Category Archives: Work

#101 Types of leaders

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I see the following types of leaders in the workplace:

  • Executive leader: These are senior people in the organization who love to pontificate, say things that sound wise, inspire and implore the organization to act. In their position, they have to think and act strategically and are dealing with matters of life and death to the organization. For them to roll up their sleeves and do “real” work may be counterproductive.
  • Thought leader: These types of leaders have an opinion about almost everything and are not afraid to share it. They use executive presence to make their illogical inferences sound logical. They typically hand out action items, but never take on tasks unless they have to. The underlying message is, “Look how smart I am.”
  • Change agent: These are the real leaders, those who with broad shoulders and fierce determination. Such people avoid crusades, they target business benefits, and systematically build coalitions and momentum to bear on the problem or opportunity. They know how to build a business case, a roadmap of deliverables, and a project plan that can be implemented. They know how to prioritize use of scarce resources, and evolve when circumstances change.
  • Self-leaders: These are people who “lead themselves” and are sometimes known as “individual contributors” and also disparagingly as the “grunts.” Such people put their head down and grind away at tasks, to keep the wheels of execution turning. They do the thankless jobs that are behind the scenes, and which have to be done over and over again. Sometimes they are referred to as “followers.”

The taxonomy described here is interesting, but the point is to find out what is considered value add in your organization and do only that work. Remember to thank those who do value add work behind the scenes.

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#99 Measuring the size of an ego

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We all have an ego, that much has been established by research, and religions. The question is, how best to harness it to our advantage in the workplace.

First, let us start with understand the negative impacts of your “ego.” If you have an uncontrolled ego, you will be closed to feedback, you will reject ideas that are “not invented here,” you will take offense to harmless comments, you will read too much into a co-workers words and actions, you will feel threatened, and you will generate needless conflict, and generally be difficult to work with. This gives us a pretty solid value case for controlling the ego in the workplace.

To measure the size of the ego, measure the “resistance” you feel within you when faced with situations in the workplace. You known, the feeling that comes up when your co-worker asks you to do something you consider unreasonable or just plain “dumb.” The higher the resistance, the bigger the ego.

Simply observe when and where you have “resistance” in the workplace. What types of situations, what types of people, what types of problems? Having this catalog or inventory will give you the size of the problem.

Before you panic and feel depressed at the size of your own ego, here is a suggestion for you to try. Approach each work situation where your co-worker lances your ego, with the determination: “If the suggestion is reasonable, I will embrace it. I will change myself and will have no problem is saying, ‘I was wrong’.”

If you reject this idea and feel you have no ego… read this post again from the beginning.

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