The Essence of Leadership
Seven keys are ready for your harvesting.
- By Robert Pater
- Dec 01, 2007
Everyone seeks improvement in “Leadership,”
for themselves or in others.
Strong Leadership promotes simultaneous
returns: boosting safety, productivity,
quality, receptivity to change, morale, trust,
credibility, and retention and energizing
involvement.
In Safety, many companies have shored
up their policies and procedures, engineering,
and enforcement, sometimes to
the point of diminishing returns. Now consider
a leadership approach that channels
workers, supervisors, and managers toward
Safety ends. As the VP of Manufacturing of
a Fortune 500 company explained, “We’ve
done many good things here to get 90 percent
improvement in Safety. But to get
even another one percent, it’s about us, our
people, and our culture.” This is the charge
of Leadership.
Here’s a crucial question: What is Leadership?
A question that, regrettably,
numerous books and seminars on Leadership
don’t answer. But you first have to
home in on a target in order to hit it.
I’ve met people on all levels (including
line workers) who were extremely effective
Leaders; I’ve also seen would-be Leaders
with plenty of position who were ineffectual
or worse.
While I can present for days on this
topic, there are seven keys that form the
essence of Leadership. There are many
kinds of Leaders and many ways to be successful,
but I’ve seen best Leaders share
most of these common attributes. Revealingly,
inept Leaders—who get weak results,
dispirit others, drag their organizations
down—seem to be lacking here.
First off, high level Leadership means
creating strong, positive results by working
with and through others. Gichin
Funakoshi, the founder of modern karate,
who spread what was initially an esoteric
system with few adherents to worldwide
recognition and practice, contended, “Success
cannot be attained alone. Any person’s
time and power is limited. A wise leader
enlists others in working toward organizational
goals.” You can’t realize significant
results just by charging ahead alone—especially
when you’re attempting to change
how people think, perceive, decide, and act.
Second, Leadership entails wisely
employing power. Someone defined power
as “the ability to change the future.” Not
too much so you waste precious energy or
credibility, or create pushback. Not too
little so you’re unable to make changes
happen. Powerful Leaders know and
respect the impact Leadership can have on
others throughout their organization.
Third, strong Leaders understand
“leadings.” They look for and ongoingly
monitor precursors and milestones that
indicate movement toward, or away from,
desired goals. They see budding signs of
change and recalibrate needed course corrections
at an early level. Conversely, they
don’t overfocus on past behaviors or on
locking the barn door after the horse has
escaped. (Do your organizational safety
goals aim only to reduce incidence rate or
other trailing indicators?)
Fourth, best Leaders put their efforts
into interventions that make “do agains”
more likely. That is, they pilot new interventions
at a low-risk level with an eye
toward making adjustments and then
spreading successful systems to wider and
higher groups. They search for patterns
and trends, often reading between the lines
to determine what’s really going on.
Fifth, most-effective Leaders strike a
balance between being visible in promoting
their agenda and being invisible in
acknowledging and crediting others for
successes. Lao Tsu wrote, “The worst
leader is someone people fear and hate.
The next best leader, people love and
respect. The best leader, when their job is
done, people will say, ‘We did this ourselves.’”
As my colleague Ron Bowles
extolls, Safety at its highest level is not
done TO others nor even FOR them, but
WITH people and ideally BY them (for
themselves).
Sixth, strongest Leaders are courageously
self-honest and practice continuous
improvement, modeling what they
expect from others. They examine their
own biases and assumptions so these don’t
blind them. They accept, even solicit,
helpful feedback that can make them
better; in so doing, they draw respect and
commitment (contrast this with would-be
leaders who become defensive, blaming
others for poor results).
Seventh, best Leaders are dissatisfied
even when things are going well, perpetually
committed to attaining even better
results. They know what they can do but
don’t rest on their laurels, always aiming
for next steps. Self-satisfaction is the enemy
of continuous top performance.
The thirst for effective Leadership isn’t
close to being quenched; the need never
has been greater. If you want to propel your
Leadership abilities, the “secrets” to this
are ready for your harvesting. Practice the
essence of Leadership with self-honesty
and dedication. Each one of us can be a
stronger Leader for making a positive
impact on Safety—and more.
This article originally appeared in the December 2007 issue of Occupational Health & Safety.