as discussed
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Assignment #5:
Final Paper – Book Review
Marks: 50
Length: 5-6 pages
Introduction:
You are required to choose a book on leadership as your course textbook.
This assignment asks you to further examine aspects of contemporary leadership.
Learning Objective & Outcomes:
1. To examine in further depth concepts on effective leadership.
2. To draw out and report on concepts in leadership from your text.
3. To compare the leadership approaches within the text against your own organization’s leadership approach/philosophy.
4. To make recommendations on how to shift your organization’s current leadership model to a more effective and proactive model.
5. To build a strategy for implementation.
· Required task : write an essay ( 5 – 6 pages ) following the next :
Exercise:
1. You are to acquire a book on contemporary leadership.
2. Over the next 4 weeks, read your textbook. You will complete a review on the text, citing key issues, trends, and concepts on leadership. You will discuss why they are important in today’s business environment. You will discuss whether or not the leadership styles, themes or concepts are relevant to your work place or a previous work place, why and how.
3. You will discuss the impact of shifting your organization’s current leadership model to one more closely aligned to the concepts you have pulled from your readings. You will discuss the implications of introducing the new concepts and how you would approach ‘leadership development’ within your organization.
The
360 Degree Leader
Developing your Influence from
Anywhere in the Organization
John C. Maxwell
The Myths of Leading from the Middle of
an Organization
99% of all leadership happens in
the middle
of an
organization
You can learn to make a positive impact even
if you report to someone who is not a good
leader
Need to lead in 3 directions– up, down, and
across
Position Myth
I can’t lead if I am not on top
The true measure of leadership is influence–
nothing more, nothing less
You must earn the right to lead
Position- people follow because the have to
Permission- people follow because they want to
Production- people follow because what you have done for
the organization
People Development- People follow because of what you
have done for them
Personhood- People follow because of who you are and
what you represent
Destination Myth
When I get to the top, I will learn to lead
If you want to succeed, you need to learn as
much as you can about leadership BEFORE
you have a leadership position
If you do not try out your leadership and
decision making skills when the stakes are
low, you are likely to get in trouble when the
cost of making a mistake is high
Influence Myth
When I get to the top, I’ll be in control
A position gives you a chance, but it cannot
guarantee influence –that must be earned
A position doesn’t make a leader
A leader can make the position
Inexperience Myth
When I get to the top, I’ll be in control
The higher you go the more you realize how
many factors control the organization
At the top you need every bit of influence you
can muster
Freedom Myth
When I get to the top, I’ll have no limits
It doesn’t matter what job you do or what
position you obtain– you WILL have limits
The amount of responsibility you have
increases faster than the authority you are
granted
You must tailor your responses to a greater
variety of people to maximize their potential
Your rights decrease as your responsibilities
increase
Customer, worker, leader, CEO
Potential Myth–I can’t reach my potential
if I am not the top leader
Strive for the top of your game, not the top of
the organization
Example given is Cheney – “You plug him in
and he works anywhere. He just has a real
good way of fitting in and working his
environment.”
All or Nothing Myth
If I can’t get to the top, I won’t try to lead
“I believe that individuals can become better
leaders wherever they are. Improve your
leadership, and you can impact your
organization. You can change people’s lives.
You can be someone who adds value. You
can learn to influence people at every level of
the organization– even if you never get to the
top. By helping others, you can help
yourself.”
Challenges Leaders Face
Leading from the middle is tough and
frustrating!!!!
Tension- The pressure of being caught in
the middle
The authority you possess is not your own. You can
be fired, demoted, moved.
Five factors
Empowerment- How much authority are you given and how
clear are its bounds?
Initiative- How do you balance initiative with not
overstepping your boundaries
Environment- What is the organization and it’s leader’s
cultural norms?
Job Parameters- How well do you know your job and how
to do it?
Appreciation- Can you live without the credit?
Relieving tension
Become comfortable in the middle—comfort
is a function of expectations
Know what to own and what to let go
Do what is expected of you and then maintain a
dialouge re expectations with your chain
Find quick access to answers
Never violate your position or the trust of the
leader
Find a way to relieve stress
Frustration
Following an ineffective leader
Your job is not to fix the leader– it is to add value.
If the leader won’t change, change your attitude or
leave.
Adding value
Develop a solid relationship with your leader
Identify and appreciate his/her strengths
Commit yourself to adding value to those strengths
Offer to staff their weaknesses
Expose the leader to good leadership resources
Publicly affirm your leader
Multi-Hat
One head, many hats
What hat do you need to deal with the instant
situation? That sets context for your behavior
Use the right hat to accomplish the task
When you change hats, don’t change
personalities
Don’t neglect a hat your are responsible to
wear
Remain flexible
Ego
You’re often hidden in the middle
Consistently good leadership DOES get noticed
Concentrate on your duties more than your dreams
Appreciate the value of your position
Find satisfaction in reflecting on your contributions to
successful projects
Embrace the compliments of your peers
Understand the differences between self-promotion
and selfless promotion
What is the difference?
Self
Me First
Move up
Hoard info
Take credit
Hog the ball
Blame
Manipulate others
Selfless
Others first
Build up
Share info
Give credit
Pass the ball
Share
Motivate others
Fulfillment– Leaders like the front more
than the middle
The front is the most recognized position
We like to be praised
The view is better
You get to determine the direction and timing
You get to set the pace
You are in on the action (happens in the
middle)
Being fulfilled in the middle
Develop strong relationships with key people
Define a win in terms of teamwork
Engage in continual communication
Gain experience and maturity
Put the team above your personal success
Vision- Championing the vision is
difficult if your did not create it
How to respond to the vision
Attack it- criticize and sabotage
Ignore it and do your own thing
Abandon it- Leave
Adapt to it- find a way to align yourself
Champion it- make it a reality
Add value to it- champion something to which you
have contributed
Influence- Leading others beyond your
position is not easy
Care
Have character
Be competent
Be consistent
Be committed
INFLUENCE = Integrity, Nurturing, Faith,
Listening, Understanding, Enlarging,
Navigating, Connecting, Empowering
Principles for Leading Up
Your underlying strategy should be to support
the leader, add value to the organization, and
distinguish yourself from the rest of the pack
by doing your work with excellence
Lead yourself exceptionally well
Manage your emotions
Manage your time
Manage your priorities (85% on your
strengths, 15% learning, 5% other)
Manage your energy
Manage your thinking
Manage your words
Manage your personal life
Lighten your leader’s load
Do your own job well first
When you find a problem, provide a solution
Tell ‘em what they need to hear not what they
want to hear
Go the extra mile
Stand up for the leader whenever you can
Stand in for the leader whenever you can
Ask how you can lift the load
Be willing to do what others won’t
Take the tough jobs
Pay your dues
Be willing to work in obscurity
Succeed with difficult people
Put yourself on the line
Admit faults but do not make excuses
Do more than is expected
Be the first to step up and help
Do tasks that are not your job
Take responsibility
Do more than manage– lead
Think long term
See the larger context (big picture)
Push boundaries
Watch the intangibles
Rely on your intuition
Invest power in others
See yourself as an agent of change
Invest in relational chemistry
Listen to the leader’s heartbeat– what makes
them tick
Know the leader’s priorities
Catch their enthusiasm
Support their vision
Connect with their interests
Understand their personality
Earn their trust
Learn to work with their weaknesses
Respect their family
Be prepared every time you take your
leader’s time
Invest ten fold
Don’t make the boss think for you
Bring something to the table
When asked to speak, don’t wing it
Learn to speak their language
Get to the bottom line
Give a return on their investment
Know when to push and when to back off
Push
Do you know something that the boss needs to know but
doesn’t?
Is time running out?
Are your responsibilities at risk?
Can you help the boss win?
Pull back
Promoting own agenda
Already made your point
Risk is placed on everyone but you
Atmosphere says no
Timing is only right for you
Request exceeds the relationship
Become the “Go-to” asset
Produce when–
The pressure is on
Resources are few
Momentum is low
Load is heavy
Leader is absent
Time is limited
Be better tomorrow than you are today
Be more growth oriented than goal oriented
People will listen
Competence > credibility > influence
Your value increases
Your potential increases
Learn, talk, and practice your craft today
Principles for Leading Across
Find, gather, recruit and enlist followers
Understand, practice, and complete the
Leadership Loop
Care- take an interest in people
Learn- get to know people and their strengths
Appreciate- respect people
Contribute- add value to people
Verbalize- affirm people
Lead- influence people
Succeed- win with people
Put completing fellow leaders ahead of
competing with them
Acknowledge your natural desire to compete
Embrace healthy competition- honest
assessment, strive to be better, develop
camaraderie, don’t let it become personal
Put competition in its proper place
Know where to draw the line
Be a friend
Listen
Find common ground not related to work
Be available beyond
business
hours
Have a sense of humor
Tell the truth when others don’t
Avoid office politics
Avoid gossip
Stay away from petty arguments
Stand up for what is right, not just for what is
popular
Look at all sides of the issue
Don’t protect your turf
Say what you mean and mean what you say
Expand your circle of acquaintances
Expand beyond your inner circle
Expand beyond your expertise
Expand beyond your strengths
Expand beyond your personal prejudices
Let the best idea win
Ideas have intellectual, physical and
emotional investment
Listen to all ideas
Never settle for just one
Look for ideas in unusual places
Don’t let personality overshadow purpose
Protect creative people and their ideas
Don’t take rejection personally
Don’t pretend you are perfect
Admit your faults
Ask for advice
Worry less about what others think
Be open to learning for others
Put away pride and pretense
Principles for leading down
Take the time and effort to earn influence
with your followers just as you do with those
over whom you have no authority
Walk slowly through the halls
Slow down- travel at their speed
Express that you care
Create a healthy balance of personal and
professional interest
Pay attention when people start avoiding you
Tend to the people and they will tend to the
business
See everyone as a 10
See them as who they can become
Let them borrow your belief in them
Catch them doing something right
Give others the benefit of the doubt
Realize there are different outcomes that are a 10
Treat them like a 10
Encourage
Acknowledge
Express sincere gratitude
Develop each team member as a person
This is a long term process
What are their dreams and desires?
Lead each one differently
Link organizational goals and individual
development
Help them know themselves
Be ready to have hard conversations
Celebrate the right wins
Teach what they need to grow and develop
Prepare them for leadership
See one, do one, teach one
Place people in their strength zones
Discover their true strengths
Give them the right job
Identify the skills they need and provide
world-class training
Model the behavior you desire
Your behavior determines the culture
Your attitude determines the atmosphere
Your values determine the decisions
Your investment determines the return
What is worse than training your people and
losing them? Not training them and keeping them.
Your character determines the trust
Your work ethic determines the productivity
Your growth determines the potential
Transfer the vision
Clarity
Purpose
Goals
Challenge
Stories
Passion
Reward for results
Give praise publicly and privately
Give more than just praise
Don’t reward everyone the same
Give perks beyond pay
Promote when possible
Remember you get what you pay for
Why is a 360 Degree Leader Valuable?
For teams to develop at every level, you need
leaders at every level
A Leadership Team is more effective than
just one leader
Hire people better than yourself
Shape your people into a team
Empower the team
Listen to your team
One is too small a number to achieve
greatness
Leaders are needed at every level of the
organization
Everything rises and falls on leadership.
Without a leader—
Vision is lost
Decisions are difficult
Agendas are multiplied
Conflicts are extended
Morale is low
Production is reduced
Success is difficult
Leading successfully at one level is a
qualifier for leading at the next level
Leadership is a journey that starts where you are ,
not where you want to be
The skills are the same, just the field of play is
different
Great responsibilities only come after you handle
small ones well
You are creating a resume for going to the next level
If you can lead volunteers well, you can lead almost
anyone
Good leaders in the middle make better
leaders at the top
Add a good leader, get a good team
Good leaders in the middle
Add value to the leaders above them
Release top leaders to focus on priorities
Motivate top leaders to continue growing
Give the organization a future
360 Degree Leaders have qualities every
organization needs
Adaptability
Discernment
Perspective
Communication
Security
Servant hood
Resourcefulness
Maturity
Endurance
Accountability/Dependability
Resources
http://www.slideserve.com/Samuel/the-360-degree-leader-developing-your-
influence-from-anywhere-in-the-
organization
Maxwell, J. C. (2005). The 360-degree
leader: developing your influence from
anywhere in the organization. Nashville:
Nelson Business.
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