PUBLISHED:
Your answer determines your ability to build strong, resilient teams.
What makes a competent leader? How does one create a measurable metric to determine the efficacy of leadership?
While there are numerous exams to certify a manager in a specific area, there was no widely accepted universal measure of leadership competency as a whole. That is until Resilience Building Leader Program (RBLP) came in and changed the game.
Why has this metric been missing from contemporary management? Well, because it’s challenging to capture. There’s quite a bit of grey area in what makes a competent leader.
RBLP set out to fill this gap in the marketplace. They developed an oral exam and turned it into a definable metric of success.
So what has this highly successful program found to be the key to effective leadership? Dr. Gene Coughlin, RBLP’s founder and CEO, insists it’s simpler than you may think…
“Be brilliant at the basics.”
Let’s dig in.
Leader tasks like earning trust, treating people with respect, enforcing accountability, and encouraging people to have fun in the workplace, are the keys to effective leadership. At first glance, there is nothing revelatory about these leader tasks. But that’s exactly what it’s about, being brilliant at the basics.
This is what is enduring and sustainable. This is how to build strong, resilient, teams and organizations.
Building and leading a team is a human endeavor … and humans haven’t changed that much. The foundations of leadership haven’t either.
There’s a lot of fad leadership training out there, but to abandon the basics is to sacrifice your people. When your people are not prioritized, your leadership and management inherently suffer.
We know Peter Drucker’s Management as a Liberal Art (MLA) supports self-development and moral growth in people. The results of RBLP’s analysis reads like a ringing endorsement of this MLA philosophy.
RBLP found that successful managers create an environment that allows people to find meaning in the work they do. An environment with opportunities to grow both personally and professionally. These are core values in building resilient teams.
Organizations are made up of humans. People who need to be managed and led to effectively contribute to an organization, and to society at large. Bringing people together to work as a team is vital, especially during times of adversity and challenge – such as the COVID-19 crisis.
It is by working together, that the organization achieves its mission. And from there, makes a positive contribution to the community. The ability to make this contribution hinges on affording your employees the opportunity to excel.
People spend at least 8 hours a day, 5 days a week at work. For many of us, work can become as much, or more important, in our lives than personal endeavors. It is this fact that great leaders must remember and nurture.
So, what sustains a resilient team?
Most MBA programs encourage prioritizing shareholders and profits. These curriculums focus on all the components of business that are not human. Coughlin urges you to be more well-rounded as a leader than one advanced degree can offer.
In fact, leaders with an MBA and a background in the humanities, often find more success in building a resilient team. Why? Because they understand the importance of humanity. How nurturing individual employee success affects society.
Prioritize employees over shareholders and profit.
Prioritize employees over the customer.
Provide Purpose
Prioritizing people is not a revolutionary idea. But if it is so obvious, why is it such a difficult long-term strategy?
Top-level executives are often managing, but not leading.
We manage process, but we lead people.
Your only sustainable source of competitive advantage is your people. Product and process come and go. People are what is behind new ideas, new products, and new processes.
There is no shortage of management in organizations today, but there is not a lot of leading. Both Coughlin and Drucker’s findings encourage you to lead.
If you focus on your people, you inherently prioritize where the next great idea is coming from.
In order to advance from management to leadership, it is vital you ground your style in liberal arts principles – in Management as a Liberal Art.
As RBLP continues to revolutionize leadership, it is clear that simply building teams is outdated. Building resilient teams that can work together through adversity and challenge – that can adapt to industry rocking crises such as COVID-19 – is the new gold standard.
It is Dr. Gene Coughlin’s hope that in ten years people will be using the phrase, “building resilient teams,” as easily as the term “project management” is used today. The future of leadership is in resilience. It is in your hands to build it.
Sources:
https://open.spotify.com/episode/2P5MmGfQaQCV2oTKCKRGOJ
The body content of your post goes here. To edit this text, click on it and delete this default text and start typing your own or paste your own from a different source.
+1 (626) 350-1500
1000 S. Fremont Ave - Mailbox #45
Building A10, 4th Floor, Suite 10402
Alhambra, CA 91803
Thank you for subscribing!
Oops, there was an error. Please try again later.