Recursos de liderazgo

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The final countdown

Last year I started to share my top ten leadership coaching themes from 2023. Here are the final five 🥁:

💪Courage, not confidence.
❓Questions, not advice.
📖The stories we tell ourselves.
🎬Getting out of the drama
💉Immunity to change.
What\’s your biggest take-away from last year?

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Feeling out of kilter?

🤔Something is a bit… off.

🫤I’m unsettled… out of kilter in some way.

These sorts of twinges can be a sign that our values are not being met in the work we\’re doing.

Perhaps you value personal connection and remote working is making that harder, or maybe you thrive on learning and stretch, but aren\’t getting enough of that in a role that you\’ve mastered.

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Getting into the detail

🔎Detail? That’s not my job any more. I do strategy now.

🤔Er, no.

As a senior leader you still need to be able to get into the detail. To dive beneath the surface and see what\’s really going on down there. To support and fully empathise with your team. To really understand the challenges… and to drive meaningful impact.

A few suggestions this week on how to keep this in mind as you rise.

Blog, Recursos de liderazgo

Get your office right

There was never any time to think. To “just” think.

You get promoted largely because of the way you think and yet when you get to the top you don’t have time to do it. Multiple clashing meetings, a daily avalanche of emails, pressing decisions at every turn, reforms to deliver, targets to meet, oh and a bunch of people to lead, engage and motivate.

Getting your office right is essential if you’re going to survive and thrive in the most senior leadership roles. You need to let go of managing your calendar and to build a team that reflects what you value and if you’re lucky, becomes the glue that holds everything together.

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It’s lonely at the top

It was one of those fun-filled performance calibrations. Everyone was going into bat for their people, making the case for high ratings and bonuses and looking to reward their hard-working teams after a tough year. I was the same: sharing just enough on areas for improvement to imply impartiality but not so much that it could be used against that person in the final tie break. Top spots were limited in our ‘guided distribution’ of performance ranking. It was every leader for themselves. Unsurprising then that one of my colleagues – a friend of many years and someone I like, trust and respect – turned on me. “So-and-so didn’t do as well as she could have on that major project… she needs to improve her stakeholder management… I’m not sure she deserves that star rating.” I steeled myself. Luckily in this instance I knew the detail of the work and could hit back with strong evidence of what had been done and kill the “feedback”. That play was over. No goal. Sound familiar? This isn’t a piece about the dangers of some performance management systems (I’ll save that for another day). It\’s about one of the many structures and incentives in organisational life that mitigate against genuine collaboration and collective leadership and how these can leave you feeling pretty lonely at the top. As we get more senior our peer relationships become some of the trickiest to navigate. Just as we move into positions where we’re supposed to put a bit more distance between ourselves and the people we manage, we also find ourselves isolated from or in competition with those around us. So where do we go for support? And for truthful, open-hearted conversations? For the connection and relationships that we need for resilience – not just to survive but to thrive? Here are some suggestions to consider if you notice that you’re feeling lonely in your leadership role: 🔒 Don’t draw back too much from the people you manage. Yes, there will be new boundaries – you may be the person giving tough news tomorrow so you can’t fully let your guard down today. But remember that your people want and need to see that you’re real and that openness creates the environment that teams need to perform at their best. 💃Find places to be you. Keeping even a bit of that guard up gets tiring, so try to find one or two work relationships where you can be more open. Be ready for this to exist in unexpected places. Invest your time and attention – we all have one of those friendships that endures no matter how much we neglect it, but that’s the exception that proves the rule. Try being in proper contact with a ‘real me’ friend every two weeks. 🚪Invite people in. We all have our blind spots and it can powerful to open up to your team or colleagues about yours. Ask them for help with noticing when you’re slipping into behaviour you want to change. You can make this safer by focusing on the future: I want to get better at this, what suggestions do you have? 🌍Build new networks. Evidence suggests that just knowing that others are facing the same challenges can increase our resilience and sense of self-efficacy. Seek out new connections beyond your usual sphere – maybe look for people in similar roles outside of your organisation – and generate opportunities to share experiences. 🧠Create thinking time. Set aside time each month, week, or even each day, that is dedicated to uninterrupted reflection. You might do this alone or with someone who you can trust to really listen – a coach, colleague, friend or partner who asks questions that deepen your thinking and who pays attention without trying to ‘fix’ things for you.  Have you ever felt lonely in leadership? What helped? Interesting read this week: Nancy Klein The Promise that Changes Everything – for reflection on how much we interrupt and are interrupted, the damage it does and the power of doing something different.

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Time to let go

There aren\’t enough hours in the day to be all over everything. And as a leader it\’s not your job anymore. So how do you let go of control and delegate in ways that set others up for success?

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¡Todos a la vez!

One of the most frustrating things about being a leader of leaders is when your top team isn\’t working together.
How do you get your team to collaborate and how do you work with your peers to generate true collective leadership?

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