Leaders Embrace Humility
Amie Devero
I partner with high-growth start-ups to create breakthrough strategy and scale people for 10X growth and value.
We are all familiar with image of the decisive, bossy and “cocky” leader. It’s an iconic idea that’s so ingrained, that admitting to being wrong or uncertain is a bit taboo. Even sports teams seem to rely on “star power” to make the baskets, hit goals and win the cup. And those stars often seem to lack even a vestige of humility or gratitude for their success and spotlight.
It can even seem?like the rest of team is at most, window-dressing, and at least, irrelevant.?If you look around, the same “star” traits are also valued in popular culture, the political arena and even in our reading of history.
The message is: Be confident, hide your?insecurities and doubts, and show strength.?Those are the keys to achieving success.
Yet, data from sources as diverse as Google and the World Economic Forum, tell a different story.?Organizations that are the most innovative and profitable, with the lowest employee turnover and the highest productivity,?have leaders with measurably high levels of humility.??This contradicts the notion of great leaders as strong and autocratic.
When leaders are humble it delivers an important message to their teams and peers. For example, people who see their leaders admit mistakes or accept critical feedback, feel psychologically safer themselves. When people do not feel that sense of safety, they are less likely to take risks. In other words, if it isn’t safe enough for the leader to make mistakes, then it almost certainly isn’t safe for anyone else.?
Risk is a key component of innovation and creativity.?Whether the business is creating software or crafting widgets, finding new and better ways to do the work, deliver the work, ship the work or even, reduce the work, can all be avenues for better business results.?
The other outcome when a leader sees himself as fallible is that his own work can improve faster than otherwise. Intellectual humility – operating within a context that anyone can be wrong – allows for improvement. Since leaders are the source of lots of downstream affects, if their ideas, strategies, plans or beliefs are steadily improving, then so will all that flows from them.
So how do you foster your own humility and demonstrate it to your team??Here are some key steps:
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Humility doesn’t require you to change your position, but genuine consideration of the opposing viewpoint is important to fostering a culture of open discourse and risk taking.
The caveat here is that this kind of open feedback culture must be strictly a?“no character attack” zone.??It is?behaviors, actions and activities that can be criticized, not people.
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Director of Industry Affairs and Business Development at CONNECTICUT LABOR-MANAGEMENT COOPERATIVE COMMITTEE
2 年I believe the humility/success factor to be applicable to elected executives as well but the media often focuses on the cocky and narcissistic.