Video Transcript: What it takes to be a great leader
What makes a great leader today? Many of us carry this image of this allknowing superhero who stands and commands and protects his followers. But
that's kind of an image from another time, and what's also outdated are the
leadership development programs that are based on success models for a world
that was, not a world that is or that is coming. We conducted a study of 4,000
companies, and we asked them, let's see the effectiveness of your leadership
development programs. Fifty-eight percent of the companies cited significant
talent gaps for critical leadership roles. That means that despite corporate
training programs, off-sites, assessments, coaching, all of these things, more
than half the companies had failed to grow enough great leaders. You may be
asking yourself, is my company helping me to prepare to be a great 21st-century
leader? The odds are, probably not. Now, I've spent 25 years of my professional
life observing what makes great leaders. I've worked inside Fortune 500
companies, I've advised over 200 CEOs, and I've cultivated more leadership
pipelines than you can imagine. But a few years ago, I noticed a disturbing trend
in leadership preparation. I noticed that, despite all the efforts, there were
familiar stories that kept resurfacing about individuals. One story was about
Chris, a high-potential, superstar leader who moves to a new unit and fails,
destroying unrecoverable value. And then there were stories like Sidney, the
CEO, who was so frustrated because her company is cited as a best company
for leaders, but only one of the top 50 leaders is equipped to lead their crucial
initiatives. And then there were stories like the senior leadership team of a oncethriving business that's surprised by a market shift, finds itself having to force the
company to reduce its size in half or go out of business. Now, these recurring
stories cause me to ask two questions. Why are the leadership gaps widening
when there's so much more investment in leadership development? And what
are the great leaders doing distinctly different to thrive and grow? One of the
things that I did, I was so consumed by these questions and also frustrated by
those stories, that I left my job so that I could study this full time, and I took a
year to travel to different parts of the world to learn about effective and
ineffective leadership practices in companies, countries and nonprofit
organizations. And so I did things like travel to South Africa, where I had an
opportunity to understand how Nelson Mandela was ahead of his time in
anticipating and navigating his political, social and economic context. I also met
a number of nonprofit leaders who, despite very limited financial resources,
were making a huge impact in the world, often bringing together seeming
adversaries. And I spent countless hours in presidential libraries trying to
understand how the environment had shaped the leaders, the moves that they
made, and then the impact of those moves beyond their tenure. And then, when
I returned to work full time, in this role, I joined with wonderful colleagues who
were also interested in these questions. Now, from all this, I distilled the
characteristics of leaders who are thriving and what they do differently, and then
I also distilled the preparation practices that enable people to grow to their
potential. I want to share some of those with you now. ("What makes a great
leader in the 21st century?") In a 21st-century world, which is more global,
digitally enabled and transparent, with faster speeds of information flow and
innovation, and where nothing big gets done without some kind of a complex
matrix, relying on traditional development practices will stunt your growth as a
leader. In fact, traditional assessments like narrow 360 surveys or outdated
performance criteria will give you false positives, lulling you into thinking that you
are more prepared than you really are. Leadership in the 21st century is defined
and evidenced by three questions. Where are you looking to anticipate the next
change to your business model or your life? The answer to this question is on
your calendar. Who are you spending time with? On what topics? Where are
you traveling? What are you reading? And then how are you distilling this into
understanding potential discontinuities, and then making a decision to do
something right now so that you're prepared and ready? There's a leadership
team that does a practice where they bring together each member collecting,
here are trends that impact me, here are trends that impact another team
member, and they share these, and then make decisions, to course-correct a
strategy or to anticipate a new move. Great leaders are not head-down. They
see around corners, shaping their future, not just reacting to it. The second
question is, what is the diversity measure of your personal and professional
stakeholder network? You know, we hear often about good ol' boy networks and
they're certainly alive and well in many institutions. But to some extent, we all
have a network of people that we're comfortable with. So this question is about
your capacity to develop relationships with people that are very different than
you. And those differences can be biological, physical, functional, political,
cultural, socioeconomic. And yet, despite all these differences, they connect with
you and they trust you enough to cooperate with you in achieving a shared goal.
Great leaders understand that having a more diverse network is a source of
pattern identification at greater levels and also of solutions, because you have
people that are thinking differently than you are. Third question: are you
courageous enough to abandon a practice that has made you successful in the
past? There's an expression: Go along to get along. But if you follow this advice,
chances are as a leader, you're going to keep doing what's familiar and
comfortable. Great leaders dare to be different. They don't just talk about risktaking, they actually do it. And one of the leaders shared with me the fact that
the most impactful development comes when you are able to build the emotional
stamina to withstand people telling you that your new idea is naïve or reckless
or just plain stupid. Now interestingly, the people who will join you are not your
usual suspects in your network. They're often people that think differently and
therefore are willing to join you in taking a courageous leap. And it's a leap, not a
step. More than traditional leadership programs, answering these three
questions will determine your effectiveness as a 21st-century leader. So what
makes a great leader in the 21st century? I've met many, and they stand out.
They are women and men who are preparing themselves not for the comfortable
predictability of yesterday but also for the realities of today and all of those
unknown possibilities of tomorrow. Thank you.