![]() VIEWPOINT: Just occasionally leaders need to make a grand gesture to get their message across, Rudi Plettinx, Managing Director of Management Centre Europe, offers valuable insight on when and how to do it, in this eighth in his series of articles for IEDP:Newly appointed leaders often have a shrinking window of opportunity to get the team they’ve been given to manage on their side. My view is that you need to get their attention from day one, the first hour if at all possible. I think it is vitally important to send a message that will make the organization know you are serious about getting things done. This is particularly true if you are being parachuted into a situation where there is low morale, high turnover or some similar corporate malaise. But getting people to sit up and pay attention sometimes calls for a grand gesture. Something truly memorable. The stuff of leadership legend that will be talked about whenever the business ‘war stories’ are recalled and retold. Just in case you need to make a grand leadership gesture one of these days, here are three real-life examples that might just get you thinking the next time you feel you need to make some instant impact:
For leaders, grand gestures have their place. Only you can’t do them too often. So my advice is save them for when you really need to strike a chord, sending a message that won’t, ever, be forgotten. You’ll also have fun doing it too. Whoever said that leadership shouldn’t be fun? Not me. Do you have a story about a CEO, or senior manager who made the grand gesture to get a point across ? If so we’d like to hear it.
This column on leadership and organizational development is written exclusively for the IEDP by Rudi Plettinx, Managing Director of Management Centre Europe, the Brussels-based development organization. Have a comment or a question? Connect with him via Linkedin.
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Showing posts with label managers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label managers. Show all posts
Monday, 4 January 2016
The Leadership Grand Gesture
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Monday, 14 December 2015
How to re-establish leadership balance in a boundary less world?
Gone are the ‘good old days’ where we could list on the right
hand side of our screen or page what “defines” a manager and on the left hand
side of the page the “features” defining a leader.
In today’s busy business and work world, we are continuously
bombarded with information through all sorts of channels & technology, on
an ongoing 24/7 basis. As a result, our jobs need our constant attention. We
need to be able to solve problems, make decisions, strategize, and support our
virtual and non-virtual teams and all of this at the speed of light. It can be
really difficult to keep any kind of boundaries and sometimes nearly
impossible.
Managers need to be leaders and leaders need to be managers.
Referring to leading and managing as ‘either or’ won’t help us to navigate the
complex realities of our work environment nor those of the global economic,
social, political or business landscape.
At MCE, we believe that Management and Leadership is not only
expressed and best applied alongside a ‘continuum’ (see below graph #1) but it is
also 360 degree and holistic.
#1 like this:

Many other boundaries or limits are also being effected by
the fast moving world we live in. For example a clear separation between work
life and private life is becoming more difficult to achieve. There are many ongoing
contradictions that make it more difficult to define a clear identity and clear
roles. Technology is no longer a ‘means’ to an end or a channel of communication
for example, but it defines who we are and blurs the lines between private life
and business life. We are always connected. So, knowing yourself (Leading Self)
and ‘being in balance with yourself’ is even more critical than it ever has
been.
But how can you know if you are in balance if you don’t know
what your boundaries should be? How do you know what is right and what is
wrong? When should you stop responding to emails that come to your mailbox 24
hours a day?
So let us review some quick tips to help you focus on what
matters and to set the boundaries that we need to be better leaders, managers,
partners, individuals, parents…:
- Set boundaries: start with defining what these are for you. It starts with you and managing yourself: stop and reflect. What does life balance mean for me? What do I need to be in balance?
- Define the most important areas: Which areas of my life are important to me and which out of these do I personally rank as my top three: (e.g.. spending quality time with my family, doing outdoor sports, seeing friends, contributing to society or to the community, travelling, time to reflect etc.)
- Reflect: To what extent I am honouring these or neglecting these areas? What’s the possible negative impact this lack of balance is having on myself, my environment and the way I manage and lead?
- Act: What behaviours and habits am I willing to change to re-establish my personal balance and by when and how will I do this?
- Measure: How do I know I have succeeded to get my balance back? (E.g. more time for myself, more energy, more helpful to my team members, less stress etc.)
To be great managers and leaders in today’s demanding world
where little boundaries exist, our first job is to be conscious of the
boundaries we need to set to enable us to act as great leaders. These can be
different for different people. Once we are aware of these, we need to assess
whether they are being challenged by outside demands and if so, how we can get
back our control over the way we manage our environment, not the other way
around. The best leaders are those who are versatile. This means they can
manage and lead whenever it is needed and they can adapt and be holistic in
their way of leading (self, others, business). However the most important
aspect is to get a good balance. Being out of balance will lead to stress, low
energy, lower productivity and ultimately less good people & business
leadership.
In the next post we will explore further, the impact of your lack
of balance on your personal health, your team’s engagement, and your
creativity.
About the author:
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Natalie Schurmann |
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