Team Leader, Manager,
Counselor, Head Usher, Supervisor, Chairman, Director, Vice President,
President, Business Owner. Here is a
list of titles, that also represent roles or positions, where the person who
carries that label must be able to work with others, lead, inspire, manage and
assume certain responsibilities. Within
different groups or organizations, each of those roles who have different
authorizations, capabilities and tasks that fall on the shoulders of that person. “Why would you want that?” is a question I
have heard, whether said directly to me or in regards to others.
So, you want to be a
leader? That is something that is
honorable to aspire towards. “It looks
easy” and “I can do what he/she does” are common phrases I have heard. John C. Maxwell, leadership expert and
author, once wrote that when he first took a leadership role (as a pastor), he
thought that he could do what he wanted to and everyone would follow along
because he was the leader. When I was
studying for my MBA, I took a management course and the professor made it clear
that there are leaders who have a title and leaders who do not. That was the topic that Robin Sharma, author
and leadership expert, explored in his book, “Leading Without a Title.” Leadership is a term, whether or not you have
the title, that is defined by the Oxford Dictionary (from the website Lexico)
as “The action of leading a group of people or an
organization.”
Can you spot a
leader? Forbes identifies 11 traits of a powerful leader (from a March 22,
2017 posting) as: Having the ability to self-manage, Act Strategically, Being
an Effective Communicator, Being Accountable and Responsible, Setting and
Achieving Clear Goals, Vision for the Future, Manage Complexity, Fostering
Creativity/Innovation, Team Building / Teamwork, Create Lasting Relationships,
Ability to Learn. That is certainly a
long list, though it is pretty inclusive of a lot of vital traits. We all know or have worked for people who
have embodied many of these traits. We
all know or have worked with people who have embodied these traits but do not
have a title. As well, we also all know
or have worked for people who have the title but none (or few) of the traits.
Do you have
what it takes to be a leader? Look at
the list provided by the Forbes article.
It is easy to look in the mirror and see which traits the person staring
back at you has. And be honest with
yourself! Most of the items you might
fall short on are learnable through personal development (classes, seminars and
books). Some institutions provide
furthering education to learn these traits.
Some are a little more esoteric, such as having a vision for the future. Another method of learning would be through
experience – not everything will be successful, but each failure will teach you
something that you can apply next time to become successful. Remember the list at the top? Those were some of the titles that I have
been labeled with during the course of my life so far. I still subscribe to the saying that leaders
are readers and that to be a leader you have to be open to learn, listen and
look for opportunities that benefit all.
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