When I
took my first job in the corporate publishing industry over twenty years ago
the culture was very different to what I know from the various corporates I
deliver executive leadership coaching to now. In the 90s there was still a
sense of having to do your time. You most likely had to have a university
degree before you worked your way up from assistant to manager and from there
to director and onward (if you hadn’t keeled over) to the board of the company.
Normal was for that process to take decades! Super-dullsville!!
Move
forward to 2012 and there’s a different type of leadership developing. It give
less weight to who you know and what’s your background and more to meritocracy,
personal passion, drive and accountability. With the right education – and that
doesn’t have to mean university – relevant experience and, most
importantly, strong personal and professional skills, leaders in corporates can
achieve recognition and directorships in their late 20s and early 30s.
A few
(but an increasing number) are going out on their own and leading multi-million
(and billion) pound operations before their thirtieth birthday. Here’s an
important question though: is it more impressive to be a CEO at 35 than it is
at 55 years old?
My
answer … ‘no’.
Heres’
what’s truly impressive: any person – young, middle aged, pensioner,
male, female, any culture, any socio-economic background – investing in
themselves to a point where they recognise the keys of a true leader: vision,
integrity, collaboration, transparency, enablement, compassion and
gratitude.
The
most frequent challenge I see in delivering executive leadership coaching is
when a leader has forgotten that their role is to serve. A product or service
will only thrive when customers, clients, readers, listeners, viewers have a
happy experience of it. And the company itself can only deliver that when their
designers, writers, developers, marketeers, sales agents and operations
directors are bought into a vision and empowered to deliver.
It’s
always about people, it’s always about evolving (an idea, a brand, a way of
distributing), it’s always about a mindset of adventuring and seeing new
opportunities. If courage and clarity are modeled in a CEO that spirit will
filter out to the directors and their management teams as will honesty, respect
and ego-lessness.
My 20
years ago experience was so much based around a fear & lack model too
(what’s in it for me) – you had to do as instructed by your manager because she
was following a mandate from her director. It was like an extension of school.
Today
though, the most dynamic companies out there use a model of respect and
abundance – CEOs acknowledging that they don’t hold all the solutions but they
do know how to hire creative thinkers and dynamic communicators and invest in
their expansion over a given term.
My
greatest satisfaction in executive leadership coaching is to have a corporate
decision maker remember his or her own talents, creativity and courage. To get
clear once again about changes and choices; because when they’re inspired
they’re inspiring.
About Author:
Jennifer Broadley is one of the UK's leading executive coaches.
She works with corporate leaders, business directors and successful
entrepreneurs. She specialises in CEO coaching, prosperity coaching and
providing the most cutting-edge and intuitive leadership and personal
success programs in the UK. Jennifer is passionate about the ongoing
self improvement of the world's future business leaders – the
way-showers for our precious next generation. She coaches, speaks,
writes and runs workshops on 'The 7 Steps to Personal & Professional
Freedom'®. You can buy her book of the same name from www.Amazon.co.uk You can call, email or message Jennifer from www.JenniferBroadley.com.
Leaders learn early on that the best way to gain support and trust from their employees is to explain all things in their entirety. Once people understand why something is important or necessary, they generally rally to the call of that which needs to be done or addressed.
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