Thursday, November 14, 2019
3 ways a business leader gets people to follow
3 ways a business leader gets people to follow 3 ways a business leader gets people to follow To get the most out of their workforce, todayâs business leaders may need to look at their own role â" and their workers â" a bit differently than leaders did decades ago. A strong and effective leader certainly stands at the top of a hierarchy, but great leaders today donât act hierarchically.While people thrive under great leaders, in todayâs business world they are also looking for a safe haven work environment where respect, trust, and encouragement are bedrocks of the work culture. Here are three ways a company leader can get people to follow, and do so without being punitive and domineering:Donât treat employees like childrenThe level of complexity and the pace of change that leaders at all levels face today is unprecedented. The pressure for achievement is intense and when mistakes are made, or when staff show up disengaged, tempers can flare.âFrustration and anger are powerful emotions, and when leaders get flooded with these feelings they typically fall into a model of leadership and accountability deeply embedded in their memories â" parenting, So they demote their employees to the role of children,â Rheem says. âBut most adults do not want to be patronized or treated like children. Those ways donât inspire employees to thrive in their work environment or put forth their best effort.âEmployees today, especially among the current generation entering the workplace, are far more likely to quit or deliberately underperform under those conditions. Thatâs bad for morale, damages the culture, and encourages turnover.âBe positiveA leader who cultivates a positive culture can reap myriad benefits. Research of 16 different industries, conducted by Dr. Kim Cameron at the University of Michiganâs Stephen M. Ross School of Business, found a significant relationship between âvirtuousnessâ in the workplace - forgiveness, compassion, optimism and trustworthiness â" and improvements in everything from profitability and productivity to quality, innovation, customer satisfaction and employee retention.âLeaders need to move away from the CPO template, where they are the Chief Punishment Officer, and instead move to more brain-friendly modes as mentors, coaches, good listeners and captains of positive recognition,â Rheem says.Donât be subverted by subculturesA companyâs top leader needs to ensure the next layers of leadership are consistently echoing the companyâs ethos at every level throughout the enterprise.âHold managers and supervisors accountable for communicating the corporate culture and living the organizationâs values,â Rheem says. âDonât let divergent micro-cultures or siloed departments hijack the enterpriseâs culture. Having strong and effective leaders as managers and supervisors creates the consistent conditions essential to healthy and sustainable workplace cultures.ââThere is a very high emotional cost in making difficult choices that affect other peopleâs lives,â Rheem says. âMost of us would prefer having those decisions made by someone we trust and have faith in, not someone who brandishes a title or threats of punitive consequences in order to achieve authority. The most successful leaders in the new era of work now underway will balance strength and determination with empathy and understanding.âDon Rheem, author of Thrive By Design: The Neuroscience that Drives High-Performance Cultures, is CEO of E3 Solutions, a provider of employee workplace metrics and manager training that allow organizations to build engaged, high-performance cultures.
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