The BEST Leaders Do THIS
The best leaders adapt their style to the situation rather than expecting their teams to adapt to them.
Overview
Effective leadership is not a fixed style but a situational practice built on a foundation of empathy, trust, and human skills. The tension between collaborative, consensus-driven leadership and direct command-and-control authority is resolved by knowing when each is appropriate. Trust built during calm periods is what makes decisive authority credible during high-stress moments.
Key takeaways
Command-and-control leadership makes for compelling movies but is generally a model of poor day-to-day management.
The hallmark of a well-run organization is that work continues smoothly even when the leader is not visibly present.
Gathering input and perspectives from others improves decision-making; no leader is expected to have all the answers.
Trust must be built during stable periods before it can be relied upon when high-stress situations demand direct orders.
Strong leaders adapt their style to the people and circumstances they face rather than demanding others conform to them.
Worth quoting
"Good leadership — like they've never made a movie about Marshall or Bradley."
"In good times, you build the trust. And then in extreme stress, you can turn that command and control on and everybody trusts that you're giving them orders that are probably in everybody's best interest."
"A good leader knows how to adapt for the situations and personalities that they work with. They don't expect their people to adapt to them."
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