5 Steps to Better Leadership

five_stepsMoving to a leadership rather than management style for people managers is one that requires significant top down support. This enables the behaviour change that is required for them to succeed. If there were only five key points I had to choose for people leaders to consider, they would be:

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  1. Prepare yourself
    Analyse what’s working and what isn’t in your leadership of your team. When you are clear on what needs to stay you can look at replacing unprofitable tasks, like spending too long on administration and email, with effective Frontline Leadership activity.
  2. Develop a critical behaviour checklist
    When you pay attention to the activity of your top performers, you will notice there is a theme to how they continually do better than your average performers. Remarkably this often comes down to consistency of critical work behaviours. While average performers may show these behaviours sometimes, high performers use them consistently.
  3. Coaching – more than managing by results
    Many first-level  and mid-level  managers may look at this point and think they have this under control. Look again. How are you coaching? Is it on a results basis? If it is you need to rethink your coaching approach. Coaching that is effective for your average performer must be behavioural based. Coach and reinforce the critical work behaviours consistently.
  4. Balanced feedback
    Look at how you are giving your feedback. If you are like the majority of managers your feedback will likely contain equal doses of both corrective and positive feedback. If you can switch that ratio to be more strongly focussed on using positive feedback to reinforce the critical work behaviours you are trying to instil, you will create much more success for both your people and for yourself.
  5. Practice, practice, practice

    I don’t know if it takes 10,000 hours to become an expert, but I do know if you practice at anything you will get better. Effective Leadership skills are no different. In fact, I’d go as far as saying that consistency is the key to success. Keep at this day in and day out and you will quickly build high levels of trust, employee engagement and performance in your team.

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One Comment

  1. Morgan
    Posted November 30, 2009 at 4:30 pm | Permalink

    Very good advice I think! Great post. :-)

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