Seven Questions You Can Use to Move from Manager to a Leader

Seven Questions You Can Use to Move from Manager to a Leader

Welcome to the Innovative Leadership Newsletter brought to you by the Innovative Leadership Institute, where we strive to bring you thought leaders and innovative ideas on leadership topics.

This week we feature an article provided by Jonathan Reitz as part of the World Business and Executive Coach Summit (WBECS) interview series. It is a companion to his interview on Innovating Leadership, Co-creating Our Future titled  Management Vs Leadership: How Coaching Skills Make a Difference that aired on Tuesday, May 25th.

Check out the Resources section below, where we share information about WBECS (World Business & Executive Coaching Summit) Free Pre-Summit where you can earn continuing education credits, Maureen's new Building Personal Resilience Online Class, and a link to the newly released, Innovative Leadership for Health Care book.

To learn more about what we can do to help you become a more innovative leader, you can begin by taking our free leadership assessments and then enrolling in our online leadership development program.

 

Many careers get built around the mysterious difference between a manager and a leader. Don't believe me? Google how to become a leader some time. But what IS that difference?

Both get things done. Each produces on strategic initiatives and business outcomes. Execution is a priority no matter what your career trajectory, especially coming out of COVID-19. The entrepreneurial view requires the action-reflection cycle to move an organization forward. It's not accidental that action leads to that combination.

Leaders follow a vision that they see and communicate to their followers. Understanding where you and the organization are going is the first step to having others follow. How a leader develops that vision and owns it is another article.

But mixing in another slight mindset shift sets leaders apart: Leaders intentionally look for opportunities to unlock/develop the people around them. When you follow or work for a true leader, full potential is within reach for both the individual and the organization.

Bringing that future to life challenges even an excellent leader. And taking people with you as you move toward a vision requires handling changing conditions and expectations.

How can an effective leader release the people around them to reach their potential? Here are seven structured, systematic questions that you can use to challenge the people around you in developmental conversations:

1. What progress have you made?

Right out of the gate, a leader has to decide: will it be more helpful to track progress by measuring back from the starting point? Or is the distance to the goal more compelling? Looking back to where you started roots the progress conversation in tangible outcomes. Keeping your eyes on what's in front builds ownership of the vision. Both have solid reasoning behind them.

2. How on track are you?

This second question invites an assessment of the progress from the perspective of the client/team member. Leaders who develop people gain insight into how well their team evaluates their progress, a key growth area. You'll not only measure progress but also understand and improve strategic skills. Sharpening this area equips individual contributors to level up to leadership.

3. What's working?

Now we move from the strategic to the tactical. This question focuses on the practical actions that have produced beneficial results in the recent past. For example, the conversation might focus on the results produced since the last you spoke. You can target these areas later in the conversation.

4. What's not working?

This practical corollary to the last question explores actions that produced unhelpful or useless results. These items can be shut down or cut back.

5. What are you learning?

The client describes their discoveries out loud. The process of forming their learning into clear thoughts and then pushing the words out of their mouth reinforces the insight. The client hears their words and gauges their reaction to them, which further confirms the moment. This question drives discoveries more often than any of the others, so don't miss the opportunity to ask it!

6. What needs to change?

Adapting or developing a client's thinking becomes the goal here. Learning that gets named but not acted on slows development. Be sure to connect the change with the realizations identified previously. Even a few moments of reflection may inspire new connections and actions.

7. What now/next?

Splitting the last step into two questions helps team members focus and order their commitments.

- "What now?" points to the first thing the client will do after the conversation ends. This action grows out of the last two questions and should move the client toward the critical outcome.

- "What next?" carries a less clear priority. As long as what the client names in response to this question moves them toward their vision/goal, the timeline can be more open-ended. A good rule of thumb expects completion of this action before the following conversation or next team meeting.

These seven questions shift a manager from directing the actions and priorities toward being a leader that invites team members to make meaningful contributions daily. The mindset shift requires the leader to depend on team members and work to bring out the team's abilities. Team member growth AND bottom-line outcomes indicate how well this is working.

Important note: This seven-question framework only works if there is an existing goal, vision, or destination. The leader and the team member focus together toward specific outcomes. Clarity wins. Ideally, the client names the target as the conversation begins. If that target isn't clear in the client's mind, the leader/coach becomes most effective by asking open-ended questions that become specific about what they want to accomplish.

Whether you or the team member identified the future target isn't the point. Clarity about what you want is the multiplier. It's potent if you can specify how you'll know you're getting what you want in the moment.

One unintended side effect is that this approach can make your team more prone to turnover. BUT it's the kind of turnover that comes from team members being promoted or taking on more responsibility. The converse of this side effect is that you will become the leader in your organization that helps people advance their careers, and that is a decisive recruiting advantage!

 

To become a more innovative leader, you can begin by taking our free leadership assessments and then enrolling in our online leadership development program.

Check out the companion interview and past episodes of Innovating Leadership, Co-creating Our Future, via iTunes, TuneIn, Stitcher, Spotify, Amazon Music, AudibleiHeartRADIO, and NPR One. Stay up-to-date on new shows airing by following the Innovative Leadership Institute LinkedIn.

 

About the Author:

Jonathan Reitz, MCC is CoachNet FLUXIFY's Director for Training/CEO. Jonathan holds the Master Certified Coach (MCC) credential in the International Coaching Federation.   He’s also the co-founder of the Team Coaching Global Alliance, and has been featured multiple times on the World Business and Executive Coaches Summit (WBECS).

He wrote Coaching Hacks: Simple Strategies to Make Every Conversation More Effective. Jonathan is a member of the faculty in the Weatherhead School of Management Coaching Program at Case Western Reserve University. Jonathan Reitz lives in Cleveland, Ohio with his wife Joy and daughter Julia. Find him online at www.jonathanreitz.com

RESOURCES:

WBECS Free Pre-Summit This year, @WBECS is hosting its 11th annual Pre-Summit! It’s all about Reimagining the Future of Coaching - a solution-driven approach to client expectation and demand in ‘the new normal.’

This is a FREE event running through June 17, bringing you convenient access to the most brilliant minds in the coaching industry.

This year’s thought leaders include world-class experts such as Hubert Joly, Martin Seligman, Michael Bungay Stanier, Dorie Clark, Hal Gregersen, Erica Dhawan, and many more!

Registration for the World's Most Impactful Online Coaching Summit is now open. Save your FREE seat for your favorite thought leaders:

Building Personal Resilience Online Class with Maureen Metcalf is now available! Do you want to increase your ability to navigate stressful situations and bounce back? Do you want to manage your emotions so they don't control you? Resilient people have an increased ability to deal with challenging situations and serve as change agents. They understand the tools to improve professional and personal endurance, resulting in more stable leadership and better decision-making. Resilient people improve morale by decreasing the stress and frustration around them. Ultimately, they have better physical and mental health. This short 2-hour online class will walk you through building your personal resilience!

Innoative Leadership for Health Care: Excited to announce the release of the 10th book in the Innovative Leadership Series: Innovative Leadership for Health Care!! See below for the Amazon link to purchase this new release!


Jonathan Reitz, MCC, ACTC

Working Coaches Leading the Coaching Profession FORWARD | Master Certified Coach (MCC-ICF) | Credentialed Team Coach (ACTC-ICF)

3 年

Thanks for the chance to talk about this with you @ Maureen!

Zipporah Alal, MA

Senior TV Programmes Officer at Kenya Broadcasting Corporation (KBC)

3 年

A beautiful piece this is

Prof Pranveer Singh PhD (IITK) FIE FSED Disruptive Education and Learning Innovator

Strategic Thinker, 390-degree Dev Process, Innovative Process Design || Accreditation, Ranking & Rating || Pro Vice-Chancellor || Former Advisor/ President/ DG/ Pro-VC/ Dean-Academics/ Executive Dean/ Director

3 年

Excellent

Samuel Davis, PMP, BRMP, CPSP

SVP, Chief Technology Officer | Fortune 100 Executive | Former Tech CIO | Advocate for Women in Leadership & Diversity in Tech | Board Trustee | Philanthropist | Startup Founder | STEM Ambassador ?

3 年

Maureen Metcalf, MBA, these key questions are incredibly important as I reflect on my journey from mid-management to C-Suite. In addition to addressing and answering each of the questions during the Innovative Leadership Institute certification program, the time you made for me and personal commitments you ensured I benefited from all helped me achieve impressive goals I had formed. THANK YOU for continuously paying it forward, and for possessing the resilience to do it for the masses ????

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