Читать книгу Becoming the Best - Kraemer Harry M. - Страница 6
Section One
Best Self
ОглавлениеA fundamental objective of values-based leadership is answering the question: How do I become my best self?
People at every level and with any job title can and should become values-based leaders – those who lead with principles and live by example. Through their actions, words, and support, values-based leaders utilize the four principles of self-reflection, balance and perspective, true self-confidence, and genuine humility to guide their own actions first. With greater self-awareness and self-knowledge, they bring their best selves to work – and motivate and inspire others to do the same.
Leadership is not determined by the number of direct reports or followers you have. You can be a team of one, leading only yourself, and still become a values-based leader by focusing on becoming your best. In fact, for many of us who have reached the C-suite, that's precisely where our values-based leadership began. From your cubicle at the entry level of a company, or working out of your living room as a freelancer, you can put the principles of values-based leadership into action to become your best self, every day.
If you are a middle manager or senior executive, leading a team of 50 or 50,000, grounding your leadership in your best self is equally important. It's a dangerous trap to think that having made it to a certain level – even to the C-suite – your focus should look only outward: on developing the organization's goals, achieving targets, and managing others to do their best.
No one is beyond becoming their best self. At this point in my life, I have been CFO, president, CEO, and chairman of a $12 billion global health-care company, with a combined tenure of 11 years at the top of Baxter International. Currently, I'm an executive partner with Madison Dearborn Partners, a Chicago-based private-equity firm, and despite the success I've been lucky to have, I remain just as committed to being my best self as I did when I was starting out in one of those cubicles as a junior analyst, decades ago. As a clinical professor of management and strategy at Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management, and a frequent speaker for groups of students, new hires, middle managers, and executive leaders, I stress the importance of being your best self as the foundation to values-based leadership.
Your best self is not about perfection (an impossible and, therefore, futile goal). It is about becoming consistently disciplined and focused, making sure you challenge yourself to truly be your best self – instead of becoming complacent, convinced that you have arrived. No matter how good you are, you can always be better. Being your best self is a lifelong commitment.
Becoming your best self will not occur automatically, nor is it a sudden conversion because some emotionally intelligent light switch has been flipped. It is a process, one that will transform you over time and impact every person with whom you come in contact.
Most people have an innate sense of right and wrong and a set of personal values, even if they don't think about them in a concrete way. Most of us strive to be good people, but we're human; we have good days and bad days. There are times when we say things to people that we regret a moment later. We ask ourselves: Why did I say that? Why did I treat someone like that? Why did I lose my temper with that person? Why did I feel the need to be the know-it-all, instead of valuing others' opinions? Why did I act in ways that are inconsistent with my values?
The answer is that, in those moments, we were not our best selves. This realization may cause us some embarrassment and discomfort, but the purpose is not to feel shame or beat ourselves up. We simply recommit to the journey of becoming better. Even people whom I greatly admire – spiritual leaders, philanthropists, and executive leaders who truly put others first – admit that they are not their best selves every day. When we acknowledge that we've missed the mark, we're just being honest with ourselves. Then we can recommit to the process of being our best selves, to the best of our ability, every day.
In this section, “Your Best Self,” we explore how to use the four principles of values-based leadership to become your best self (which is the foundation for the other bests in the book – best team, best partner, best investment, and best citizen). In Chapter 1, we start with the most important principle of values-based leadership: self-reflection. This fundamental principle enhances your self-awareness and self-knowledge, and allows you to gain insight into your decisions, actions, and interactions with others. Self-reflection leads to the second principle of values-based leadership: balance and perspective. I define this second principle as being open to input and diverse opinions from others, and doing so in a way that improves decision-making. From there, in the second chapter, we move to the principles of true self-confidence and genuine humility, which are complementary – not contradictory. With true self-confidence, we ground our best self in the knowledge of our skills and accomplishments; we know what we know. But we also acknowledge what we don't know, and the benefit of working with others who are strong in areas in which we are weak. We reflect on our strengths and weaknesses, and understand what we can become and not become. Genuine humility reminds us of the value of every person, the importance of showing respect to everyone, and never forgetting where we came from.
The four principles of values-based leadership are the road and the guardrails, leading us toward the goal of becoming our best. Like all journeys, it has a clear beginning: becoming your best self.