Leadership is one of the most complicated human endeavors, both at work and beyond.
There are entire sections of bookstores about leadership, more keynote speakers on the topic than you could possibly count, and roughly a half a million different programs purporting to help you with the crucial work of leading a team.
What do you actually need to know to be a team leader, though? What makes a great leader, and what makes great leadership? It's a complicated equation with many answers and possibilities, but we will try to walk through some of it here.
It is important, again, to understand how many different inputs there are to leadership -- there's at least (at least!) 23 different ways to conceptualize the work of leading a team. We tend to deify great leaders, which is logical and often good, but we can get confused about what exactly "leadership" is -- it's not really a destination, but just another step on a journey.
When people look at leadership and think of it as a destination, they tend to become ego-driven leaders, which doesn't help very much at all with leading a team. In fact, that style of leadership usually just alienates workers and drives up turnover.
We're seeing some of that right now with "The Great Resignation" and staffing shortages in multiple industries. It's not necessarily that everyone decided to get a new job at once. Rather, people were tired of ineffective leadership and being treated poorly by those in leadership roles, and they wanted more from their professional career. COVID helped open some eyes to what really matters, and being mistreated by poor leaders in the name of a paycheck isn't always what matters.
All this said, if you're a first-time leader or a veteran leader, what should you know about leading a team successfully?
Typically the biggest aspect a leader needs to focus on is communication. Without communication, it's impossible to build any type of team, from an effective team (hits most of their goals) to a high performing team (hits virtually all their goals).
Communication skills are absolutely crucial to team effectiveness. So what exactly are "communication skills?" This varies by the team you have, but it means being clear, being concise, setting deadlines, setting priorities, and communicating with each team member in the way they prefer to receive communications.
Some employees will be very driven by in-person, 1-on-1 conversations; some employees may prefer an email. Each of the group members will want something different in terms of communication, and the effective leader knows how to communicate differently with each team member because they know their people.
Beyond communication, what else will a good leader focus on? A few examples:
Broadly speaking, there are 11 different types of leadership style:
You can learn more about each specific style at the link above. However, the most important thing to remember is that there is no one-size-fits-all leadership style for a given team leader. Instead, most leaders are a mix of different styles across different situations. In other words, there isn't necessarily one leadership style that's the default gold standard. A style that works great in a certain work environment might not be nearly as beneficial with an entirely different team.
It's best to focus on the individual strengths of your group members instead of worrying too much about leadership style, but if you are interested about learning which leadership style you most align with, Fingerprint does have an assessment for that.
If you do a thought exercise around the purpose of leadership, and why some get paid more money to be the team leader, well, why is that? Ideally it's because someone needs to take the strategy of the organization and break that into work chunks to that employees know what to focus on. Someone needs to be able to set priorities. The leader needs to focus there.
Unfortunately, we know from research that only about 8% of leaders can truthfully and tactfully align strategy and execution. That's a tremendously low percentage, but it makes sense if you think about it: strategy can pivot often, and when it pivots, the work needs to be re-prioritized, but there's existing work and processes that also need to be managed. It's a very hard situation for some leaders, and part of what makes leadership so challenging.
You can work on this in part, and be a more effective leader in the process, by checking in frequently with your team. This means asking them about blockers, issues, wins, losses, and what tools and help they need to be successful.
Gratitude is an important aspect of work. You spend a lot of time at work. Gratitude underscores the entire human experience. So wouldn't you want to work at a place that realizes the power of gratitude? Most people spend about 55 hours/week or so interacting with work. Who wants to do that in a place sans gratitude?
As a result, a team leader needs to show gratitude to their people. This means checking in on their lives. It means asking how things are going, and how they can help. It means moving roadblocks out of the way. It does periodically mean gift cards, days off, and more. It means creating an environment where the employee has certainty and autonomy about their work; they know they probably won't get fired the next day, and they have a chance to work on things in the way they want, so long as the goals are met. This is what good leadership looks like in the context of gratitude. That's how managers and leaders need to think about leading team meetings and activities too -- always reserve space for compliments and gratitude.
Consider this post, entitled "Effective teams and managers: What Google has learned." Now pay attention to this section:
We were getting some signals that managers on the whole were not performing or at least not providing the experience to the people on their teams you would want to have when you come to work. We did research on what differentiates the best managers from the not-so-great managers and came up with eight attributes of success - everything ranging from having consideration for people as people to providing coaching and career development advice. We codified that set of eight, and we give every Google employee the chance to rate their manager on those eight attributes, and we provide them with the feedback. That is an example of a set of eight rules that is empirically based. We know it drives good outcomes, and if you can prove that a set of rules is leading to better outcomes, people will listen to that. It just needs to be based on data and evidence.
If you look for those eight crucial leadership skills, you come to this list:
Those things would all realistically make a very strong leader.
Some other things that the most effective leaders do:
Define priorities: Most companies (even those that make tons of $$$) are bad at this. What are the priorities of the company? Usually the answer is "X-percent growth." OK. So that's the priority. Now we need ..
Some action steps: What are the plans/operational elements that will get us to the priority? And then we need ..
Task alignment: What are people and teams supposed to be working on towards this goal?
Systems for shifting this: When goals, priorities, strategies, or tasks change ... how is that getting communicated?
It can be argued that, for the sake of more effective leadership, senior leaders would not be individual contributors. Instead, they would focus on the high-level stuff described above. (While seeking input from others.) Middle managers and front-line guys/girls would focus on the people and developing them. A lot of the boxes and reporting that middle/front-line guys used to be has been replaced or automated with technology and software suites. And yet, a lot of managers still spend hours and hours on those types of things - essentially box-checking that Oracle could do for them. What if those managers focused on people and aligning people's skill sets to big-picture priorities? What a wonderful time to be alive!
Anybody in a managerial position has two basic responsibilities: prioritize what must be done, and allocate resources to get those things done efficiently. "But how can you possibly prioritize or allocate if you haven't figured out what really matters?" Kraemer asks.
Self-reflection allows us to understand what is important, and focus on what might be done differently.
This means that those in leadership roles need to be checking in on themselves -- both their physical and mental health, of course, but also how they're doing and what their team is feeling. If you just barge ahead on tasks, you're not serving as a good leader. Check in with yourself and your team. Know where things truly stand. That's a crucial element of team leadership.
One of our strongest use cases is team performance, as well as resolving conflict and communicating better. Those are all essential aspects of leading a team and leadership in general, so we invite you to give them a try!
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Our expert coaches have designed hyper-effective programs that will help you improve your mental health, wellbeing, productivity, leadership and more.
Coach Marlee (your amazing AI-powered personal coach) will analyse your unique traits and goals to let you know which program to start with (and if there are any you should skip)!
Your recommended programs include:
Take your teaming to the next level in this high impact 9-week team coaching program with Coach Marlee. Discover and optimize complementary strengths and unique talents with your team, reach decisions together quickly, enjoy team cohesion, high energy and motivation as a bonded team.
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