Keys to Great Leadership: It’s About Using Your Head — and Your Heart
""A good head and a good heart are always a
formidable combination."" — Nelson Mandela
But when you add to that a literate tongue or pen, then you have something very special.....
Seabiscuit illustrates
a central point about the quest for the triple crown: both head and heart are required.
The
way most leaders go about identifying and developing talent is utterly
insufficient for what is needed to create a Triple Crown organization.
They focus mostly on the head and neglect the heart.
They
emphasize hard skills and capabilities like knowledge, skills, and
expertise. They assess intelligence, education, pedigree,
experience, technical competence, skills, and other conventional
indicators.
The head is just part of the equation
Of
course, those factors are critical, and sometimes raw brainpower is
especially important. Princeton’s president, Shirley Tilghman,
told us, “Brains really matter. You
can’t be a leader here if you’re not smart.” Ron Sugar, former CEO and chairman
of Northrop-Grumman (a global provider of military and
commercial security systems), told us, “A lot of our work is literally rocket science, so we have 45,000
outstanding scientists and engineers.”
Even
in intellectual and technical environments, the head is only part of the
equation. Lynn Easterling, vice president and deputy
general counsel at Cisco (the global networking solutions company),
told us, “I can teach the hard
skills, but I can’t teach good character or good relational skills. It’s
much easier to find people with the hard skills than it is to find the people
with both the hard and soft skills.”
The
term “heart” is rich with meaning. Parker
Palmer, a distinguished author and teacher, captured it well: “I’m using the word ‘heart’ as they did
in ancient times … It meant that center in the human self where everything
comes together — where will and intellect and values and feeling and
intuition and vision all converge. It meant the source of one’s integrity.
It takes courage to lead from the heart.”
Heart
includes intangibles such as character, will, passion,
compassion, courage, and persistence. Heart encompasses what
energizes people, what carries them through adversity, what drives them to
win.
Integrating the head and the heart
Palmer
observed that people are healthy and whole only when they involve both
their head and heart. The Vail Leadership Institute espouses what
it calls an “inside-first” leadership philosophy. According to its founder
and president, John Horan-Kates, “This whole concept is built around the notion that leadership
starts with one’s character, which largely resides in the heart, and
emanates out from there.”
Triple
Crown leadership integrates head and heart. In his bestselling book, Authentic Leadership, author Bill George wrote that great companies must “figure out how to tap into people’s hearts —
their passions and their desires to make a difference through their work.”
Lorrie Norrington, former president of
eBay Marketplaces (the global division of eBay that manages its
e-commerce sites), told us, “The
heart really matters in leadership. Without heart, it isn’t possible to
create passion, dedication, and lasting change in your business.”
Heart reveals character within
As
we saw with Seabiscuit, heart reveals the character within. People with
heart show a fierce commitment to their enterprise, demonstrating loyalty
to their colleagues and passion for the group’s aims.
They
show a healthy ambition to win and build something enduring and impactful.
This fuels their performance and sustains them amid adversity. Football
coach Vince Lombardi once said, “Heart
power is the strength of your company.”
Some
leaders say this heart stuff is too soft and fluffy and not
sufficiently actionable. We disagree.
Triple
Crown leadership proactively seeks, develops, and rewards people with both
head and heart. It fills the enterprise with them, transforming both the
people and the place in the process.
Excerpted
from Triple Crown
Leadership – Building Excellent, Ethical and Enduring
Organizations, by Bob Vanourek and Gregg Vanourek.
So, The Good Vibe --- Your brain can play tricks, your heart can blind, but your gut is always right !!!
& Yes, Off-Course The Best Philosophy In Life Is To Keep Mind Happy. We Dont Know Whether Success Gives Happiness Or Not But, Happy Mind Can Always Lead To Success :-))
& Yes, Off-Course The Best Philosophy In Life Is To Keep Mind Happy. We Dont Know Whether Success Gives Happiness Or Not But, Happy Mind Can Always Lead To Success :-))
#GetInspiredHere
https://thinkbigprofessional.blogspot.in
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