What Is Leadership?
What is leadership, anyway?
Such a simple question, and yet it continues to vex popular
consultants and lay people alike. I’ve now written several books on leadership
for employee engagement, and yet it
occurred to me that I never actually paused to define leadership.
Let’s start
with what leadership is not…
Leadership has nothing to do with seniority or one’s position in
the hierarchy of a company.
Too many
talk about a company’s leadership referring to the senior most executives in
the organization. They are just that, senior executives. Leadership doesn’t
automatically happen when you reach a certain pay grade. Hopefully you find it
there, but there are no guarantees.
Leadership has nothing to do with titles.
Similar to
the point above, just because you have a C-level title, doesn’t automatically
make you a “leader.” In all of my talks I stress the fact that you don’t need a
title to lead. In fact, you can be a leader in your place of worship, your
neighborhood, in your family, all without having a title.
Leadership has nothing to do with personal attributes.
Say the
word “leader” and most people think of a domineering, take-charge charismatic
individual. We often think of icons from history like General Patton or
President Lincoln. But leadership isn’t an adjective. We don’t need extroverted
charismatic traits to practice leadership. And those with charisma don’t
automatically lead.
Leadership isn’t management.
This
is the big one. Leadership and management are not synonymous. You have 15
people in your downline and P&L responsibility? Good for you, hopefully you
are a good manager. Good management is needed. Managers
need to plan, measure, monitor, coordinate, solve, hire, fire, and so many
other things. Typically, managers manage things. Leaders lead people.
So, again, what is Leadership?
Let’s see
how some of the most respected business thinkers of our time define leadership,
and let’s consider what’s wrong with their definitions.
Peter Drucker: "The only definition of a leader is someone
who has followers."
Really? This
instance of tautology is so simplistic as to be dangerous. A new Army Captain
is put in the command of 200 soldiers. He never leaves his room, or utters a
word to the men and women in his unit. Perhaps routine orders are given through
a subordinate. By default his troops have to “follow” orders. Is the Captain
really a leader? Commander yes, leader no. Drucker is of course a brilliant
thinker of modern business but his definition of leader is too simple.
Warren Bennis: "Leadership is the capacity to translate
vision into reality.”
Every spring
you have a vision for a garden, and with lots of work carrots and tomatoes
become a reality. Are you a leader? No, you’re a gardener. Bennis’ definition
seems to have forgotten “others.”
Bill Gates: "As we look ahead into
the next century, leaders will be those who empower others."
This
definition includes “others” and empowerment is a good thing. But to what end?
I’ve seen many empowered “others” in my life, from rioting hooligans to Google
workers who were so misaligned with the rest of the company they found
themselves unemployed. Gates’ definition lacks the parts about goal or vision.
John Maxwell: "Leadership
is influence - nothing more, nothing less."
I like minimalism but this
reduction is too much. A robber with a gun has “influence” over his victim. A
manager has the power to fire team members which provides a lot of influence.
But does this influence make a robber or a manager a leader? Maxwell’s
definition omits the source of influence.
So what is leadership?
Notice
key elements of this definition:
· Leadership stems from social influence, not authority or power
· Leadership requires others,
and that implies they don’t need to be “direct reports”
· No mention of personality
traits, attributes, or even a title; there are many styles, many paths, to
effective leadership
· It includes a goal, not influence with no intended outcome
Lastly,
what makes this definition so different from many of the academic definitions
out there is the inclusion of “maximizes the efforts”. Most of my work is in
the area of employee engagement, and engaged employees give discretionary
effort.
I guess technically a
leader could use social influence to just organize the
efforts of others, but I think leadership is about maximizing the
effort.
It’s not, “Hey everyone, let’s line up and get to the top of that hill
someday.”
But rather, “Hey, see that hill?
Let’s see how fast we can get to the
top…and I’ll buy the first round for anyone who can beat me up there.”
So what
do you think of my definition of leadership?
Social influence, others,
maximize effort, towards a goal.
Do those key elements work for you?
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