‘What does it take to be successful in top leadership?’, I’m asked by a client about to step up to an MD-on-the-board role. And I found my usual coach approach of ‘empower the client to discover’ went right out the window. ‘If you really want to lead with style’, I said, ‘then genuinely be yourself’.
My experience has often been that by
the time you, as a senior executive, are invited to be part of the elite
leadership team that make up the board of a large corporate, it’s your
character, experience and intuitive creativity that are really being called on.
You’ve done the journeying; the one
that starts in the first years learning the formulas for acceptance which allow
you to integrate into the company structure. As a team member you had to learn
how to get on with colleagues, how to keep time, meet deadlines, produce
results and communicate clearly, respectfully and using the language of the
organisation.
Then you moved up to management; you
learned the skills that allowed you to communicate clear goals, to motivate, to
listen well, to spot your team member’s strengths and to influence their
thinking as well as that of peers, directors and clients. You met deadlines and
achieved results.
As a director, you felt the pressure
and responded. You developed to know how to champion your business sector
within the overall company vision. You inspired those around you to think more
creatively, you knew which were the quick wins and which opportunities were
best played out over a longer, more strategic time period. You worked out that
to consciously invest in your own development at this point meant you could
work less (yet smarter) and earn more. You hired teams knowledgeably and
inspired with wisdom.
So now you’ve done your time, you’re
ready for board level and your role from here is to oversee the business of a
whole country or the negotiating of billion-pound contracts.
You’re part of a leadership team that
together steers a healthy course of growth for products, services, customers
and employees alike. What’s different from here is that there’s less instead of
more structure because the market isn’t defined by past results it’s created by
honoring the future. It’s time to downplay some of the rigidity that got you
there and up-play some of the true you.
Successful leaders, over time, learn
how to trust their intellect, their emotional intelligence and
their intuition. The investment of time and personal & professional
development has been focussed for the boardroom for a decade or more. From here
your ability to create and to influence from a place of integrity and uniquely
you-ness is massively leveraged. Competitors, customers and the rest of the
company are watching and learning from your style. You may not know it yet, but
in your part of the corporate world … you’re already a super-star!
See more at: http://www.jenniferbroadley.com
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