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leader can achieve his or her goals without the efforts of
others. The success of community leaders rests on this deeper
and more powerful leadership question. Potential leadersask
themselves "How do I get individuals to do what I need
them to do?" True leaders ask "What can I say or
do to get them to cause themselves to do what I need them
to do?" True leadership is the art of "causing followership."
The art
of causing followership is founded on a few deceptively simple
principles. The first principle: People do what their minds
and emotions tell them to do, not what the leader says to
do. Ignoring the psychological and emotional needs of followers
is akin to wearing a blindfold on an obstacle course. Consider
a ditch digger who works past exhaustion and an executive
who takes three-hour lunches. Both are motivated 100 percent
to fulfill their own current needs. Shouting instructions
louder or clarifying job descriptions won't fundamentally
change those needs.
Wise leaders
who acknowledge this also grasp the second fundamental principle
of causing followership: The follower provides the motivation.
No leader can motivate others. They can only cause followers
to motivate themselves. While this may seem like semantics,
it is a subtle but profound shift in understanding true leadership.Successful
leaders, like effective followers, are motivated to achieve
goals. An individual's efforts toward this end are done for
personal satisfying reasons. At some level, all human action,
even that of the selfless community leader , fulfills a personal
need. Thus the third principle: All motivation is self-serving.
The critical
question for a true leader: "How do I determine what
behavior on my part will cause my followers to motivate themselves?"
Answering this question is the key to creating followership.
Unlocking the power that typically lies dormant in the followers
can be viewed as a function of four primary conditions, each
one linking together to create the psychological environment
for true leadership.
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The
four conditions are:
- Accurate, timely, and useful information
- Perceptual agility
- Need-goal alignment
- Behavioral agility
The first necessary condition, frequently sabotaged by bad
systems or bad relationships, is the constant flow of accurate,
timely and useful information. The most valuable kind of information
is "negative" feedback from followers. Any leader
who protects his or her fragile ego with a compulsive need
to appear perfect, strong, or the one with all the answers
will stop this vital flow of information. Oftentimes we hear
these leaders cry, "My people don't treat me with respect!"
Little wonder, since these individuals invariably posture
to protect and maintain their own egos.
A second
necessary condition for true leadership is perceptual agility.
This is the skill of listening, thinking, and analyzing outside
of your own frame of reference. Leaders with perceptual agility
see the world as others see it. Mentally, they walk a mile
on another person's shoes at a moments notice. Operating from
one's own frame of reference is a severe limitation to accurately
reading follower's needs.
Much of
the negative feedback that potential leaders avoid can be
reframed. If leaders view negative feedback as a reflection
of the follower's perception, that feedback loses its sting
and becomes indeterminate data. A person's criticisms can
tell you more about how that person's mind prioritizes goals
than it does about your performance. More fundamentally, such
criticism tells you about his or her needs.
Once the
information is flowing, and the leader has developed the perceptual
agility to map the mental terrain, a true leader must create
need-goal alignment. Linking the follower's needs to a goal
taps into the follower's own rich source of motivation and
commitment. Any leader who can align his goals with a follower's
needs will reap the harvest of tremendous energy locked inside
each human being. Any leader who neglects to consider follower's
needs will be forced to spend tremendous amounts of his or
her own energy to maintain that status quo.
Final
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