Find Your
Leadership Edge
By Joelle
Jay, PhD
Every day talented and accomplished leaders struggle because
they’re too stressed, too stretched, or too tired of sacrificing. As
a result, many businesses are losing their
leaders, and many leaders are losing themselves. They don’t know how
to achieve success without sacrificing their quality of life.
Fortunately, there is another way to be
successful as a leader in today’s world that is more thoughtful,
more strategic, and more reflective. In fact, you can learn
to lead in a way that preserves your talent while enhancing your
quality of life.
Realize that every leader has an inner and an outer edge.
Your inner edge is the “you” behind the scenes: your thoughts and
motivations, your aspirations, your plans, your decisions, your
strengths and weaknesses, your values, and your way of becoming a
success. Your outer edge is the “you” that you show the
world: your words, your actions, and your interactions with the
people around you.
Parker Palmer, author of A Hidden Wholeness and Let
Your Life Speak, illustrates the relationship between our inner
and outer selves using a geometrical shape called the Möbius strip –
a seamless circle twisted so that as you trace your finger around
the loop, the inner side becomes the outer side, and outer turns to
inner.
Palmer writes, “The mechanics of the Möbius strip are
mysterious, but its message is clear: whatever is inside us
continually flows outward to help form, or deform, the world – and
whatever is outside us continually flows inward to help form, or
deform, our lives. The Möbius strip is like life itself: here,
ultimately, there is only one reality.”
Your inner and outer edges are intimately related. The way
you feel influences the way you act. Your actions affect your
results. Your results determine the way you experience life. So in
order to be effective as a leader and in your life, you need to
spend time on both your outer and inner edge.
Unfortunately, many leaders concentrate only on their outer
edge. They focus on the company vision, mission, results,
customers, and clients. They tend to the e-mails, the phone calls,
the demands, the meetings, the media, etc. Yes, all of that is
appropriate and productive in a leadership role, but to be an
effective leader, you also need to spend some time on your inner
edge where it’s quieter, where you can think, and where you can
connect to who you really are so that you can continue to perform at
your peak.
Your thoughts and feelings (your “inner edge”) influence your
effectiveness as a leader, and your actions and interactions (your
“outer edge”) in turn shape your life. And just as your inner and
outer edges are intimately related, so are your life and your
leadership. The way you lead helps shape your life. The life you
live will help you lead. Become a better leader, and lead a better
life. And if you don’t pay attention to both outer and inner aspects
of leadership, you may suffer a fate common to many leaders: you’ll
lose your edge.
The more you focus on the inner edge, the more it becomes a
part of your everyday life. To get started on your inner focus, pay
attention to the following:
Your Vision:
Many leaders are motivated, driven, and extremely busy, yet
they’re still not clear about what they want. What do you
want? A promotion? Time for yourself? Better relationships with your
friends and family? That ever-elusive work/life balance? None of
these are possible unless you stop moving long enough to figure out
what you’re after. Explore your ideas. Envision a different reality.
In order to achieve success in your life and as a leader, you need
clarity about what you really want. That clarity comes from
contemplative thought. Therefore, schedule some quite time for
yourself each day – even if it’s just 10 minutes – so you can
develop a clear vision for yourself. Ask yourself, “Who am I as a
leader?” “What do I want to achieve?” and “What do I hope to
contribute?”
Your Strategy:
Developing your strategy means choosing the select few areas
that you must prioritize in order to achieve your vision. When you
follow a strategy, you break out of the cycle of busy-ness that
characterizes many leaders. Your strategy serves as a lifeline back
to your vision. When you have a clear vision and a strategy to help
you achieve it, you know your priorities, you can think about them
all at once, you keep them from crowding each other out, and you
find new opportunities for them to work together. Overall, when you
have a strategy, you show respect for yourself and your work as a
leader. You’re no longer just managing your workload. You’re leading
your life. Ask yourself, “What are the most important things I
should be doing right now to achieve the vision I’ve set for myself
and my business?”
Time for Reflection: When you’re reflective, you’re able to identify, maximize,
and leverage your unique attributes to be an effective, higher
achieving leader. The fact is, if you want to be your best, you need
to take the time to reflect on what’s brilliant about you. Once you
do, you can develop an approach to leadership that uses all of your
attributes in the most advantageous way. As a result, you save time,
energy and effort. You get better results, because you are doing
things in the way that works best for you. You discover what it
truly means to achieve success with quality of life, because they
become one and the same. Best of all, you do this not by changing
who you are, but by becoming more of who you are. Ask yourself,”
What’s working?” “What’s not working?” and “What should I change?”
Your Intuition:
When going after your vision, you have two
choices: You can either make things happen or you can let things
happen. Making things happen is the active mode. It’s about being
rational, strategic, concrete, action-oriented, goal-driven, and
aimed at results. It’s about forcing things if necessary, and it’s
the default mode for many leaders. In contrast, letting things
happen is the receptive mode. It’s about being intuitive, trusting,
insightful, knowing, optimistic, and open to possibility. On the
inner edge
there’s space for intuition, which is letting things happen and
having enough space and wherewithal to recognize opportunities as
they present themselves to you, so you don’t have to work so hard
all the time. Ask yourself, “What opportunities are available to me
now?” and “What do I instinctively know?”
Your Alignment:
When you’re in alignment, the “you” in your personal life is
the “you” in your professional life. The ideas that apply over here
also work over there. You are who you are wherever you are; you are
true to yourself. Too often, we separate
our work and our life into boxes. We compartmentalize. And
while compartmentalizing may work pretty well in a storage room,
it’s no way to live a life. You are whole. Take some time to
consider all the pieces of your life and business and make sure they
all make sense. Ask yourself, “How are the different decisions I’m
making all contributing to the vision I have for my leadership and
my life?”
The Gift of
Leadership:
When you
practice the personal leadership strategies presented, you gain a
greater sense of self. You achieve your vision and goals, and you do
so in a way that fulfills and sustains you. You get a sense of
control in this crazy world, and you gain the ability to make
choices, take risks, and be the leader only you can be. That’s when
you discover that leadership itself is truly a gift.
Read other articles and learn more about
Joelle Jay.
[This article is available at no-cost, on a non-exclusive basis.
Contact PR/PR at 407-299-6128 for details.]
|