This week's post was written by
Scott Peterson.
During most Excellence in Leadership 1 classes, we ask two very
telling questions:
1.
Who was the best
supervisor/leader you have ever had, and why?
2.
Who was the worst
supervisor/leader you have ever had, and why?
The answer to the first question revolves around development,
coaching and motivation. Most of the time, the leader that tops the
"best" list focused on helping the person grow, elevating their performance,
and helping them achieve more than the employee thought was possible. They
played the role of a mentor, coach, cheerleader, etc. Their goals were
balanced between getting things done and positioning other people to learn and
grow.
The answer to the second question is also interesting. Leaders
on the "worst" list are focused on themselves and getting things
done. They treat their people as tools.
I have had many people from the Interstates family invest their
time in me to help me grow. For example:
- Jim Franken - coached and pushed me about leadership and being forward-thinking.
- Darrel Ramhorst - gave me hard feedback, pushed me to have high standards, and encouraged me when I needed it.
- John DeZeeuw - helped me understand the business of construction, engineering and automation. He also inspired me to have a balanced perspective (balancing the needs of the employees, the needs of the clients, and the needs of the business).
- Larry Den Herder - focuses on providing feedback and direction on how to make a difference for our clients.
- Jack Woelber - provides great feedback and support. He also helps reinforce the desire to build a great culture, live our core values, and provide opportunities for people.
- Dave Crumrine - helps me to think broadly and deeply about our clients and our business. His ideas, feedback and passion around pursuing a better way have raised the expectations of myself and our team.
- Doug Post - encourages me to be a better systems thinker and to constantly read and look for solutions for our teams and for our clients.
- Kristi Segar and Lori Van Beek - provide great feedback, insight and perspective to help me grow as a leader.
As you think about how to develop, coach and motivate your team,
there are two approaches that are effective. If you want to have amazing
results, the key is to implement them together. These approaches are:
Planned Development
As a leader, know your team. Know what they want to develop and
support that. You should also have open and candid conversations with them
about what they need to develop and why. As you get to know them
you'll find out what they need (e.g. skill development, experience, self-awareness,
confidence, etc.).
Teachable Moments
These moments pop up every day, but many of them go unnoticed. A great
leader has the ability to see them and leverage them. They may not see
100% of them; it is more like baseball - hitting 300 is great. They
connect the teachable moment with the development that employee needs at that
time. When it happens - it is powerful and can really motivate the
employee, and the leader.
Interstates excels at development, both on the technical side and
on the leadership side. Your responsibility, your opportunity, your privilege
is investing some of yourself into your team, your peers and other leaders to
help them reach their potential. When it happens, it's a win/win
situation. When you invest in people, you ARE leading The Interstates Way!
Continue leading The Interstates Way!
Scott Peterson
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