How to Be a
Memorable Leader
By Jean
Kelley
If you look back over your
career, chances are you can identify one or two people who stand out
as memorable leaders. Even if these people didn’t hold an official
leadership role, their actions and words rallied people together to
achieve a common goal. And whether that goal was large or small, far
reaching or contained, you remember these leaders for a long time.
While there are many great
leaders in the world, not all of them are truly memorable—that is,
they don’t leave an impression that lasts beyond their current
accomplishment or focus. But being memorable is essential if you
want long-term success. So what makes one leader memorable and puts
another in the “out of sight, out of mind” category? It comes down
to three key elements. Develop these characteristics in yourself and
you, too, can be a memorable leader.
Know Who You Are:
Socrates said, “The unexamined life is not worth living.” While
that’s a little harsh, it does make the point that everyone must
examine their life. For what? To pinpoint your “moral compass”—your
true values. Memorable leaders know their values, why those values
are important, and how those values play out in life.
Realize that you can’t
have one set of values in your work life and a different set in your
personal life. You take your set of values with you everywhere, and
a mess up in one area of life can easily affect another. For
example, it was a seemingly personal value that distracted and
somewhat derailed Bill Clinton’s career, not a business value, which
shows that values are not compartmentalized. So if you don’t examine
your life and know what you stand for, you can easily get
sidetracked.
Getting to know yourself
starts with honesty—with others and yourself. While most people have
“cash register” honesty, meaning they’d never steal money from their
employer, they aren’t always honest in other ways. Perhaps they tell
the world they value one thing, yet display something else. For
example, some people will tout the value of hard work and claim they
work harder than anyone else. Yet when you really look at their work
behaviors, you find that they’re spending most of the day on long
conversations that have little to do with work or are surfing the
Internet—things that don’t advance the company. That’s not personal
honesty or personal awareness.
If you’re having trouble
knowing who you are and what you stand for, ask a trusted colleague
or family member to give you feedback. You can also opt to do a
formal 360-degree feedback assessment, which enables others to give
objective insight on how they view you.
Know Your Vision, Communicate It, and Live It:
A Harvard Business School
professor once said, “The only thing a CEO needs to do is
communicate their vision, communicate their vision, and then
communicate their vision.” Why is communicating the vision so
important? Because if you don’t know where you’re going and tell
others where you’re going, then you and everyone around you are
going to lose the way. With all the things employees have going on
in their lives, they’re distracted during some of the week, so it’s
easy for them to get off track. Memorable leaders keep communicating
the vision so everyone is always on the same page.
Living your vision and
your company’s core values means everyone—those you report to and
those who report to you—knows the vision as well. If you don’t
understand your company’s vision or core values, have a conversation
with your boss about them. Without vision and values, both companies
and people lose their way—people are floundering, no one knows what
they should be doing, and people hide their potential talent. Not a
good situation for sure! For example, in a manufacturing company,
getting the product out on time isn’t a core value and has nothing
to do with the company’s vision. In order to have a healthy and
synergistic team, people need to connect to something bigger than a
goal of moving product. Vision and values make the difference.
Also realize that
communicating a vision does not mean the leader needs to be
talkative. Many memorable leaders are quiet and reserved, such as
presidents Truman and Eisenhower. People follow memorable leaders
because they exemplify their vision, not just tout it.
Be Teachable:
Being open to learning new things and admitting your limitations and
your struggles give you power; it’s not a weakness. Realize that
people don’t want to think they’re following a robot. They want to
know that whoever they’re following is real.
Memorable leaders teach
other leaders and are interested in the development of people
beneath them. That’s why you need to be in touch with your direct
reports and learn their dreams, goals, and career aspirations. As
the old quote says, “People don’t care how much you know until they
know how much you care.” So the “teachable” part goes in two
directions: you have to be willing to learn for yourself and you
have to be willing to teach others.
Finally, Peter Drucker,
the father of modern management, once said, “Leaders are readers.”
That means it’s important you know what’s going on in all
industries, not just your own. Staying too focused on one viewpoint
of issues makes you one-dimensional. Creativity comes from combining
what you know with what other leaders know and then adapting it to
your own industry in order to improve or innovate. That’s why
“overview” publications like Harvard Business Review, Forbes,
and Inc. are favorites of memorable leaders.
A Leader for the Ages:
While few people
are natural born leaders, you can learn to be a memorable leader and
have people lining up, asking to work for you. All it takes is a
commitment to lead others in a way that reflects your deepest held
values, embraces your vision, and encourages lifelong learning. The
more you commit to practicing and living these three keys, the more
memorable you’ll be.
Read other articles and learn more about
Jean Kelley.
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