Latest from Professional Development/Leadership
HUMAN NETWORK: Managers Become Leaders With a Shift in Focus
Senior leadership at the corporate headquarters of a large retail chain was entertaining succession planning. What started out as an exercise turned into a sweeping new protocol for transitioning managers into leaders.
For the organization, it’s vitally important to get this right. Managers sometimes trip on their way up. Senior leaders can mitigate stumbling with an aggressive strategy.
Managers are typically promoted into leadership roles with the thought that their effectiveness will continue; but rather than assume, senior leaders are wise to put into place a two-pronged approach.
The first prong is to place the right candidate. The old cliché applies: Hire for attitude and train for ability.
The second prong is to cultivate the well-selected candidate. This involves extensive training opportunities and environments that promote growth.
Transitioning managers into leaders should ideally start long before the switch is flipped. Early on, candidates should be groomed through extensive training, cross-program experiences, and leadership development. Preferably, the training, experience and development will culminate by equipping the candidate-leader with a view and an understanding of the leadership landscape.
Placing an incumbent leader in a productive environment is less precise.
The context of leadership can be polarizing, ambiguous, volatile, and complex; so out of necessity, strong support systems must be in place. A network of colleagues to model the way and offer reassurance along with mentors, coaches, and careful monitoring, will serve as the classic challenge/support system to promote a productive transition while cultivating new leaders.
New Leaders Must Shift in 5 Broad Areas
The biggest difference to grasp for new leaders is the change in role that entails a focused shift in 5 broad areas:
1. Production to Outcomes
The immediate challenge for managers is to shift their thinking and operating from a "making widgets" mindset to an influencing outcomes mindset. It is inherent in the leadership process that the leader influences the outcome. As the new leader begins working with department heads and stakeholders they need to be operating from a new perspective, a long-term view with idea of short-term, stepping-stone implementation. The role of the leader is to influence the long term with organizational strategy in mind.
Rather than making and counting widgets, a new leader must have both eyes toward efficiencies now and necessary adaptations toward the future.
2. Specialist to Visionary
Managers thrive as specialists. They know their department, their people, and their function.
That’s not enough for a leader. Leaders must know the language of all departments. They must be able to translate information, patterns, and trends from departments into the language of efficiencies, profit and direction.
The vision of the organization is up to the leadership. No one else will take the reins here. Leaders must harness what is known now with the trends they see in the telescope and provide direction. Vision can be complex and multifaceted, but nothing can beat everyone pulling in the same direction. This is one big advantage that is difficult for competitors to duplicate.
3. From One to All
Managers have the responsibility to manage the day-to-day on the floor. They are embedded with the staff. Leaders don’t manage things as much as they lead direction. Whereas a manager focuses on employee engagement, a leader has a focus of workforce engagement.
A new leader may have lingering departmental biases that show up as baggage that slows meetings and other processes down. The classic mistake is for new leaders to over-manage and under-lead, especially their previous function. Colleagues need to give the new leader their patience while he cultivates an open-minded shift from managing one department to serving all departments in the organization.
4. Solving Problems to Seeing Problems Before They Develop
Strictly speaking, managers and leaders are keen problem solvers. But one of the finer points of leadership — and where leaders earn their keep — is seeing problems before they happen. If a leader can identify slowed growth or a decline in earnings early on, and proactively put things in place to avoid the dreaded workforce planning, this "seeing" can save everyone.
5. Worker to Learner
Leadership is not about knowing — it’s about learning. New leaders typify the shift from a working manager to a learning leader. As they work to cultivate an open mind and flexibility, they must also demonstrate a commitment to relentless self-improvement — that means applying continuous learning toward competency, excellence, and greatness.
When new developing leaders are hand-selected, cultivated, and afforded the organizational backing necessary for success, it’s more than an exercise in succession — it’s a testament to a leadership strategy and the state-of-the-art demonstration of a leadership culture. Over time the effort builds into the ultimate competitive advantage.
About the Author: Brian Braudis is a highly sought-after human potential expert, certified coach, speaker, and author of High Impact Leadership: 10 Action Strategies for Your Ascent. He has also authored several audio programs from executive leadership development to stress management. Brian believes leadership is a verb not a title. Brian’s passionate and inspiring presentations are based on the foundation that regardless of your position or role everyone is a leader. For more information, please visit https://www.thebraudisgroup.com/.