Story:
Leadership as a Hero's Journey
I have no intention of adding to the twisted mythology of leaders as special creatures. Many of the common notions of heros, as it relates to the work of leading, end up limiting the ability of leaders to be effective. When I ask leaders to name a hero, someone mentions Superman. Superman is the antithesis of our discussion.
Sagatica derives from the Latin Sagacitas – wisdom, ability to make good judgment and acuteness of discernment. Executive wisdom manifests as an ability to move from analysis to synthesis, from competition to collaboration, and from business to purposefulness. We do this through a situational analysis followed by one-to-one executive coaching, team based facilitation and enterprise wide leadership development. Our clients are mostly Fortune 1000 life science and technology firms, but our approach will positively impact any business leader. Organizations don’t improve results – people improve results. Sagatica’s team lives to improve results by mastering the competencies of executive leadership effectiveness. At the heart of results are the people – leaders and teams – that solve problems and innovate. Our work produces wise leaders who make wiser choices and achieve better results. We are a smaller company located in San Diego, founded by Eric Kaufmann and Gregg Fasbinder.
Many of the common notions of heros, as it relates to the work of leading, end up limiting the ability of leaders to be effective. When I ask leaders to name a hero, someone mentions Superman. Superman is the antithesis of our discussion. Superman has super human powers. He is a perfected being and knows no fear. By contrast, every leader and every person I’ve met possesses no super powers, is flawed and complex, and is caught in anxiety and fear at new turns (even the exciting ones). Over the past two decades, I have coached and consulted hundreds of leaders in for-profit, nonprofit, and government realms. I’ve worked with spiritual and religious leaders, community and social leaders, privately held and publicly traded company leaders, and educational leaders. None of them were exempt from flaws and anxiety. It is precisely because of our flawed and anxious nature that we can be heroic. A hero is someone who aims high, makes sacrifices, and gives back. If your leadership is striving for a significant prize, and you find yourself in peril, and you are serving the greater good, then you are poised for the hero’s journey.
A chair can be categorized into different and distinct parts: legs, seat, back, and arms. It is, however, recognizably a chair when all these parts cling seamlessly together. Similarly, this book is arranged in four parts, each addressing one of the four virtues of heroic leaders. While each virtue is complete unto itself, the heroic mindset emerges at the intersection of these four interdependent virtues.
Part I is about Focus. Specifically, it answers the question, “What am I creating?” We are always creating something, either intentionally or unintentionally. Your leadership responsibility is to be intentional, purposeful about what you, your team, and your organization are focused on creating. Your thoughts and beliefs and, by extension, the beliefs and thoughts of your team and organization, are reflected in your creation and behavior. This power of focus is what draws you and your organization toward results. It is this power to intend, to deliberately reach for desired outcomes, that pulls you away from the known and familiar into the journey of the unfamiliar and unknown; the journey of discovery, innovation, creation, and results. In this part, we will gain understanding of and learn to apply the wisdom that a thought is a thing, you are what you think, and you become what you think about most.
Part II addresses Courage, and in this part we will learn to answer the question, “What am I avoiding?” The journey is initiated by reaching for a goal, by purposefully setting out to create something new and challenging. Intending, stretching out, forms a gap between what you have and what you want. That gap is filled with potential as well as uncertainty; uncertainty invites anxiety and fear. As a leader you are bound to feel excitement in the presence of uncertainty. You recognize in uncertainty the potential for innovation and creation. You will also know fear. In Part II, we will learn why fear is the gatekeeper of power, and how to retake our power from the clutches of fear.
Part III explores the development of Grit. Grit answers the question, “What am I sustaining?” Grit, more than any other factor, is the most reliable predictor of achievement. Very few leaders are overnight successes. Your willing dedication and consistency of application are predictive of achievement, and focus takes passion and perseverance to sustain the practices and disciplines that turn potential into reality. Grit is that virtue that empowers you to overcome the incessant addiction to comfort that will pull you and your team right back into inertia. In this part we’ll discover how to persevere when your inspiration and motivation have waned.
The final section, Part IV is Faith. Here we will tackle the final challenge of awakening the heroic spirit, “What am I yielding?” The label hero cannot be self-imposed. The hero title is bestowed upon those who have made great contribution at some personal cost. Paramount among the requirements of heroes is sacrifice. To sacrifice is to give up something of value in order to gain something of greater value, or to avoid calamity or evil. Effective leaders sacrifice daily. They give up time with family, personal time, recognition, and freedom from responsibility and scrutiny. Yet, the least celebrated and most demanding leadership sacrifice is giving up comfort. In this part, we will explore how to sacrifice without feeling weak, and how to apply mindfulness meditation to embolden our heroic spirit of leadership.
Every manager and executive with whom I talk eventually asks the question, “What does it take to evolve into a great leader?” There are two facets to that answer: actions and attitudes. Actions are things that great leaders do. Attitudes are the way that great leaders are. Actions, what leaders do, are displayed in their competencies – skills and abilities. Their actions include competencies such as strategic thinking, teambuilding, financial savvy, political acumen, operational excellence, recruiting and hiring, and coaching, among others.
Bring to mind, though, the leaders whom you have followed passionately. It was more than their intelligent, educated, or skilled actions that compelled you to follow them. You gave your energy and effort to their beingness, their presence. You committed yourself to their vision and purpose because you believed in them. That's how great leaders inspire and engage us. Being adept at the required competencies is a baseline for entry into leadership. Climbing to the top of the ladder of commitment and engagement, however, results from your energy and tone. Great leaders are engaging. They engage people who willingly commit themselves to their vision and purpose.
The results for which you are accountable are accomplished by your people, your team. The ultimate measure of leadership, therefore, is followership. The people whom you hire are bartering their time for money. You pay them for their presence and efforts, but what you really want is their creativity and commitment. More than showing up, you want your people to care and engage. In order for them to give of themselves, they have to feel safe, and safety cannot be guaranteed. What they can have in place of safety, though, is trust.
This book has been an exploration of who you have to be in order to invoke trust. Specifically, we have looked at the being-thinking-doing continuum that bestows trust upon leaders. We have mapped the mental and emotional expedition leaders embark on when they take on responsibility for people and outcomes. You have journeyed through the process required to be emotionally mature; the path to becoming an engaging person whom people choose to follow.
Your leadership journey is yours to shape. You have the authority and ability to awaken your hero’s spirit. I have endeavored to invite, educate, and inspire you to take on leadership as a hero’s journey. Now, as always, the decision is yours.
I offer you two gifts for emboldening your heroic journey skills: 1) questions to orient your daily efforts, and 2) validated assessments to shine a practical light on your areas of flow and interference.
By asking the questions below you will activate the four virtues: Focus, Courage, Grit, and Faith.
Beginning of day:
• Who will I be today?
• What scary item will I engage today?
• Where do I need to be disciplined today?
• Where can I let go today?
End of day:
• Did I spend time this morning selecting priorities?
• Did I take a step toward a person, project, or plan I’d rather avoid?
• Did I make deliberate choices or was I reactive?
• Was I able to give up some control?
Emotional Assessment Assessment: http://emotional.sagaticasurvey.com
Team Engagement Assessment: http://sagaticasurvey.com
Enterprise Assessment: http://enterprise.sagaticasurvey.com
This book is not aimed to please, but to challenge. If you are a leader, then there are enough sycophants swirling around you. You don’t need more stroking, rather, you will benefit from sharpening your thinking, decisions, and judgment. The thought-provoking chapters are accessible and illustrated with anecdotes and metaphors. Reading this book will equip you to skillfully dive into the unknown, engage your people to commit to you and your mission, and grow results. Emerson wrote that, “An institution is the lengthened shadow of a man.” This book is written for leaders who are ready to take responsibility for the shadow they are casting and its influence on organizational outcomes.
Eric Kaufmann, President of Sagatica and Author, Leadership as a Hero's Journey
sagatica.com
Press Release: http://www.onenewspage.us/n/Press+Releases/74vxqejge/Genuine-Leadership-...
The leadership journey is quite beneficial for people, it helps to develop our confidence skills, improve our decision-making ability, and develop our personality. Therefore every human being needs good leadership attitude to develop their skills and confidence. Apart from that, they are also following different leadership journey to get a unique personality. Thanks for such a wonderful leadership journey.
http://www.reginafasold.com/leadership-training-coaching.php
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