A young manager accosted me the other day. “I’ve been
reading all about leadership, have implemented several ideas, and think I’m
doing a good job at leading my team. How will I know when I’ve crossed over
from being a manager to a leader?” he wanted to know.
I didn’t have a ready answer and it’s a complicated issue,
so we decided to talk the next day. I thought long and hard, and came up with
three tests that will help you decide if you’ve made the shift from managing
people to leading them.
Counting value vs Creating value.
You’re probably counting
value, not adding it, if you’re managing people. Only managers count value;
some even reduce value by disabling those who add value. If a diamond cutter is
asked to report every 15 minutes how many stones he has cut, by distracting
him, his boss is subtracting value.
By contrast, leaders focuses on creating value, saying: “I’d
like you to handle A while I deal with B.” He or she generates value over and
above that which the team creates, and is as much a value-creator as his or her
followers are. Leading by example and leading by enabling people are the
hallmarks of action-based leadership.
Circles of influence vs Circles of power.
Just as managers
have subordinates and leaders have followers, managers create circles of power
while leaders create circles of influence.
The quickest way to figure out which of the two you’re doing
is to count the number of people outside your reporting hierarchy who come to
you for advice. The more that do, the more likely it is that you are perceived
to be a leader.
Leading people vs Managing work.
Management consists of
controlling a group or a set of entities to accomplish a goal. Leadership
refers to an individual’s ability to influence, motivate, and enable others to
contribute toward organizational success. Influence and inspiration separate
leaders from managers, not power and control.
In India, M.K. Gandhi inspired millions of people to fight
for their rights, and he walked shoulder to shoulder with them so India could
achieve independence in 1947. His vision became everyone’s dream and ensured
that the country’s push for independence was unstoppable. The world needs
leaders like him who can think beyond problems, have a vision, and inspire
people to convert challenges into opportunities, a step at a time.
I encouraged my colleague to put this theory to the test by
inviting his team-mates for chats. When they stop discussing the tasks at hand
— and talk about vision, purpose, and aspirations instead, that’s when you will
know you have become a leader.
Agree?
About the Author:
Vineet Nayar is vice chairman of HCL Technologies, an
India-based global information technology services company. He is the author of
Employees First, Customers Second.
Source: blogs.hbr.org
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