Category Archives: Leadership

#183 How are you perceived?

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In training leaders, I place a lot of emphasis on looking within. While learning by osmosis, and learning by observing others, has value, doing so without understanding your intrinsic capabilities to perform leadership roles can lead to developing bad habits. An over dependence on role models can lead to blind faith.

Assuming you have looked within and gained an understanding of who you are, and have come to terms with what you have discovered about yourself, answering one question may help shorten your journey to being a leader: how do your co-workers perceive you?

This question is difficult to answer. Some obstacles are:

  • Your co-worker is unable or unwilling to give you useful, actionable feedback, or
  • You don’t understand the feedback, or
  • The feedback is not palatable and you reject it as invalid, or
  • Your over analyze the feedback given to you and take no action, or
  • You take the wrong action to fix the problem, or
  • You just don’t have the discipline, energy, and resilience to learn what your co-workers think about you.

While it may be difficult, it is not impossible to answer this question. It takes a high degree of self awareness, flexibility, and willingness to experiment with your behaviors. It helps if you can leave your emotions out of it and not take feedback personally. In fact, you can blunt any personal attack and disarm any opponent by providing a rational, unemotional description of the feedback, and ask suggestions for improvement.

As you do this over time, you realize that you have created your own barriers to decode the signals being sent by your co-workers. Taking down these barriers is all you need to do, the benefits will automatically follow.

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#178 Professionalism versus loyalty

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Two concepts are misunderstood, leading to confusion, contradiction, and dysfunction when applying professionalism (P) and loyalty (L). Assumptions and impermanence.

Both P and L are based on assumptions, which change over time. If you cling to obsolete assumptions to justify your loyalty, you are heading for martyrdom.

Professionals may be considered fickle not loyal if they don’t articulate their assumptions for taking on and leaving an assignment. There is a fine line between a rat deserting a sinking ship and a prudent exit from a lost cause. Very few situations call for arguing with impermanence and clinging to misguided loyalty.

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