Your staff won't tell you that you're terrible. You'll just have
to figure it out yourself.
If you ask one of your key employees how you're doing as a
leader, chances are that you aren't going to get a 100 percent honest answer.
The employee probably isn't going to tell you your faults, when you have the
power to destroy his or her employment.
You may be asking why you should even ask such a question of
your employees. After all, you're the boss. But it's simple, really. Research
shows that more than 70 percent of the workforce is disengaged. Much of the cause
of that disengagement ofteN stems from the active dislike the employee has for
his or her leader, often described as "the manager from hell."
But none of these employees are going to risk their jobs to tell
you that. And because of their reluctance, you may need to take a long, hard
look at your behavior and be brave enough to recognize the signs that you
aren't doing as good of a job as a leader as you would like.
Here are 10 signs that you may, well, suck as a leader:
1. Your attitude is "This is how we do things
around here, and you can like it or leave."
Great leaders are in a constant state of growth and
adaptability. They would never approach employees with this attitude.
2. You are busy being nice.
Great leaders know what truly matters. Leaders know their
purpose -- their why. Running a
business is not a popularity contest that leaders need to try to win. If you
spend all your time trying to be nice to people, you aren't leading.
3. You micro-manage.
Great leaders are collaborative, not micro-managers. Leaders
don't feel that they have to do everything themselves. They trust their team
members to do it and know they will do it right.
4. You are all about the numbers.
Great leaders are, first and foremost, CROs. You know -- chief
relationship officers. Leaders cannot always focus on the bottom line. Remember
that the number one character trait of great leaders is that they highly value
the people they lead.
5. You secretly, or not so secretly, dislike people.
Great leaders are genuinely into their work relationships. They
like people and love seeing them grow. You have no business being a leader if
you don't like people.
6. You steal the light.
Great leaders give the spotlight to others. Bad leaders take
credit for what's not theirs, and justify their behavior based on some
"rational-lies" that they tell themselves. But it is not, despite
anything you have ever been told, all about you.
7. You lack empathy and compassion.
Great leaders have a highly developed level of emotional
intelligence. Don't try to lead if you can't grasp this concept.
8. You lack self-knowledge.
Great leaders are continually developing deeper self-knowledge,
because they understand that self-knowledge lies at the root of genuine empathy
and compassion. In order to lead effectively, you have to know who you are
below the surface.
9. Your people don't trust you.
Great leaders are highly integral. They don't say one thing and
do another. If this is you, you'll lose ground every quickly with your staff.
10. You keep your personal life a secret.
Great leaders are bonded to their people, and their people are
bonded to them. Great leaders know and care about who their people are. Great
leaders let their people see who they authentically are beyond their role as
leader. Let people in, proving that you have learned the power of
vulnerability.
If you read this, and you find yourself saying, "Yeah, but
you don't understand," what you are actually saying is that you are
committed to sucking at your role as you are at leading. If that's the case, no
one can help you until you decide it's too painful to stay the same.
So, what's it going to be?
Written by: Dov Baron
Credit: Entrepreneur.com
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