December 2017

Page 8

Field News

IDENTIFYING GREAT LEADERS: INSPIRATION AND IMPACT Brian Schooley - November 9, 2017 In a foundational leadership course I facilitate, I ask the students who they consider to be a great leader and why. With over 500 students in the past two years, I find in each class the answers are consistently similar. They identify two types of leaders who have either inspired or directly impacted them. The responses also provide some valuable insights for first-line supervisors and managers.

their commitment and passion were the same. They personified confidence, even if presented in different forms.

The first category of leaders are people most of us would recognize. Names like Martin Luther King Jr., Gandhi, John F. Kennedy, General Norman Schwarzkopf, Mother Teresa and many others like them. These are historical figures who have significantly impacted the world. When asked why they chose these particular people, the students typically mention how inspirational these people were. Following are some of the words used to describe these leaders:

But guess what? Most of us aren’t going to be the next Abraham Lincoln or Bill Gates or Colin Powell. Yet, we can still have an incredible impact on those we lead (and serve). Paraphrasing Mother Teresa, We are not all called to do great things, but we can each do small things with great love.

Charisma

Powerful

Influence

Selfless

Passionate

Mission-oriented

Commitment

Almost unanimously, the common theme amongst those named is their ability to communicate, even though many of them did so in different ways. Even today, who could listen to Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech and not be moved? At the same time, Mother Teresa’s humility and amazing persistence for her mission in India served as powerful communication devices. These leaders also had significantly different missions, but they all embodied the ability to motivate and move masses of people towards various goals. Certainly, the mission and goals of a Gandhi differ a great deal from a General Schwarzkopf. But

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Other famous people the students names include innovators like Elon Musk, Steve Jobs and Benjamin Franklin. Their creativity and inventive nature set them apart, and like the names listed before, impacted the world.

That is my segue to the second type of leader my students recognize class after class. They identify first-level supervisors and front-line managers, the people who are impacting their lives on a daily basis. Don’t get me wrong, not all of the students do this, but those who have effective supervisors are more than willing to list their supervisor as a “great leader.” Following are some of the attributes they use to describe these leaders: •

Invested

Active listener

Cares about my growth and development

Courageous

Expertise

Integrity

Genuine

Who wouldn’t want to work for someone who has even just a fraction of those attributes? When students name their supervisors and list some or all of those attributes, other students chime in how they wish their supervisor was like that. Sadly, many students tell different stories

December 2017


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