders.h.i.+p, the more you realize that good leaders.h.i.+p is about leading with others, not just leading others. It requires collaboration. It requires inclusion. It requires sacrifice of selfish personal ambition for the sake of the team and the vision of the organization. It means being part of something greater than yourself. It means putting others ahead of yourself and being willing to go only as fast as the people you lead.
Moving up from Level 1 to Level 2 requires the greatest personal change from a leader. It requires a change of beliefs and att.i.tudes toward other people and leaders.h.i.+p. But here's the truth: once you decide to include others in the leaders.h.i.+p journey, you are well on your way to achieving success at the other levels.
Level 2
PERMISSION.
You Can't Lead People until
You Like People
When a leader learns to function on the Permission level, people do more than merely comply with orders. They actually start to follow. And they do so because they really want to. Why? Because the leader begins to influence people with relations.h.i.+ps, not just position. Relations.h.i.+ps are a major key to success, whether you're trying to sell, coach, teach, lead, or simply navigate the daily tasks of life. Building relations.h.i.+ps develops a foundation for effectively leading others. It also starts to break down organizational silos as people connect across the lines between their job descriptions or departments. The more barriers come down and relations.h.i.+ps deepen, the broader the foundation for leading others becomes. When people feel liked, cared for, included, valued, and trusted, they begin to work together with their leader and each other. And that can change the entire working environment. The old saying is really true: people go along with leaders they get along with.
Moving up to Level 2 is an important development in leaders.h.i.+p because that is where followers give their supervisors permission to lead them. People change from being subordinates to followers for the first time, and that means there is movement! Remember, leaders.h.i.+p always means that people are going somewhere. They aren't static. No journey, no leaders.h.i.+p.
The Upside of Permission
The Workplace Has Become More
Pleasant for Everyone
There are many upsides to Level 2 because the focus on relations.h.i.+p building opens up so many new avenues of leaders.h.i.+p. Here are my top five upsides.
1. Leaders.h.i.+p Permission Makes
Work More Enjoyable
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