5 Things you can do to manage yourself exceptionally well – Leading Up

The key to leading yourself is self-management.

From Today Matters: Decision making is OVERRATED. We overate what happens when we make a decision. Oh, made that decision and life’s changed. Sometimes yes, sometimes no.
But decision managing is underrated. How we manage the decision we make is going to determine the success of that decision. You need the discipline to follow through DAILY on the decisions you make.

Let me share an example. Many people make a decision to diet to lose weight. Great… decision made. But the decision is just the start… it needs follow through and the daily discipline to make it work.

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5 Things you can do to manage yourself exceptionally well

  1. Manage your emotions.
    • Good leaders know when to display emotions and when to delay them.
    • Whether you display or delay your emotions should not be based on “what will make me feel better?” rather, it should be based on “what does the team need?”
    • Have you ever tip toed around someone? Poking your nose around the door to your bosses office and thinking, no not today.
  2. Manage your time.
    • Actually you cannot manage time. Time ticks on by whether you manage it or not. What you can do is manage your priorities:
  3. Manage your priorities
    • 80% of your time and work in your strengths
    • 15% of your time and work where you are learning
    • 5% of your time and work in those other necessary areas
  4. Manage your energy.
    • Beware the ABCs of Energy Drain
      • Activity without direction – Doing things that do not seem to matter.
      • Burden without action -Not being able to do things that really matter.
      • Conflict without resolution – Not being able to deal with what’s the matter.
  5. Manage your personal life.
    • Success is having those closest to me, love and respect me the most.

Great Leaders Know The Difference Between Power and Authority And Which One Gets Results | Leadership, Sales & Life

Chris was the only one left.  Every junior leader was gone.  His group was promising, so everyone thought.  Slowly, the power (authority) they thought they had never materialized. Not one team that the group lead materialized.  No influence.  No momentum.  The top down approach never made an impact. He needed help.  He was taught nothing gets done or accomplished without power.   That was how he influenced people, power and a top-down approach.   It was his way or no-way.

Image courtesy of johnbossong.com

How to Grow and Learn into the Leader You Can Be

Thank you for your patience – my book is now available in pdf format via Scribd – and you can enjoy a special discount of 38%.

Imagine that you are stressed out, overworked, overly pressured and don’t get the recognition you deserve. This may be so close to reality that you won’t find it hard to imagine! You want to grow in your career, but trapped by your current lifestyle and there’s a genuine fear that you may be close to burning out.

One day, a friend mentions that she has been helped by a coach and suggests that you do the same. At first, you resist. You’ve seen the hundreds of articles and adverts promising a silver bullet solution to organise your life, reach your dreams, orchestrate your career and get on top of your life.So let’s get this out of the way now:

There are no silver bullets; no quick and easy solutions; it will not happen overnight.

There are times in life and work when we would benefit from the experience, wisdom and knowledge of people who have been in similar situations. If you are looking for one such person, then you are looking for a coach. But how do you make sure that you get the most out of it?

What’s Better Today? How to Grow and Learn into the Leader You Can Be” helps and guides you in getting the most our of your own coaching because, for most people, being coached is a new experience.

In Part One, “Starting Out” – you will learn if you are ready to be coached, and if so, what sort of coaching will work best for you right now and thus how you can go about choosing someone to work with.

In Part Two, “Grow and Learn” – you’ll learn how to get the very most you can out of your coaching. I’ve put together a structured framework with templates that you can use to both shortcut your coaching and get the results you want as quickly as you want.

In Part Three, I share about “Wrapping Up” your coaching effectively so that you, and your coach, continue to learn from the experience.In fact, by using the templates and guidance in this book, you will be coaching yourself.

What’s Better Today? How to Grow and Learn into the Leader You Can Be by Dr John Kenworthy

Leaders, loosen your grip to stay in control

What helps distinguish leaders and managers is about control and, quite literally, how “hands-on” you are. When you first learn the game of golf, the chances are that you grip the club tightly. After all this is basically holding onto a stick that you will swing through the air and hit a ball. Allowing the club to “follow-through’ – if you don’t hold on tight, the club might just go as far as the ball.

(I appreciate that many of you reading this may not have ever played golf, for you some alternatives, perhaps liken the tight grip of a golf club to:

  • the tight grip of the reins of a horse
  • controlling your dog on a very short leash
  • holding on tight to your child’s hand )

New golfers have to learn how to ‘let go’ – to relax their grip. If a tight grip is a 10 on a scale, we want a 4 out of 10. The same is true of leadership and the way we hold on to our people. Hold on too tight (micro manage) and people have little freedom to use their own skills and strength. Hold on too tight to the club, and it is the golfer doing all the work.

So the question is: “who should be doing the work?” The manager or leader or the member of staff?

The golf club is weighted for a reason. If you allow the club to do the work, the swing and striking of the ball, becomes almost effortless. Relax your grip on your team and allow them to excel at what they do, and the work becomes almost effortless.

Once you know, as a golfer, that the club is designed to do the job of striking the ball and your job is simply to swing and allow physics do to its job, you can relax. Maintain just enough control to ensure alignment, direction and distance and the ball will fly according to the club used, and the size of the swing. If you want a long distance, you use a long club and a full swing. A short distance off the fairway onto the green requires a shorter distance club and a smaller swing. The power to achieve the distance lies in the tool being employed and the chosen swing – the rest is pure physics.

So what can we learn as a leader?

Isn’t it the same? Make sure that you are using the right tool – the person needs the right skill set (and/or mindset) to do the required job. The leader’s job is to have a little control to ensure that the skills are employed in the right direction for the right distance – that’s about judging how far it is to the goal and translating that into the swing itself – in the case of people, the swing is influence and motivation… let the staff do the rest.

And just like that golf ball landing exactly where you both planned and wanted it to be for the next shot. You celebrate. Unlike golf though, praise your club and thank them for their effort. After all, they did all the work!

When we use this metaphor on our golf leadership workshops, the feedback is instant. Hold tight onto the club and the golfer has to use a great deal of effort and the ball often ends up being pulled, pushed, sliced or hooked – going two thirds of the required distance. Relax the grip maintaining directional control and the ball flies straight to the full distance of the club and swing used.

(For non-golfers… try this with a horse, hold tight, the horse will slow down even when you whip it! You dog on a short leash stays by your side whilst pulling your arm out of its socket! Your child dangles from your hand as you cross the road.)

When the going gets tough, leaders in control let go!

Yet, new golfers on particular find their grip tightening in more difficult situations. The very moment when they need to be most at ease, most truly controlling, fear envelops them, pressure builds, the grip tightens and the ball goes astray.

The same is true of business leaders under pressure. Listen to the media hype about the doom and gloom of the current economic situation and fear can easily creep in to the mind. Many leaders respond by tightening their grip on their people and their business, believing that the tighter they hold the more control they have and the more likely they are to survive and pull through. Albeit, they expend huge amounts of effort, feel incredibly stressed, and more likely to explode a blood vessel!

Tough times in business are better served by leaders keeping a clear head, a loose grip, maintain direction and let your people do what they do best.

Let’s face the truth here, even a behemoth the size of AIG can’t control the market, what makes you think that you can? My advice, ignore the noise (media doom and gloom), look for the opportunities and focus on the goal and it’s direction, choose the right club, loosen your grip and let your club do the work.

Loosen your grip and you’ll have more control.

Top 5 Most Important Leadership Traits | Linked 2 Leadership

Whilst these top 5 are pretty sound, I think the primary thing for a leader is their level of influence – without which… they ain’t no leader…

The quality of leadership has a strong influence on a company’s ultimate outcome. While every company is different, there are certain general qualities that every leader should have.

  1. Honesty
  2. Ability to Delegate
  3. Humour
  4. Creativity
  5. Positve Attitude

I have already suggested that Influence is missing here – and I wouldn’t be so sure that these are ‘traits’

So, what attributes or traits would you add to this list to make it the Top 10? How are you doing at keeping these important traits on your mind, in your heart, and on your lips? Do you struggle with maintaining any of these traits? I would love to hear your thoughts!

Image courtesy of linked2leadership.com