Areas Every Leader Must Master For Success: The People Category

This second instalment of a three-part series focuses on the “People” category, highlighting three key leadership elements: engagement, feelings, and talent.

Engagement: Leaders must connect team members to the organisation’s purpose, fostering personal commitment and motivation. Consistently reinforcing the “why” helps maintain alignment and enthusiasm.

Feelings: Creating a psychologically safe environment is crucial for innovation and growth. Leaders should promote a culture where failure is seen as an opportunity to learn, encouraging resilience and risk-taking while maintaining accountability.

Talent: Attracting and developing the right talent is not just a goal; it’s a necessity. Leaders must ensure their teams are diverse in thought, aligned with the organisation’s purpose, and capable of driving success. Tough decisions may be necessary to maintain a high-performance culture, but the benefits of a diverse and capable team are worth it.

The article also provides critical questions for leaders to assess and enhance their approach to engaging, supporting, and developing their teams. The series will conclude with a focus on mastering productivity, emphasising effective plan execution.

In this second part of my three-part miniseries, we’ll explore the category of people, which follows hot on the heels of purpose, which we explored in part one.

The people category is comprised of three elements: engagement, feelings and talent. Your role as a leader is to create a psychologically safe space where people can thrive and deliver. People perform at their best when connected to their work and when they understand the impact it will have. They also need the space and opportunity to learn, grow and develop, knowing their boss has their back.

Let’s take a closer look at the three elements of the people category.

Engagement

Skilled leaders bridge the gap between individuals and the higher purpose. They help team members understand the significance of the goal on a personal level, fostering a sense of purpose and passion within each person.

I work with many leaders on their purpose. They put time and effort into crafting an inspiring, compelling, and engaging message. Enthused by their work, they share it and get their troops fired up, only to let it die on the vine.

The purpose (the “why”) is a leader’s most potent engagement tool; it helps you find the right people for the journey. Purpose is a drum that you need to bang repeatedly, constantly reminding people why we all do what we do.

Feelings

This is far from the soft side of leadership. Leaders are custodians of organisational culture, responsible for cultivating an environment where people can flourish, learn and push boundaries. To do this, you must provide a psychologically safe space where individuals can confidently pursue growth and innovation, knowing their boss has their back.

I have heard leaders openly say, “It’s okay to fail,” only to blow up when things go wrong. In her book Dare to Lead, Brené Brown likens this to sticking someone on a plane and expecting them to skydive without first teaching them how to land.

As a leader, you must build a win-or-learn culture, harnessing failure as an opportunity to grow. This does not mean ignoring conduct and capability issues; people still need managing. But encouraging them to take a chance means people will innovate and do the right thing when it matters most.

Talent

Leaders are blessed (or cursed) with the relentless pursuit of finding and retaining the right people aligned with the higher purpose. Make sure you surround yourself with talented individuals connected to the purpose, and nurture and develop your team members, ensuring that their skills match the organisation’s demands. You must also make tough decisions to dismiss those who are not fully committed to the journey.

Three common pieces of advice for leaders are to surround yourself with different thinkers, clearly define high performance and intervene when people aren’t cutting it.

I have coached several leaders who have built a team of people like themselves. We like people who see the world as we do. But how do you know what your people really think? Find people who see the world differently from you; encourage, if not demand, that they challenge your perspective. People whose careers are in their boss’s hands will often play it safe when authority bias is at play.

I’ve seen leaders so focused on a top performer that they overlook their poor behaviours while picking up on other team members’ behaviours. This inconsistency creates a two-tier system that leads to a downward trend in overall performance, and people leave.

In one example, I worked with a leader who held their top performer accountable, only for them to exit. They were terrified their numbers would decline. However, the team responded positively; the overall team performance went up over time as people recognised that how we do the work is as important as the results. The team is now aligned and committed to the cause; of course, they still have challenges to overcome, but they work together.

Sadly, I have had to dismiss team members several times, but only after allowing them time to improve with coaching and support. In one case, it became apparent that their heart wasn’t in it, so it needed addressing.

I had a challenging conversation with them, after which they thanked me. They were desperately unhappy at work. My primary learning was to intervene early; we both could have avoided the pain of a drawn-out process.


This next section lays out a set of questions to help you stress-test the people category. It will help you define, check and balance so you can get the right people on the team, develop capability and engage people to get the best out of them. It will also help you understand how teams interact and how to encourage and manage healthy conflict while creating an environment where people want and feel able to give their best.

Questions to Ask

If you want to create an environment for people to flourish and a team people want to join, ask these questions.

Engagement

  • How might we connect people to the purpose?
  • How might we motivate people and keep them going?
  • What support structures might we need?
  • How might we help people learn and grow?
  • How might we measure engagement?

Feelings

  • How might we remove the fear of conflict?
  • How might we build resilience in our people?
  • How might we promote change as an opportunity?
  • What are we doing to create a psychologically safe environment?
  • How might we encourage meaning and purpose?

Talent

  • How might we attract the best people to work with us?
  • What do we need in our talent base—now and in the future?
  • What could we do to improve capability and develop capacity?
  • How might we create a learning culture in our teams?
  • How do we ensure that we nurture and retain talent—and move people on (or out)?
  • How do we identify talent?

Look out for the final part of this three-part miniseries where I’ll unpack the third area leaders must master for success: productivity.

Great leaders recognise that creating the right environment for their people to flourish with a compelling purpose is all well and good, but they still need to execute the plan and get it done.

This article first appeared on Forbes.com on 1st September 2023

Ricky has been a regular contributor to the Forbes Councils since 2023, where he shares his perspectives on all things leadership, change, culture and productivity, all with Thinking Focus’ unique perspective on metacognition, or as we prefer to say, thinking about thinking.

Areas Every Leader Must Master For Success: The Power Of Purpose

Leadership remains a critical focus for organisations, with over $60 billion spent annually on leadership development worldwide. Despite extensive training, many leaders struggle to define their role clearly. In this first article of a three-part series, the author explores the concept of purpose as a foundational element of effective leadership, breaking it down into three key areas: higher purpose, perceptions, and scope.

  1. Higher Purpose: Leaders must articulate a compelling and clear purpose that resonates across all levels of the organisation. A well-defined purpose guides decision-making and aligns teams, ensuring everyone is motivated and committed to achieving common goals.
  2. Perceptions: Leaders play a crucial role as the organisation’s PR representatives, shaping both internal and external perceptions. By effectively communicating the purpose and linking each team member’s role to the broader mission, leaders foster a sense of ownership and alignment.
  3. Scope: Striking a balance between ambition and resources is paramount. Leaders must identify the ‘Goldilocks zone’—setting challenges that are demanding yet attainable. This necessitates making strategic decisions about what to pursue and what to relinquish, ensuring that teams are not stretched too thin and that resources are utilised efficiently.

The article also equips leaders with practical questions to evaluate and refine their approach to purpose, perceptions, and scope. These insights are designed to empower leaders in driving their organisations forward while maintaining clarity of direction and focus. The next article in the series will delve into the second critical category: people.

Leadership is an ever-evolving concept that remains a subject of profound interest and exploration for professionals worldwide. Global organisations spend more than $60 billion every year on leadership development, honing the skills of seasoned and aspiring leaders.

Despite all this learning, a simple question baffles even the most seasoned leaders: “What exactly do leaders do?” You will find widespread discussion on leadership styles and theories, but there’s a distinct lack of focus on what leaders actually do.

I co-founded my company in 2016, a behavioural change business helping corporate teams “get out of their own way.” This talented team has multi-sector corporate world leadership experience gained in finance, utilities, hospitality, health care and telecoms, to name a few.

Over the years, we have encountered many frustrated leaders in our interactions, observations and countless coaching sessions in over 150 companies. From this emerged nine key areas related to what leaders should be doing. All nine, while expected, are surprisingly hard to find all in one place.

These nine areas fall under three core categories: purpose, people, and productivity. In a three-part miniseries, I will unpack each category and uncover the nine critical areas. I will share insights and examples and provide a comprehensive checklist guiding leaders toward effective and impactful leadership practices. In this first article, let’s start with the purpose category and look at its three key areas.

Purpose: Clarifying Direction And Focus

The purpose category boils down to three core elements: higher purpose, perceptions, and scope. Successful leaders understand the significance of shaping and articulating a higher purpose, managing perceptions inside and outside the organisation, and balancing their resources to achieve a demanding agenda.

Higher Purpose

I am working with the senior team of a top motorway services operator in the U.K., a highly successful organisation embarking on its next growth phase. They recognised that their 6,500-strong team needed to step up to do this. I challenged them to articulate their purpose as if I were a new starter on the front line of their business.

It was challenging; while they could intellectualise it, they couldn’t simplify it. The purpose should be compelling and translatable across the organisation to engage and keep teams motivated even when times get tough. The simpler it is, the easier it will be to socialise, share and inspire people to step up and pursue ambitious goals.

This overarching purpose defines future aspirations, informs decision-making, and forms the basis for any proposed changes to the plan. Any changes to strategies and tactics should be tested against the purpose. Does this align with our purpose? Accelerates our plan? And at what cost?

Perceptions

Leaders are the organisation’s PR representatives, building a team of individuals dedicated to achieving a common goal. They help others understand how their work fits the bigger picture, motivating and garnering acceptance to reduce barriers to success.

In my example above with the motorway service operator, the simplified strategy became three core areas that made sense to stakeholders at all levels. Leaders can lift it off the page and talk passionately with every team member. It enables team members to connect their contribution to the higher purpose.

In an effort to help cultivate consistent internal and external perceptions like these, my company runs its leadership program alongside senior team workshops, providing tools and mental models and extending permission to apply them to meaningful sponsored business projects.

Scope

Ambition is essential for companies to drive forward, stretching their teams to perform. However, leaders must balance their resources, which is particularly tricky for leaders who continually demand more.

Leaders should look for the Goldilocks zone. If the challenge is not great enough, your people get bored and coast along—until the pace increases, then find it hard to step up. Too much on the agenda, and you will burn out your people or risk achieving nothing; at best, you will have delays or cut corners to meet demanding timelines, quality expectations, and budgets.

It is much better to focus on what you care about; challenging, yes, but achievable. Business strategist Michael Porter says that strategy is choosing what not to do. Leaders often forget that resources are finite, be that skills, people or budget.

I am coaching a project manager of a large U.S.-based med-tech company based in Europe. They report to the U.S.-based project management office (PMO). My coachee’s frustration is “too many projects with too few resources available.” Add to this senior colleagues refusing to talk truth to power. They are not calling out resource shortages or pressure on timelines for fear of repercussions at a more senior level—the impact is overcommitting others to unachievable expectations and setting them up to fail.

Questions to Ask

Leaders must be careful what they ask for and foster a psychologically safe space where people can and will share reality.

These questions can help leaders define, check and balance their higher purpose and perceptions and manage a demanding yet achievable agenda.

Higher Purpose

  • What are the compelling reasons why we do what we do?
  • Why this and not something else?
  • Why is this better than doing nothing?
  • If all else fails, what would we revert to?
  • What are we not prepared to compromise?

Perceptions

  • How do we judge how others see the purpose?
  • How do we communicate our view of the purpose?
  • How do we promote congruent attitudes and behaviour?
  • What are we consistently doing to grow the team?
  • How do we, as leaders, model for and serve our followers?

Scope

  • What are the most relevant priorities for us?
  • What’s in scope—and what’s not?
  • Why this first? Why now and not later?
  • What are the boundaries of our activity?
  • What are we prepared to give up?

Look out for part two of this three-part miniseries on areas leaders must master for success. We’ll delve into the second category: people.

Great leaders understand that the success of any organisation lies in creating an environment where people can grow, succeed and contribute to a common purpose.

This article first appeared on Forbes.com on 11th August 2023

Ricky has been a regular contributor to the Forbes Councils since 2023, where he shares his perspectives on all things leadership, change, culture and productivity, all with Thinking Focus’ unique perspective on metacognition, or as we prefer to say, thinking about thinking.

Four Pillars For Aspiring Leaders For Self-Discovery And Growth

So, you want to be a leader; you want to lead a team and deliver amazing results for your organisation. Of course, those rewards, perks, and other benefits are attractive, too. But have you thought about what leadership entails, what’s involved, and the consequences?

In this article, you will discover four pillars of leadership that need your due consideration if you are to navigate the highs and lows of being a leader in today’s challenging business environment.

  • Are you prepared for the personal sacrifices and impact on your relationships outside work?
  • Are you ready for the cognitive load that leaders face today as they tackle large-scale challenges and threats from all sides?
  • Do you know the stakeholder landscape and what it takes to mobilise your resources to achieve your goals?
  • Do you have the resilience to stay the course and bounce back when things go wrong?

Leadership, a coveted realm for the ambitious, beckons countless individuals with its promise of steering teams toward success. Yet, the true nature of leadership is a labyrinthine tapestry that demands much more than anticipated. It necessitates a profound shift in mindset and an unwavering embrace of novel challenges. Before embarking on this transformative odyssey, aspiring leaders must pause and reflect, mentally preparing themselves for the profound metamorphosis that awaits. Authentic leadership transcends the role of a mere conductor guiding an orchestra; it demands a transition from doing great work to thinking strategically.

But what foundational pillars should these aspiring leaders explore before immersing themselves in the depths of leadership?

Let us explore each pillar, accompanied by guiding questions that aid aspiring leaders in introspection, illuminating their preparedness.

The Personal Pillar: Striking A Harmonious Balance

Leadership roles, undeniably demanding, cast their immense influence upon every facet of your life. While these positions bestow countless benefits, they often exact sacrifices from aspiring leaders and their loved ones. Successful leaders comprehend the significance of involving their families in decision-making, establishing clear boundaries and fortifying a robust support system. Such support alleviates burdens, permitting leaders to wholeheartedly dedicate their time and energy to the demands of their roles.

  • How do you envision aligning your personal life with the demands of leadership?
  • What sacrifices are you willing to make in your quest for leadership?
  • Have you engaged in discussions with loved ones, considering their perspectives?
  • How can you establish clear boundaries between work and personal life to maintain a healthy equilibrium?
  • What support systems or resources can you assemble to navigate the leadership challenges?

The Cognitive Pillar: Embracing A Paradigm Shift

Leadership necessitates a cerebral metamorphosis, a transition to an entirely new modality of thinking about the world of work. Strategic and conceptual thinking empowers leaders to grasp the grand tapestry, connecting disparate data points and deploying creative problem-solving skills.

These cognitive capabilities complement the skills for managing, prioritising, organising and setting standards. Effective leaders empower those around them to think, fostering an environment where collective intelligence transcends the sum of its parts.

  • How comfortable are you with shedding the cloak of a “doer” mindset in favor of a strategic thinking mindset?
  • What new patterns of thought or skills must you cultivate to excel in a leadership role?
  • How can you foster a culture of strategic thinking and unleash creativity within your team?
  • Are there any blind spots or biases that might impede critical thinking and effective decision-making?
  • How can you motivate and empower your team members to harness their cognitive abilities, contributing to collective intelligence?

The Awareness Pillar: Navigating The Human Tapestry And The Surrounding Landscape

Esteemed leaders possess a heightened awareness of the individuals they lead and the landscapes within which they operate. Understanding people demands self-awareness and strong interpersonal skills, enabling leaders to comprehend and motivate their collaborators. This combination begets the necessary gravitas and influence. Awareness of the environment encompasses understanding the organisational structure, its politics and the broader market landscape, including competitors and emerging trends.

  • How well do you comprehend your strengths, weaknesses and motivations?
  • What steps can you take to enhance your self-awareness and emotional intelligence?
  • How can you foster robust relationships and effectively communicate with diverse individuals?
  • What strategies can you employ to remain abreast of internal dynamics within your organization and external market conditions?
  • How can you proactively anticipate and adapt to changes in your environment, surging ahead of the curve?

The Resilience Pillar: Flourishing Amid The Tempest

Mastery of resilience distinguishes triumphant leaders. They cultivate mental fortitude to withstand the demands of their roles and navigate setbacks, becoming the emotional anchors upon which their teams rely.

Even the most adept leaders face moments when the role pushes them to their limits. Therefore, leaders must develop coping strategies, recognise their reactions under stress and establish routines and techniques to sustain themselves during challenging periods.

  • Are there any self-limiting beliefs or patterns that might hinder your resilience?
  • How can you build a support network of mentors, colleagues or coaches to aid you during trying times?
  • What self-care practices and habits can you incorporate into your routine, perpetuating resilience in the long run?

Wrapping Up

Aspiring leaders must embark on an odyssey of self-discovery, delving into the depths of these four pillars before destiny thrusts them into leadership roles. This journey of discovery allows future leaders to assess their readiness, cultivating a profound understanding of the path ahead.

Leadership is not a destination but an enduring pursuit of excellence. Aspiring leaders can forge a path toward influential and fulfilling leadership by building solid foundations upon these four pillars, enriching their personal and professional lives.

This article first appeared on Forbes.com on 18th July 2023

Ricky has been a regular contributor to the Forbes Councils since 2023, where he shares his perspectives on all things leadership, change, culture and productivity, all with Thinking Focus’ unique perspective on metacognition, or as we prefer to say, thinking about thinking.