Beyond the Limits of Leadership Connecticut

And why the military gets it better than business.

Local Companies

The Modern Observer Group
860-343-1579
220 Julia Terrace
Middletown, CT
The Working Coach, LLC
860-866-4087
95 Stub Hollow Rd.
New Hartford, CT
TFC
860-875-8892
P.O. Box 754
Tolland, CT
NDMA Inc.
203-431-0029
641 Danbury Road
Ridgefield, CT
DAVIDSTREEVER
(860) 526-9454
PO Box 122
Chester, CT
Total HR Services, LLC
203-561-7315
25 Chester St
Stamford, CT
TeleChoice, Inc.
860-429-0100
803 Warrenville Road
Mansfield Center, CT
Performance Programs, Inc.
800 565-4223
PO Box 630
Old Saybrook, CT
Russell Lee Media
888.569.0314
P.O. Box 4415
Hamden, CT
MCA Associates
203-732-0603
66 Derbyshire
Derby, CT


Beyond the Limits of Leadership

"Whenever we have a problem, we call for better leadership and more training." That appraisal was offered by Col. George Reed, who teaches at the U.S. Army War College, a leading military strategy school.
As Reed says, "We value leadership so highly that as a matter of culture we see it as a solution to everything. The truth is, good leadership and training will have a positive impact on most things, but overemphasis can result in overlooking other important variables." That assessment pulled me up short: leadership is the salient edge in every high-performing organization. But Reed is correct. Leadership cannot exist within a vacuum. It must open the door for other initiatives, such as learning and individual accountability.

Sharing the leadership load
The military prides itself on instilling leadership into all the ranks, from enlisted to senior officers. Unlike the corporate sector, leadership in military is not assumed; it is taught and then expected to be put into practice. Coupled with leadership is the sense of responsibility, being accountable for your actions, from ordering supplies to sending troops into combat.

When things go wrong, as they are wont to do in any organization, Col. Reed suggests that leaders ask questions about the organization, the context, policies and available resources. One of the findings at Abu Ghraib for instance was that the soldiers responsible for guarding Iraqis were from a military police unit, not trained for the hazards of a maximum security prison located in hostile territory. Hence, as Reed notes, they were out of their depth as well as unduly pressured to produce enemy intelligence. Consequently, the U.S.-Iraqi prison system was set up for failure. It was absent training, resources, proper supervision and leadership.

Leadership is not reserved for the big issues, nor is learning. Both must be integrated into the culture of the organization and continually taught, expected, practiced and renewed. From leadership and learning emerge a sense of accountability, a form of personal leadership that makes people responsible for outcomes. The job of pushing leadership, learning and accountability falls to managers.
Here are some ways to instill this practice into your organization.

Distribute thinking. Well-meaning managers want their people to do for themselves, but all too often they short-circuit the process by issuing orders instead of taking time to think first. To be fair, managers are put into positions where they can only react (get the job done) rather than pro-act (think first). So here’s a suggestion. When circumstances permit, say at the start of a project or the start of the business cycle, call people together and ask for their input in how to approach the project, how to circumvent obstacles and how to hurdle those obstacles when they arise. A moment taken to think first can prevent a month of cure.

Coach for specifics. Very often, managers issue directives that are vague and ambiguous. For example, a manager may ask an employee to demonstrate more creativity or more initiative. The what, where, why and how are left to the employee’s imagination; and hence the directives are left undone. Here’s where coaching comes in; it focuses on specifics, what actions an employee can take to improve her performance. Then, if a manager wants more initiative, he can suggest ways to demonstrate that initiative such as developing a plan, forming a team or executing against criteria. The more specific a manager can be, the greater he increases the odds of encouraging an employee’s own creativity, and ultimately responsibility and leadership. (Hint: Giving specifics does not circumvent thinking. It merely provides the employee with a suggested roadmap that can be modified with the employee’s own ideas.)

Promote ingenuity. Troops engaged in combat situations are among the most resourceful of all teams. Today, we see soldiers armoring their military with scrap iron scrounged from the streets of Iraq. Those soldiers are not waiting around for supplies or even for Donald Rumsfeld; they are applying their own ingenuity. Entrepreneurial startups are equally resourceful. A leading reason why Japanese manufacturers of a half-century ago pioneered just-in-time manufacturing along with the quality control measures of Deming and Juran was because of scarce resources. You will find that same ingenuity in resource-deprived startups from Silicon Valley to Bangalore. Committed people with good ideas find away way to make things happen.

The limits of leadership
"Imagine the organization that has been given a Herculean task with insufficient resources to accomplish it," says Col. Reed. "We'll run good leaders into the ground if we try to train and lead our way out of that situation." Again, leadership is not a universal panacea. In fact, leaders are really not responsible for all of the doing; they set the direction for others to carry through.

Leadership demands delegation, asking others to share in the load. At the same time, leaders must ensure that their employees have the authority and responsibility to get the job done. For example, if a manager asks an engineer to be a project manager but neglects to assign people to her team, then the project is doomed to failure. The engineer may be held responsible for missing the deadline, but in reality it is her manager who is at fault.

Successful organizations are those that value learning and expect their people to learn from their mistakes as well as their successes so that they grow their own skills. With such knowledge comes empowerment and accountability. That is leadership on a personal level, one that can propel the entire organization forward.

John Baldoni is a leadership communications consultant who works with Fortune 500 companies as well as non-profits including the University of Michigan. He is a frequent keynote and workshop speaker as well as the author of six books on leadership; the latest is How Great Leaders Get Great Results (McGraw-Hill). Readers are welcome to visit his leadership resource website at www.johnbaldoni.com.

Featured Local Company

Total HR Services, LLC

203-561-7315
25 Chester St
Stamford, CT
www.total-hr-services.com

Regional Articles
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Ansonia CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Avon CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Berlin CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Bethel CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Bloomfield CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Branford CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Bridgeport CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Bristol CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Brookfield CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Cheshire CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Clinton CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Colchester CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Coventry CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Cromwell CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Danbury CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Danielson CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Darien CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Derby CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership East Hampton CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership East Hartford CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership East Haven CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Ellington CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Enfield CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Farmington CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Glastonbury CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Greenwich CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Groton CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Guilford CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Hamden CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Hartford CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Jewett City CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Madison CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Manchester CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Meriden CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Middletown CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Milford CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Monroe CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Mystic CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Naugatuck CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership New Britain CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership New Canaan CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership New Fairfield CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership New Haven CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership New London CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership New Milford CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Newington CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Newtown CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Niantic CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership North Haven CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Norwalk CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Norwich CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Old Saybrook CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Orange CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Plainville CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Plantsville CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Ridgefield CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Rocky Hill CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Sandy Hook CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Seymour CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Shelton CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Simsbury CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Somers CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership South Windsor CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Southbury CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Southington CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Stafford Springs CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Stamford CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Storrs Mansfield CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Stratford CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Suffield CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Tolland CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Torrington CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Trumbull CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Uncasville CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Vernon Rockville CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Wallingford CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Waterbury CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Waterford CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Watertown CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership West Hartford CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership West Haven CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Weston CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Westport CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Wethersfield CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Willimantic CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Wilton CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Windsor CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Windsor Locks CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Winsted CT
- Beyond the Limits of Leadership Wolcott CT
Related Local Event
HOLIDAY NETWORKING GATHERING
Dates: 12/4/2008 - 12/4/2008
Location: Country Club of Darien
Darien CT
View Details
Rate Article
     
Articles Insider

Rss   Delicious   Digg   Add To My Yahoo   Add To My Google   Bookmark   Search Plugin

Topics:
Advertising Educational Content Home Appliances Real Estate Resources
Business Services Entertainment Home Electronics Software
Career Family Home Services Technology
Cars Fashion Internet Telecommunications
Chamber of Commerce Financial Services Legal Trade Shows
Computer Hardware Franchise Miscellaneous Travel
Construction Health Nightlife Weddings
Education Holidays Online Database World History