KubLead11-07-082 |
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Leadership is Dead How
Influence is Reviving It Jeremie Kubicek Howard
Books, 2011, 217 pp. ISBN 978-1-4516-1214-1 |
"The key to effective
leadership is learning how to influence in a way that engenders greater
trust, stronger partnerships, and more impactful endeavors." To do this "you must break down your
walls of self-preservation and sacrifice your security for the sake of
others. Only then does the escalating
paradox of personal generosity come into play: The more you give, the more
you receive." (from the flyleaf)
Describes some good leaders. Kubicek is president and CEO of GiANT
Impact, a global leadership company. Summary: "Leadership is about influence. Influence is power. And how you use that power will affect your
world and those around you. Will you
choose to empower or overpower? To
liberate or dominate?" (181) Leadership is dead because
too many leaders have abused their positions, lost their moral compass,
abandoned long-term responsibility, and sold out for short-term gains and
skyrocketing salaries. "You don't need
massive power or a prominent position to lead positive change in an
organization. You need only influence:
the most potent and underutilized professional resource on the planet. … Te
be influential requires that we shed the fears and self-preservation
instincts that hold us back." (23)
Today's leaders must be willing to sacrifice their own security to
inspire others. "The greatest
strategy for business success and personal fulfillment is not based upon
getting all you can. Instead it is
centered upon giving all you can." (23) We are focused on the
process of leadership while we neglect the hearts and souls of leaders. Leadership training should strengthen your
core, your guiding principles and values, first. Then you can build on your core
strengths. (42-3) Next you must understand the
strengths and weaknesses and challenges of your team members. The protective mode is not
a productive mode. Focus on
self-preservations leads to stagnation.
Defense is not a long term strategy.
It leads to mediocrity and mediocrity is self-perpetuating. (48-9) The goal of the relational
approach is to build a trusting relationship with the customer or client so
that you come to understand the customers' interests and needs and then can
offer them products or services that serve them
best. Transactional business is a
trap. Transactions lead only to other
transactions and the demand for short-term gains provides little fulfillment
and high burn out. "Great leaders with
true influence build relationships by serving the needs of those within their
spheres of influence, even as they serve the needs of their businesses. This isn't just a business tactic, it is a
lifestyle." (54) "Men and women who
build walls to protect their status or income or their sense of security risk
also restricting growth in their careers and relationships. They also tend to fall into a very basic
transactional approach…. Great
leaders…step beyond the walls to give, to serve, and to grow…." (56) "Influence is based on
trust. People do not follow those who
are out only to advance their own interests. … It is nearly impossible to
trust someone who thinks first and foremost about himself. … To have
influence, you have to reach beyond your walls and give yourself for the
benefit of others." (58) Overemphasis on
self-preservation leads to fear of change.
Top executives may try to protect their authority, salary, time,
reputation, status, perks, energy, or family.
What are you trying to protect?
Protection and preservation can mire a career and a life in
mediocrity. (65) You become focused on yourself; you become
defensive; and your performance deteriorates.
Every leader has
intentions, a motive. "When your
intent becomes organized in an action-oriented way, it becomes your agenda. …
Knowing your agenda is the first step to understanding your personal
leadership." (74) Examine your
intent by answering a series of questions, such as ·
What do you
hope happens in your work? ·
What do you not
want to happen? ·
What are you
afraid of losing? Etc. (77) "Leadership is
influence. Influence is power. How that power is used comes from the
intent of the leader, from the motives of the heart." (78) People are either for you,
against you, or just for themselves.
For the most part, they are just for themselves. But what would it be like if you
demonstrated that you were for
them? It brings amazing changes in
people when they believe that you want the best for them. (78-9) Influence begins with a hunger to
serve others and a willingness to assess and motivate yourself to maintain
healthy relationships. (82) Trust is the reward of
unwavering character. Credibility
typically follows from a high level of competency and depth of
knowledge. Trust and credibility are
the first stages of influence. Influence is power and
power can be used to empower and liberate or to overpower and dominate. And either of these may occur deliberately
or unconsciously. The dominator uses influence
to manipulate people to follow their agenda.
The liberator empowers others.
It typically yields good returns and good will. Some people have difficulty sharing power
for various reasons. The majority of
leaders fall somewhere in between.
It's important to understand where your leadership falls on this
spectrum. Our society accepts the
separation of private and public morality.
Yet who you are affects what you do.
Morally and spiritually broken leaders are dangerous. Broken moral codes lead to shattered
professional codes. It is vital to be
aware of your own moral codes. To
become a liberating leader you must humble yourself, empower others, listen well, practice empathy, and lead others to success
via a service mentality. (133) Influence requires
commitment, the sacrifice of time, energy, and effort. It means reaching out and giving of yourself. Where you
invest your influence, you invest your life.
It means establishing relationships that exceed the business or
personal opportunity, for the other person's benefit, without focusing on
your own needs. It's a learned skill
that brings real rewards.
Opportunities are important, but they come more readily to those who
put others first. "When you focus on
relationships rather than deals, you have an opportunity to accomplish more
over a longer period. In a
transaction, you take away whatever someone pays, and that's the extent of
your interaction. Relationships are
gifts that keep on giving. 'Relationships before opportunity' is about giving
before receiving, planting before harvesting, and serving before asking. The most important aspect of relationship
building is to see that the other person's needs are met first."
(142) Then, use the opportunity to
further serve the relationship.
Building and serving relationship establishes you as genuine and
trustworthy. (149) "When you find someone
who is open to receive, then you simply give freely of whatever you have that
is needed. If someone is hostile or
selfish, you don't give, you move on."
(158) "The key to living
as a giving influencer is to exude a giving attitude that becomes
contagious." (159) "The key
is to take every interaction with a team member, a co-worker, a friend, or a
family member and transform it into something special; something deeper and
more meaningful than either of you expected." (164) The internal reward is fulfillment. "The great reward of
excellence is more business. The great
reward for intentionally serving communities, families, and individuals is
long-term respect, which can't easily be diminished. … The reward for living
a lifestyle of influence is the gift of mutual trust." (176) "The ultimate reward of influence is
a fulfilled life." (179) "Leadership is about
influence. Influence is power. And how you use that power will affect your
world and those around you. Will you
choose to empower or overpower? To
liberate or dominate?" (181) DLM Note: The author seems to use the word
"influence" in two ways. One
is positive, arising from the trusting relational approach that seeks to meet
others' needs first. [See pp. 58, 82,
etc.] The other is neutral and may be
used positively or negatively. [See p.
181 above.] |
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