22 Feb 2008 03:51:01 | Marta Driesslein
b>What you want done, gets done when you put your people
first. They’ll reward the sacrifice you make for them by
making your reality, theirs. Start with a vision. Execute with a
purpose. Yield the right of way.
Relinquish your need for power to control your people and
you’ll win the battle for influence. Former U.S. President,
Dwight D. Eisenhower observed, “Leadership is the art of getting
someone else to do something you want done because he wants to
do it.”
Ignite great potential in others by deliberately and
strategically changing your mission’s aim and its execution to
be about them, not you. You’ll exponentially achieve much more
through multiplication, than by going solo. One seed falls to
the ground, dies, and its capitulation results in production of
fruit and more seeds. It is a continuous cycle of regeneration.
So it is also to increase influence.
Historically, great leaders are first, humble servants.
Get things done through others, put people over popularity, and
you’ll unleash a force that changes a world. Consider one who
did. Of all the jobs he could have chosen, he opted to be a
lowly carpenter. Of all the paths he could have traveled, he
purposed to walk the road to humility. They wanted him to be a
king. He chose to be a servant.
Labeled as the “Man of Sorrows” throughout his personal and
professional life, he was well-acquainted with routine
disappointments, misunderstandings and frustrations. A humble
resident of ancient Nazareth, whose life radiated
others-oriented sacrifice, he enigmatically became a
life-changing influence. He was the epitome of what “One-Minute
Manager®” author, Ken Blanchard calls a “Servant Leader” because
his mission transformed from the inside; the thoughts and
actions of those around him. His endeavors were never
self-serving.
A servant leader masters the skill of wood crafting.
Whether in human resource development or in forming a work of
art, there’s a mind-meld, an oneness that must occur between the
crafter and the entity being formed. Unity of vision, not force
transforms something out of nothing; from useless, to useful.
Brute force to timber creates firewood to be discarded. Brute
force to people you want to influence destroys their spirit and
neutralizes their capability to become persons of passion and
purpose. Carve wood or shape others; both need development time,
patience and total immersion into the undertaking.
Seek balance to offset the tyranny of the urgency. Tom
Buehner, Business Strategist for R.L. Stevens & Associates,
Inc., http://www.interviewing.com, an international career
marketing develops people, organizational infrastructures, and
in his spare time, as a highly-skilled woodworker, custom
furniture.
He believes whether building the next effective leader, or
constructing awesome wood creations, the principle of balance is
the same. “You can’t use an axe to carve a sculpture, nor can
you turn a tree trunk into a table, in a hurry. If you do,
you’ll overlook the wood’s inherent elegance. Likewise,
uncovering a person’s potential involves time,” Buehner
instructs.
Maximum influence ensues smoothly and naturally when there’s
time to peel layers that hide the inner core. “The trunk of
a tree, the raw material of any wood craft, has many rings. Some
of these layers are rigid, some are soft. To reveal its best
qualities, you must take time to really study what you have
before you and envision the end-product. The work of
transforming the wood needs to be done non-violently and
patiently to lower the impact of the change and to receive from
it in exchange, malleability. It’s the same canon to
productively win over and empower your people.” Buehner says.
People don’t care how much you know until they know how much
you care. Influence others to accept change by removing
self-interest. Make sure what’s shared with them is edifying and
beneficial. Create an unhurried environment that allows them to
own their success through systematic positive affirmation. When
asked what role communications play in effectively influencing
others, Buehner states from his Carmel, Indiana office, “It is
less important to get your point out than it is to get your
point across.” The intent of your message must equal the impact
it had on them. Make sure your intent is clearly understood. Ask:
• “What did you hear me say?”
• “How do you see me helping you accomplish this?”
“Communication breaks down between leaders and those they
influence when the intent is unrecognizable,” Buehner adds. “If
you seek first to understand, and be a role model for others in
your service to them, your message becomes a powerful leadership
development tool. Duplicate yourself in your people by earning
their trust, respect and accord. They’ll become more pliable and
less resistant to change.”
Want a better way to permanently influence others?
Remember:
• To shape you must seed
• To serve you must sacrifice
• To teach you must be taught
• To influence you must immerse
• To produce you must cultivate patience
People ascend to become what you want them to be if you allow
them the opportunity to be who they are. Leadership requires
the courage to let go of certainties. See inside yourself and
others to visualize the end-product without prejudice or
presumption.
Stop striving to be on top. You won’t lose your identity by
yielding; you’ll find it — finally.
About Author :
Marta Driesslein, CECC is a management consultant for R.L.
Stevens & Associates Inc. http://interviewing.com/