When you hear the word “leadership” what comes to mind? There are numerous definitions of leadership. For me leadership is ultimately about creating a way for people to contribute to making something extraordinary happen. Effective leadership comes down to people. It is about the ability to successfully engage and maximize all human resources for the attainment that vision.
Lean
organizations need leaders who know how to serve their people. A servant leader
-- one who wants to serve first and lead second -- strives to create a work
environment in which people can truly express these deepest of inner drives.
Servant leadership entails a deep belief that people are the greatest asset any
organization has, and to nurture their individual growth becomes the basis for
all organizational development. That growth goes far beyond the limited
dimension of financial benefit -- it dives into our core motivations as people.
People
want to be engaged and also have some level of control over their environment.
A servant leader recognizes that the people doing the work generally have the
best ideas about how to improve the processes they participate in. Through
tools like rapid improvement events and PDCA (Plan Do Check Act) suggestion
systems, servant leaders practice participatory decision-making, empowering
employees to be innovators and co-creators in positive change. Such leaders are
also enablers; they spend a significant amount of time at the workplace, making
direct observations, and then striving to create systemic improvements that add
value to the work of their employees.
Leaders
are nothing without people. Put another way, people will make or break you as a
leader. You’ll either treat them well, earn their trust, respect and loyalty, or
you won’t. You’ll either see people as capital to be leveraged or humans to be
developed and fulfilled. You’ll either view yourself as superior to your
employees, or as one whose job it is to serve them, learn from them, and leave
them be better off for being led by you.
The
best leaders don’t put people in a box – they free them from boxes. Ultimately,
a leaders job isn’t to create followers, but to strive for ubiquitous
leadership. Average leaders spend time scaling processes, systems, and models –
great leaders focus on scaling leadership.
A
leader must be a good teacher. Leaders must be able to be good teachers to
share insights and experiences. Leaders can inspire, motivate, and influence
subordinates at various levels through the use of teaching ability. Obviously,
one must be a good communicator in order to be an effective teacher. Without
the ability to clearly and effectively communicate a message, goal, story, or
philosophy, it is impossible to lead.
When
you become a manager, supervisor, or team leader, the game changed. You're now held to a higher level of
accountability than before. In fact,
everything you do is exaggerated; you are under a magnifying glass. And when you're down, they're down. When you're up, they're up. You set the tone... you shape the environment
in which all can be successful.
Your
employees expect you to lead without excuses.
The leadership you display and the decisions that you make contribute
more to the success of your employees than all other factors combined. Everything you do counts. Make it count.
Good
leadership is not reflected in the leader’s actions, it is reflected in the
impact and effect of those actions on the team. A leader should adapt to the
environment and what the team needs today without losing sight of what will be
needed tomorrow and always preparing for that moment when he or she will no
longer be there. Guaranteeing the growth and sustainability of the team and the
individuals that comprise it beyond the leader’s time is the ultimate trait of
a great leader.
While
there are people who seem to be naturally endowed with more leadership
abilities than others, I believe that people can learn to become leaders by concentrating
on improving these leadership skills.
Lean
success requires a change in mindset and behavior among leadership, and then
gradually throughout the organization. So it follows that success in Lean
implies a change in what leaders reinforce—a change in leadership behaviors and
practices. Change begins when leaders start acting differently. It’s that
simple (but not that easy).
I believe this approach to leadership extends far further than in the lean model. Contemporary leadership teaches employee-centric methods in general, with the assumption that happy and engaged employes will draw more customer interaction, ultimately greater revenue as a by-product. Good stuff. -Kurt.
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