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Leading and
Motivating By Brian Tracy
It’s been said that
“Leadership is not what you do, but who you are.” This, however, is
only partially true. Leadership is very much who you are, but it
cannot be divorced from what you do. Who you are represents the
inner person, and what you do represents the outer person. Each is
dependent on the other for maximum effectiveness.
The starting point of motivational leadership is to begin seeing
yourself as a role model, seeing yourself as an example to others.
See yourself as a person who sets the standards that others follow.
A key characteristic of leaders is that they set high standards of
accountability for themselves and for their behaviors. They assume
that others are watching them and then setting their own standards
by what they do. They, in fact, lead by example, just exactly as
though someone were following them around, surreptitiously taking
notes and photographs of their daily actions for others to see and
act on.
Motivational leadership is based on the Law of Indirect Effort.
According to this law, most things in human life are achieved more
easily by indirect means than they are by direct means. You more
easily become a leader to others by demonstrating that you have the
qualities of leadership than you do by ordering others to follow
your directions. Instead of trying to get people to emulate you, you
concentrate on living a life that is so admirable that others want
to be like you without your saying a word.
In business, there are several kinds of power. Two of these are
ascribed power and position power.
Position power is the power that comes with a job title or position
in any organization. If you become a manager in a company, you
automatically have certain powers and privileges that go along with
your rank. You can order people about and make certain decisions.
You can be a leader whether or not anyone likes you.
Ascribed power is the power you gain because of the kind of person
you are. In every organization, there are people who are
inordinately influential and looked up to by others, even though
their positions may not be high up on the organizational chart.
These are the men and women who are genuine leaders because of the
quality of the people they have become, because of their characters
and their personalities.
Perhaps the most powerful of motivational leaders is the person who
practices what is called “servant leadership.” Confucius said, “He
who would be master must be servant of all.” The person who sees
himself or herself as a servant, and who does everything possible to
help others to perform at their best, is practicing the highest form
of servant leadership.
Over the years, we have been led to believe that leaders are those
who stride boldly about, exude power and confidence, give orders and
make decisions for others to carry out. However, that is old school.
The leader of today is the one who asks questions, listens
carefully, plans diligently and then builds consensus among all
those who are necessary for achieving the goals. The leader does not
try to do it by himself or herself. The leader gets things done by
helping others to do them.
This brings us to five of the qualities of motivational leaders.
These are qualities that you already have to a certain degree and
that you can develop further to stand out from the people around you
in a very short period of time.
The first quality is vision. This is the one single quality that,
more than anything, separates leaders from followers. Leaders have
vision. Followers do not. Leaders have the ability to stand back and
see the big picture. Followers are caught up in day-to-day
activities. Leaders have developed the ability to fix their eyes on
the horizon and see greater possibilities. Followers are those whose
eyes are fixed on the ground in front of them and who are so busy
that they seldom look at themselves and their activities in a larger
context.
George Bernard Shaw summarized this quality of leaders; in the words
of one of his characters: “Most men look at what is and ask, ‘Why?’
I instead look at what could be and ask, ‘Why not?’”
The best way for you to motivate others is to be motivated yourself.
The fastest way to get others excited about a project is to get
excited yourself. The way to get others committed to achieving a
goal or a result is to be totally committed yourself. The way to
build loyalty to your organization, and to other people, is to be an
example of loyalty in everything you say and do. These all are
applications of the Law of Indirect Effort. They very neatly tie in
to the quality of vision.
One requirement of leadership is the ability to choose an area of
excellence. Just as a good general chooses the terrain on which to
do battle, an excellent leader chooses the area in which he and
others are going to do an outstanding job. The commitment to
excellence is one of the most powerful of all motivators. All
leaders who change people and organizations are enthusiastic about
achieving excellence in a particular area.
The most motivational vision you can have for yourself and others is
to “Be the best!” Many people don’t yet realize that excellent
performance in serving other people is an absolute, basic essential
for survival in the economy of the future. Many individuals and
companies still adhere to the idea that as long as they are no worse
than anyone else, they can remain in business. That is just plain
silly! It is prehistoric thinking. We are now in the age of
excellence. Customers assume that they will get excellent quality,
and if they don’t, they will go to your competitors so fast,
people’s heads will spin.
As a leader, your job is to be excellent at what you do, to be the
best in your chosen field of endeavor. Your job is to have a vision
of high standards in serving people. You not only exemplify
excellence in your own behavior, but you also translate it to others
so that they, too, become committed to this vision.
This is the key to servant leadership. It is the commitment to doing
work of the highest quality in the service of other people, both
inside and outside the organization. Leadership today requires an
equal focus on the people who must do the job, on the one hand, and
the people who are expected to benefit from the job, on the other.
The second quality, which is perhaps the single most respected
quality of leaders, is integrity. Integrity is complete, unflinching
honesty with regard to everything that you say and do. Integrity
underlies all the other qualities. Your measure of integrity is
determined by how honest you are in the critical areas of your life.
Integrity means this: When someone asks you at the end of the day,
“Did you do your very best?” you can look him in the eye and say,
“Yes!” Integrity means this: When someone asks you if you could have
done it better, you can honestly say, “No, I did everything I
possibly could.”
Integrity means that you, as a leader, admit your shortcomings. It
means that you work to develop your strengths and compensate for
your weaknesses. Integrity means that you tell the truth, and that
you live the truth in everything that you do and in all your
relationships. Integrity means that you deal straightforwardly with
people and situations and that you do not compromise what you
believe to be true.
If the first two qualities of motivational leadership are vision and
integrity, the third quality is the one that backs them both up. It
is courage. It is the chief distinguishing characteristic of the
true leader. It is almost always visible in the leader’s words and
actions. It is absolutely indispensable to success, happiness and
the ability to motivate other people to be the best they can be.
In a way, it is easy to develop a big vision for yourself and for
the person you want to be. It is easy to commit yourself to living
with complete integrity. But it requires incredible courage to
follow through on your vision and on your commitments. You see, as
soon as you set a high goal or standard for yourself, you will run
into all kinds of difficulties and setbacks. You will be surrounded
by temptations to compromise your values and your vision. You will
feel an almost irresistible urge to “get along by going along.” Your
desire to earn the respect and cooperation of others can easily lead
to the abandonment of your principles, and here is where courage
comes in.
Courage combined with integrity is the foundation of character. The
first form of courage is your ability to stick to your principles,
to stand for what you believe in and to refuse to budge unless you
feel right about the alternative. Courage is also the ability to
step out in faith, to launch out into the unknown and then to face
the inevitable doubt and uncertainty that accompany every new
venture.
Most people are seduced by the lure of the comfort zone. This can be
likened to going out of a warm house on a cold, windy morning. The
average person, when he feels the storm swirling outside his comfort
zone, rushes back inside where it’s nice and warm. But not the true
leader. The true leader has the courage to step away from the
familiar and comfortable and to face the unknown with no guarantees
of success. It is this ability to “boldly go where no man has gone
before” that distinguishes you as a leader from the average person.
This is the example that you must set if you are to rise above the
average. It is this example that inspires and motivates other people
to rise above their previous levels of accomplishment as well.
Alexander the Great, the king of Macedonia, was one of the most
superb leaders of all time. He became king at the age of 19, when
his father, Philip II, was assassinated. In the next 11 years, he
conquered much of the known world, leading his armies against
numerically superior forces.
Yet, when he was at the height of his power, the master of the known
world, the greatest ruler in history to that date, he would still
draw his sword at the beginning of a battle and lead his men forward
into the conflict. He insisted on leading by example. Alexander felt
that he could not ask his men to risk their lives unless he was
willing to demonstrate by his actions that he had complete
confidence in the outcome. The sight of Alexander charging forward
so excited and motivated his soldiers that no force on earth could
stand before them.
The fourth quality of motivational leadership is realism. Realism is
a form of intellectual honesty. The realist insists upon seeing the
world as it really is, not as he wishes it were. This objectivity,
this refusal to engage in self-delusion, is a mark of the true
leader. Those who exhibit the quality of realism do not trust to
luck, hope for miracles, pray for exceptions to basic business
principles, expect rewards without working or hope that problems
will go away by themselves. These all are examples of self-delusion,
of living in a fantasyland.
The motivational leader insists on seeing things exactly as they are
and encourages others to look at life the same way. As a
motivational leader, you get the facts, whatever they are. You deal
with people honestly and tell them exactly what you perceive to be
the truth. This doesn’t mean that you will always be right, but you
will always be expressing the truth in the best way you know how.
The fifth quality of motivational leadership is responsibility. This
is perhaps the hardest of all to develop. The acceptance of
responsibility means that, as Harry Truman said, “The buck stops
here.”
The game of life is very competitive. Sometimes, great success and
great failure are separated by a very small distance. In watching
the play-offs in basketball, baseball and football, we see that the
winner can be decided by a single point, and that single point can
rest on a single action, or inaction, on the part of a single team
member at a critical part of the game.
Life is very much like competitive sports. Very small things that
you do, or don’t do, can either give you the edge that leads to
victory or take away your edge at the critical moment. This
principle is especially true with regard to accepting responsibility
for yourself and for everything that happens to you.
The opposite of accepting responsibility is making excuses, blaming
others and becoming upset, angry and resentful toward people for
what they have done to you or not done for you.
Any one of these three behaviors can trip you up and be enough to
cost you the game:
If you run into an obstacle or setback and you make excuses rather
than accept responsibility, it’s a five-yard penalty. It can cost
you a first down. It can cost you a touchdown. It can make the
difference between success and failure.
If, when you face a problem or setback, and you both make excuses
and blame someone else, you get a 10-yard penalty. In a tightly
contested game, where the teams are just about even, a 10-yard
penalty can cost you the game.
If, instead of accepting responsibility when things go wrong, you
make excuses, blame someone else and simultaneously become angry and
resentful and blow up, you get a 15-yard penalty. This may cost you
the championship and your career as well if it continues. Personal
leadership and motivational leadership are very much the same. To
lead others, you must first lead yourself. To be an example or a
role model for others, you must first become an excellent person
yourself.
You motivate yourself with a big vision, and as you move
progressively toward its realization, you motivate and enthuse
others to work with you to fulfill that vision.
You exhibit absolute honesty and integrity with everyone in
everything you do. You are the kind of person others admire and
respect and want to be like. You set a standard that others aspire
to. You live in truth with yourself and others so that they feel
confident giving you their support and their commitment.
You demonstrate courage in everything you do by facing doubts and
uncertainties and moving forward regardless. You put up a good front
even when you feel anxious about the outcome. You don’t burden
others with your fears and misgivings. You keep them to yourself.
You constantly push yourself out of your comfort zone and in the
direction of your goals. And no matter how bleak the situation might
appear, you keep on keeping on with a smile.
You are intensely realistic. You refuse to engage in mental games or
self-delusion. You encourage others to be realistic and objective
about their situations as well. You encourage them to realize and
appreciate that there is a price to pay for everything they want.
They have weaknesses that they will have to overcome, and they have
standards that they will have to meet, if they want to survive and
thrive in a competitive market.
You accept complete responsibility for results. You refuse to make
excuses or blame others or hold grudges against people who you feel
may have wronged you. You say, “If it’s to be, it’s up to me.” You
repeat over and over the words, “I am responsible. I am responsible.
I am responsible.”
Finally, you take action. You know that all mental preparation and
character building is merely a prelude to action. It’s not what you
say but what you do that counts.
The mark of the true leader is that he or she leads the action. He
or she is willing to go first. He or she sets the example and acts
as the role model. He or she does what he or she expects others to
do. You become a motivational leader by motivating yourself. And you
motivate yourself by striving toward excellence, by committing
yourself to becoming everything you are capable of becoming. You
motivate yourself by throwing your whole heart into doing your job
in an excellent fashion. You motivate yourself and others by
continually looking for ways to help others to improve their lives
and achieve their goals. You become a motivational leader by
becoming the kind of person others want to get behind and support in
every way.
Your main job is to take complete control of your personal evolution
and become a leader in every area of your life. You could ask for
nothing more, and you should settle for nothing less.
Brian Tracy is a leading authority on personal and
business success. As Chairman and CEO of
Brian Tracy International, he is the best-selling author of 17 books
and over 300 audio and video learning programs.
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