Organizational performance can rise no higher than the collective performance of its people. With the arrival of the knowledge economy, organizations transitioned on a global scale from a mechanistic environment of linear control, to a systemic environment of complexity. As such, the role of leader has never been more important than it is in today’s world, and individual leader behaviour is the single most important predictor of organizational performance.
In the book Strength-Based Leadership, best-selling author Tom Rath and renowned leadership consultant Barry Conchie explore the results of decade’s worth of Gallup research on the topic of leadership relations with followers. Responses from more than 10,000 interviews conducted around the world reveal the four central reasons that people choose to follow their leaders:
1. Trust
In today’s fast-paced, complex, ambiguous environment of constant change, conflicts and crises abound within the organization. So in order to succeed, trust is a necessary characteristic of any organization’s culture. Trust enables your team not only to perform its daily function but also to rise above conflicts and crises. Trust is vital to forging and sustaining connections and collaborations in the relationship between a leader and follower.
2. Compassion
Compassion goes beyond empathy. Empathy is a personal understanding of someone else’s difficult condition, whereas compassion is a commitment to help that person out of their condition. Compassion includes kindness, warmth, sensitivity, openness, and tolerance. Compassion and caring cannot exist without one another.
3. Stability
Beyond the financial, stability is also rooted in leadership’s consistent and predictable patterns of behaviour. When leaders are honest, accountable, and transparent, they promote confidence among their employees. Employees, in turn, are assured that their leaders are doing what is necessary to the keep the organization operational.
4. Hope
Hope is oriented toward the future. Leaders who have a positive mindset about the future and who promote enthusiasm among followers instill hope.
These four central reasons all involve a leader’s ability to adjust for and create a positive and energized mindset. Such a mindset is innate in all humans, but often not drawn on and used to its full potential. Enhancing one’s Skill of Positive Presence (www.corporateharmony.ca) provides the necessary learning, techniques and exercises that will propel individuals, leaders, and entire workforces to thrive in today’s global environment of complexity and ambiguity.
