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BlogLeadership

Story Telling & Trust

by Ron Potter September 18, 2009
Image Source: Sarah Browning, Creative Commons

Image Source: Sarah Browning, Creative Commons

Building trust is an essential part of leadership, but people aren’t likely to trust you if they feel they don’t know you at all. That was the problem with a manager I was asked to help.

Her biggest issue is that she didn’t let people in. She was a leader – people reported to her – but her people didn’t feel like they understood who she was. She seemed very distant and aloof.

And it was intentional. When I spoke with her about it, she said:

“I don’t want to have people from work in my personal life. I don’t want them knowing what I do, or what sort of person I am.”

Her problem wasn’t arrogance or disdain. She felt vulnerable. She was trying to protect herself.

My challenge was to show her there was a way to connect with her people that didn’t involve the sort of intimacy she feared. I spent our first-day session together modeling how to do this. When we got to the end of the session, I asked, “How well do you think you know me now?”

She replied, “I know a phenomenal amount about you.”

“Really?” I said. “How is that?”

“Every time I asked you a question, you told me a story that related to that topic.”

I told her I did that deliberately because people remember stories, and they also connect with the person telling the story. She was feeling like she knew me almost intimately after just one day, and all because I told her six to eight stories as we were talking.

“You can do the same thing,” I said. “You don’t have to bare your soul with people. You just need to start telling stories about the things you’ve done and how you’ve learned what you know.”

It was a very powerful lesson for her. She walked out of the session thinking, “I can do that. I can tell stories.” I think it made a huge difference in her leadership ability.

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Short Book Reviews

Management Rewired

by Ron Potter September 9, 2009

Management RewiredRon’s Short Review: How our brain actually works and how that impacts our image of management and leadership.

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BlogTeam

What’s Love Got To Do With It?

by Ron Potter August 26, 2009
Image Source: David Goehring, Creative Commons

Image Source: David Goehring, Creative Commons

The Sporting News recently honored UCLA Legend, John Wooden as the greatest coach of all time. Coach Wooden ended his acceptance speech with these words:

“Love is the most important thing in the world.”

While Coach Wooden did indeed love his players, he is known best for building some of the greatest sports team in history. So, what’s love got to do with it? Love is, in fact, the foundation and essential element for building great teams.

Unfortunately, our English language shortchanges the word love. In Greek, there are at least three words that get translated into our word love. Two of these Greek words signify the emotional feelings and affection we might feel for a lover or a brother. However, the third word is an action verb. It’s not about what we feel, it’s about what we do. This is the type of love that coach Wooden was talking about.

Wayne Hastings and I identify seven main elements of this action-oriented love in our new book, Team Trust. They include:

Patience

Kindness

Lack of envy

Humility

Is not rude

Does not anger easily

Keeps no records of wrong

At the heart of the list is humility. This is the same element that begins the list of Trust Me, Developing a Leadership Style That People Will Follow. You can hear it in the words Coach Wooden spoke during his acceptance speech, when he said:

“No one can really honestly be the very best, no one.”

Coach went on to give the glory to his players, saying:

“[The players] are the ones that make the coaches.”

Humble to the very end. Coach Wooden is a very wise 98 years old.

Without humility, none of the other elements of Trust Me or Team Trust have a chance of blossoming. Pride tends to undermine all of the seven attributes listed above.

How can we develop patience when we’re always right?

Kindness, when mixed with pride, comes across as demeaning or patronizing.

Pride is the root of envy and rudeness.

Proud people feel anger when things don’t go their way.

Proud people tend to nurse grudges and keep a record of perceived wrongs.

If you seek greatness, start by taking a humble attitude. You’ll be amazed at how much people will honor you.

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Short Book Reviews

The Introverted Leader

by Ron Potter July 9, 2009

Introverted LeaderRon’s Short Review: Encouraging the Introverted leader.

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BlogLeadership

Humility vs Hubris

by Ron Potter May 19, 2009
Image Source: Dennis Jarvis, Creative Commons

Image Source: Dennis Jarvis, Creative Commons

When I met with Wayne Hastings for the first time to discuss the writing of our book, Trust Me: developing a leadership style people will follow, I carried with me a research paper I had been reading that eventually became Jim Collins’ book, Good to Great. In his book Jim described what he termed a “Level 5” leadership style that was present every time a company went from being a good company to being a great company. The two pillars of that style were humility and a strong will to endure and succeed. Our book outlined 8 leadership principles that began with humility and ended with endurance, the same characteristics.

Jim is now publishing a new book titled How The Mighty Fall: And Why Some Companies Never Give In where he looks at the signs that we can detect that indicate a company may be on it’s way down from great to good (or worse).

What’s the number one sign? Hubris!

Hubris (/hju:bris/)

Excessive pride or self-confidence; arrogance
Overbearing pride or presumption; arrogance

Wikipedia says:

“It was also considered the greatest sin of the ancient Greek world because it was not only proof of excessive pride, but also resulted in violent acts by or to those involved.”

Humility: the first principle in great leadership
Hubris: the first step of the fall from glory

Are you a great listener?
Do you accept the brutal reality of your situation?
Do you have great faith in people?
Do you see it as your job to help everybody perform at their best or be in a place where they can be successful?
Or, do you believe you’re successful because you (and your team) have figured out the right way to do things. You’re smart. You know what you’re doing. Hubris?


The links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the FTC’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

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BlogLeadership

Humility is Still Number One

by Ron Potter May 2, 2009

A back issue of BusinessWeek (May 11, 2009) reviews a book by soon-to-be Regulatory czar Cass Sunstein titled, Going to Extremes: How Like Minds Unite and Divide. BusinessWeek says:

“What jumps out from the book is Sunstein’s mistrust of human judgment in everything from politics to business, especially when people band together.”

They go on to say:

“There’s a whiff of elitism in Sunstein’s apparent call for enlightened experts (like himself) to gently correct the cockeyed masses.”

However, they say:

“Sunstein also believes wrongheaded views can be kept in check. Part of the answer is putting people with humility, curiosity, and openness in power.”

I don’t have any faith in the elitism view that a few very smart people with what Sunstein calls “Liberal paternalism” are the answer to anything. I meet too many smart, hardworking, dedicated people every day who go to work with great values and the intent to make things better. But, isn’t it interesting that even the “Liberal Parent” says I wouldn’t have to step in and “fix” things if people would simply put leaders in place who have humility as their number one trait.

Jim Collins in his book Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap…And Others Don’t identifies the number one trait of great leaders as humility.

In my book, Trust Me: Developing a Leadership Style People Will Follow, we identify the number one trait of great leaders as humility. None of the other traits work without it.

Check your ego at the door every morning. It will make you a better leader.


The links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the FTC’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

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Short Book Reviews

Right from the Start

by Ron Potter September 9, 2008

Right From The StartRon’s Short Review: Dan lays out a good plan for the first 100 days in a new job.

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Short Book Reviews

Heroic Leadership

by Ron Potter June 9, 2008

Heroic LeadershipRon’s Short Review: The Jesuits were formed at a time of new world markets, links between American, Europe and Asia and increased media systems.  Amazing transferable values contributed to their success.

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Short Book Reviews

Cowboy Values

by Ron Potter April 9, 2008

Cowboy ValuesRon’s Short Review: Just a fun read about cowboys and their American values.

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Short Book Reviews

What Got You Here Won’t Get You There

by Ron Potter December 9, 2007

What Got You Here Won't Get You ThereRon’s Short Review: Making the shift from being a manager to being a leader takes different skills.

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Short Book Reviews

The SPEED of Trust

by Ron Potter October 9, 2006

The SPEED of TrustRon’s Short Review: Lack of Trust adds a stiff tax to the operation of an organization.

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Short Book Reviews

Leadership and the New Science

by Ron Potter September 9, 2006

Leadership and the New ScienceRon’s Short Review: This one is deep and takes some real thought and concentration.

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