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August 2005
It's Not About You
by Dean Robert Joss
In May, former General Electric CEO Jack Welch visited the Business School to
talk about leadership and his new book, Winning. With about 800 people in
Memorial Auditorium, we had a public conversation about managing. The best
comment he made, I thought, was the simplest. It’s something I believe and try
to practice every day. Leadership is not about you. It’s about the people
who work for you.
“The day you become a leader, it becomes about them,” Welch said. “Your job
is to walk around with a can of water in one hand and a can of fertilizer in the
other hand. Think of your team as seeds and try to build a garden. It’s about
building these people,” he insisted. “Only you will know the team.”
That’s right. The minute you move from being a task-oriented professional to
being a manager of people, it stops being about your individual talents, your
successes, and starts being all about coaching, motivating, teaching,
supporting, removing roadblocks, and finding resources for your employees.
Leadership is about celebrating their victories and rewarding them; helping them
analyze when things don’t go to plan. Their successes become your successes.
Their failures are yours too. Too many people today think leading is exclusively
about their own performance. Even some of those who become CEOs, usually highly
intelligent people who worked hard to get where they are, turn into
self-aggrandizing individuals once they hit the executive suite.
Too many people, perhaps encouraged by the media, have developed an obsession
with leaders. In his new book on hierarchies, Top Down, Hal Leavitt
covers a broad range of issues. Leavitt, who is the Kilpatrick Professor of
Organizational Behavior, Emeritus, at the Business School, surmises that part of
today’s infatuation with the leadership discussion springs from the fact that we
perceive organizations have become flatter, when, in fact, they are still
hierarchies, though changed ones that are “participative” and “groupy.” They
have become harder to navigate with chains of command that are less clear. As a
result, leadership qualities are more necessary for managers at every level, not
just for those at the top of an authority pyramid.
Although it is difficult to find common characteristics among acknowledged
leaders—what would Winston Churchill have in common with Mother Teresa?—Leavitt
identifies three recurring themes of leadership: transformation, persuasion, and
competence. Leaders are able to transform or change a situation. They can
influence others and motivate them to follow. They exude confidence and
competence about what they are doing that inspires others. At the Business
School, we are creating a cocurricular leadership development program that gives
students experiences and coaching to help recognize and reinforce some of these
qualities.
Of prime importance, in my view, is this notion that leadership is about
change and a leader must leverage those who work for him or her, empower and
support them with regular feedback, rewards, and exchange of ideas. Of course,
sometimes leaders have to “weed the garden” in Welch’s pithy vocabulary. The
tough job of firing and hiring is part of creating an effective team.
One person, no matter how talented, cannot accomplish much in a managed
organization of today’s complexity and global reach. Transforming through others
is the job of the leader at any level. Said Welch when he was here: “The day you
become a leader, your job is to take people who are already great and make them
unbelievable.”
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From the Editor
Dean's Column

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PHOTOGRAPH BY
ANNE KNUDSEN
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