Mistakes Leaders Make Today with Tomorrow’s Talent

The talent shoreline has changed. Developing leaders standing where you used to stand doesn’t work anymore. Waiting for the tide to come back in isn’t going to happen, because the shore line moved out. You are standing, waiting and meanwhile the weeds are growing up around you while you sink in the mud. You are holding on to your old mindset and its only weighing you down further. Your competition has moved down to the new shoreline. You are frustrated. But, if you want to catch fish, you have to go where they are. They aren’t where you are anymore.

There are some common mistakes leaders make in development today, especially the next generation of leaders. Development is never accidental or casual. Development is an intentional and critical system. Development is not natural, decay is natural. So, assuming that people will develop because they are present, working hard and seem to be listening is a mistake. You must intentionally engage in the development process and activate a development system.

Every system doesn’t have to look the same. A leadership development system is reflective of the leader guiding it, thus leadership systems will look different. But, one commonality is that the system will actually produce and develop new leaders. Let me say this as well, not every person you are trying to develop into a leader will work out. But that’s not an excuse to keep having the same failures and making the same mistakes.

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Frequent Failures Leaders Make Today:

Failure to construct a system for new leaders to develop in. With what and who we are dealing with today, a leadership development structure is absolutely essential to facilitate the maturation of new leaders. Millennials and Centinnials need structure in all that they do–including steps to grow as a leader. Organizations and leaders who realize this and create a platform are attracting and winning the top talent. Leaders of organizations must invest time, resources and energy into a structure that engages and guides the next generation through development. If you leave the next generation working for you to “figure out for themselves” (because that’s what we did), the only thing they will figure out is how fast they are going to leave you.

Failure to have a leadership strategy. Yes, you actually need to have a leadership strategy. No war is won without a strategy. We are in this War for Talent. And guess what? The Millennials won. There are 82 millions Millennials and only 63 million Gen. Xers and 72 million Baby Boomers. There are more Millennials and they had the weight to fundamentally alter the way we think, the systems we use and where we will work. The work still has to get done, but we are now in the aftermath of the war. This is called reconstruction. You must have a strategy, because your competitors do. A leadership strategy is a plan that systematically recruits, retains, develops and releases leaders.

Failure to launch. The point of your leadership development system is to launch these new leaders out. Now, what is actually counter-intuitive is that when you talk about departure and launch, these next-gen leaders actually seem to stay in your organization longer. But, if you aren’t willing to launch new leaders away from your organization, you become an unattractive organization. Be willing to create a system that has a launch point for your leaders. In today’s talent pool, creating a system that celebrates the launch and promotes the launch and looks forward to launch is actually becomes highly attractive for the top talent.

Failure to recognize the cost. The cost of development requires more than ever before. Many leaders today are applying the same mindset around development and cost. Grooming people who will “one day” be ready to be a leader simply doesn’t happen at the rate it once did. Those days are gone. Developing leaders is like fishing. The fish still bite, but the gear, the equipment and getting to the fishing hole cost more, often significantly more. Just as egos have inflated, the cost to develop leaders has inflated as well. You can not like it, you can not accept it, but this will not help you recruit, retain, develop and launch new leaders. You are going to have to spend more. This is why a strategy is so important, otherwise you will fail to see the return you desire.

Failure to investInvestment means you are addressing risk. There is a risk in releasing your resources to the unknown. However, you must be willing to invest in new methods, new ideas and new processes in your leadership development strategy. You must not only have new hooks in the water, but new nets and new divers! The good news today is that a little goes a long way with millennials. You don’t have to invest extravagant sums, but you need greater frequency. Next gen leaders need more access to the top leadership. IMG_9688

Failure to create a leadership network. A network is part of the strategy, its not the strategy. A network by definition is a group of interconnected people. Your leaders are already way more connected than you realize. They connect with everyone. Many leaders today fail to engage these systems of connectivity. Create a leadership network of past leaders, present leaders and future leaders. Every leadership system today should look at the value of an alumni network. Viewing your leaders that left you as assets as opposed to simply absent, will engage the sense of value in your whole system. They already stay connected with those in your organization. Alumni can become some of your best advocates, promoters and recruiters.

Failure to see themselves as a follower. Every leader better have someone they are following. The death of leadership is arrival. Arrival is complacency. Complacency leads to apathy.  When a leader feels like they have arrived, they’ve reached the pinnacle of their ability, they begin to take more than they give. Too many modern leaders detach from themselves being a disciple. If you don’t have a plumb line, you will build where ever the pressure pushes you. You will accept less than the best because pressure creates desperation, panic and anxiety. Leaders must keep learning and keep applying. Great leaders who are also great followers are easy to follow. Leaders who are only following themselves or the wind are difficult to follow. When you are difficult to follow, look back and look around, chances are you’ve had a trail of people leaving you.

Failure to put in more than they take out. When a leader begins to reap the benefits of what they have sown, many times a subtle mindset shift happens. This subtle shift moves from “put in” to “take out.” This is a temptation and a trap that is easy to fall in and is devastating to the development of your people. These days what leaders are putting in requires more than ever before because of scale, volume, pace and complexity.

Failure to adapt. Because the shoreline has changed, you must adapt. Without adapting you will be overwhelmed and overcome. Many leaders today feel exactly that: overwhelmed and overcome. This creates extra tension and pressure in the whole organization. Adaption is the adjustment to environmental conditions. Your talent environment has changed. When you fail to adapt, you end up getting trapped. Being trapped means being stuck. When you are stuck, you don’t move and you get left behind. Leaders today must practice strategic adaption. Which means you don’t change who you are, you change what you do. This is the fundamental difference. Many leaders fear adapting for fear of change. Embrace the change of what you do or how you do it, not the change of why you do it.

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Failure to move in humility. Failure to adapt is often a sign of pride. Pride will kill leadership development quicker than any other thing. Pride is a heart issue. I’m not talking about the pride of shared joy in an accomplishment. I’m talking about the insidious pride of self-centeredness. When a leader makes it all about themselves, they are self-centered. Successful leaders practice humility, which means they easily recognize others and don’t need recognition themselves. Too many leaders today will not adapt because of pride. Pride makes you angry, frustrated, lazy and aloof. Humility keeps you hungry, engaged and serving. Humility helps you remember why you started developing leaders in the first place.

The greatest leader outside of Jesus Christ was one of his chief followers/disciples, Paul the Apostle. Paul spoke about adaptation in his disciple-making strategy. He said, “To the weak I became weak, that I might win the weak. I have become all things to all people, that by all means I might save some” (1 Corinthians 9:22). This is some of the best counsel that I can ever offer someone frustrated in their development of others. Paul is basically saying, “I adapt whenever necessary to the standing of others, so that I can relate to them and win them.” If you really want to win with talent, you must adapt. You don’t win talent by demanding they become like you. You win talent by going to where they are.

Failure to paint a picture of better & brighter tomorrow. The next generation leader already has a very clear picture of what their tomorrow looks like–even if you think it is just fantasy. If you don’t speak into that picture or paint a better picture their tomorrow, then their shelf-life with you will be extremely short and you wont have an opportunity to bring reality into the fantasy.  And it’s pretty hard to develop a leader when they leave you. Leaders today must paint accurate pictures of a better and brighter future.

Failure to speak with a social conscience. This is why I have found that despite the perceived unpopularity of my Christianity, when I speak with a social conscience, the next generation leader welcomes and responds. The next gen leader has more of a social conscience than ever before. Your leadership development style and structure needs to at least acknowledge this reality, if not engage this reality. Millennials really want to make their world a better place for everyone. Now, they often are not entirely sure how to do this or where to start. This is where you come in. You have resources, you have connections in your community and you do have a social conscience. A social conscience basically means you care and will demonstrate concern for others.

Conclusion

Developing leaders is always worth it. Today talent costs more and demands more. The shoreline has moved. The talent tide will not return. Throw off your pride, slosh through the sand and rediscover the joy of a new talent beach.

 

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(c) Alex Vann, 2017

 

The Secret to Winning with Your Millennial Leader

The Secret to Winning and Developing Your Millennial Leaders is simply this:

If you want to truly influence them, then you have to understand where they are. Many leaders today only understand where they aren’t.

This article is designed to help the Baby Boomer, Baby Buster and Gen. X leader gain better insight into the mindset of the millennial leader. If you have leaders from 20 to 35, then you have millennials who are leaders or see themselve as leaders. Stop trying to change reality and start understanding it. Ignorance leads to arrogance. Increase your insight and your leadership development strategy will be better for it. Too many senior leaders have created a leadership culture that is unforgiving to millennial leaders. If you want to win in leadership today, you better learn what makes the millennial mindset tick. Then, you can teach it how to tock!

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Millennials are bombarded with information, yet they are highly selective and individualization in what they believe works best for them. Human nature has not changed. But, our access to information has changed. This has accelerated the belief-and-achieve curve, inflated egos and self-assurance among the next generation called Millennials. But, a lesson for every Millennial, Centennial, Gen X’er and Baby Boomer is this information doesn’t make you a leader any more than a new paint job makes a car without an engine move.

Leaders today must learn what’s under the hood before they hit the road.

There’s one question that can quickly get you past so much of your frustration and help you identify a better course action with your millennial leaders or millennials your are trying to develop. This question will help you understand where your millennial is building from or why they aren’t able to build much at all.

Ask this question: “Who is your model?”

Chances are 50% of them will pause, look at you like you just asked them if they speak Nepalese, and say “Myself, I guess.” The next large group of them will say someone they have never met or someone that is really only an acquaintance. The smallest group will identify either you or someone in your organization. If I have learned nothing else in my over 20 years of leading and developing people it’s this: Every successful leader has had a model or models that has influenced them greatly. No leader pops out of the womb or arrives on the scene ready to lead all by themselves with no outside influence, no training and no development. That kind of leader is reckless and inexperienced. That kind of leader is like putting a toddler behind the wheel of Tesla. The reality for many of your millennials is they simply have the wrong model or no model at all. You cannot be your own model. Sadly, many leaders across the generation divides have this strategy. When you are your own model you are destined for failure.

Ask your Millennials who they are modeling themselves after. How they respond will give you better insight into where they really are in their leadership development and growth track.

Lesson #1 – Teach Millennials the Model is for Measurement. View leadership development as growth. We have a “growth chart” on our wall in our mud room at home for our children. Each September, my wife will measure them on the wall and make a mark. I remember as a middle-schooler using my mother as my measuring stick. I remember catching her in height and then passing her. But, once I passed her I needed a new model–my dad. Millennials must also be taught that a model is not solely for admiration and accreditation. Most of our young leaders have a strong desire to build a large network, but only in as much as they can get from it and not give into it. Be careful that you don’t foster the idea that a model is more than a reputation or status enhancer. A model is for emulation and measurement.

Get the Model Right

It is important to select the right model. The right model is a more than modern mentoring. Modern mentoring is rapidly becoming an exercise in frustration and futility. A good model is consistent in practice, character and conduct. A good model exercises wisdom and sound judgment. A good model is a good leader who seeks the growth and maturation of others.

A model is a person that serves as a pattern for others with character qualities worthy of imitation. A model serves as a point of reference and who has a position that will influence and foster growth in others.

When you have the wrong model, you are shaping yourself the wrong way.

Recently, I sat down with a frustrated millennial leader. This leader didn’t understand why they weren’t getting promoted. I stopped them after hearing a lot of excuses and asked this question: “Who is your model? Who are you modeling yourself after?”

This leader paused. Looked at me. Looked out the window. Looked back and me and said, “No one here, really. Just myself, I guess.

I responded, “That’s the problem.When you have the wrong model, you get the wrong results. Since, all leaders start at immaturity and are growing up toward greater maturity, models are critical to our development. Models are others who are at a more mature place in their own development and have qualities and attributes that are worthy of emulation and replication. A young leader might do many things well, but no one (except Jesus) does all things well.

Lesson #2 – Millennials tend t0 choose a make over a model. Typically, they want the shiniest, prettiest car that elevates their status, instead of the most trusted, reliable and consistent performer. It’s largely not their fault. They have been conditioned to believe these things. You must help them see that what’s under the hood is more important that the color of the paint–that the performance is more important than the appearance.

Models are used for imitation and replication. We all need models. The Apostle Paul wrote that someone could have 10,000 teachers and no father, thus they were to model or imitate him (1 Corinthians 4:15). We all need models, because we are filled with deficiencies, defects and deficits. Models show us why we need growth, how to grow and where to grow. The wrong models will never provide the right vision for growth. Models give us examples to see. And appearance is important to Millennials.

Lesson #3 – Millennials have a bent more toward being concerned with how they externally appear than how they internally constructed. Their undeniable lack of emotional maturity and subsequently, emotional intelligence, insulates their ability to think very circumspectly outside of themselves. They were not told “life isn’t fair,” “there is one winner and a bunch of losers,” or “you want something,  go work for it.” They were told, “great trying,” “wow, you are special,” and “here is ribbon for 12th place.” Their ignorance is your responsibility, if you want to develop them. You will never win them if you don’t understand them.

Lesson #4 – Millennials lack maturity and your frustration or disdain doesn’t help them gain more maturity. Your frustration pushes them away. We live in a development climate that senior leaders must adapt their systems and styles of development like never before. Human nature doesn’t change, but because of our access to information and our inflated self-evaluations, our systems of development must change. You have to earn their right to be their model and your title and position is not enough.

Lesson #5 – Millennials are not looking for fun, they are looking for engagement. Don’t mistake entertainment with engagement.  At the deepest level this is what it is. Because of social media and the constant connectivity of their world, we live in an era of over-stimulation. Engagement is your ability as a leader to connect at an appropriate level, (a) which starts with the heart, (b) shapes thoughts, and (c) influences behaviors. Effective leaders who work with Millennials are able to paint a picture of the future that aligns and appeals to the Millennnial, but is in harmony with the needs and goals of the organization. Leaders often get frustrated with having to “cater” to Millennials. Let me encourage you not to see your adjustments as catering, but as connecting. If you don’t connect with the millennials in your organization, their departure will be hastened.

Lesson #6 – Millennials see themselves as highly mobile with an upward destination–they are always looking for what is next. You become more effective as you become more accepting of this. Millennials as a whole (of course not all of them) don’t understand loyalty the way previous generations do. I don’t like it, but it is the reality of our day. When you are willing to engage and help your millennial leader explore the future, then the by-product is more loyalty.

Millennials see you as either helping them or holding them back. There is no middle ground. If you want to be effective at developing Millennials as leaders, then you must help them see that your system increases their competitiveness in a highly competitive landscape. They must see that your system values their individuality and helps them move forward.

This is what Gen Xers and Baby Boomers often fail to see–how competitive the landscape is and how hard (in their minds) progress actually is. What this really means is to a millennial is pressure. Millennials see opportunities without clear solution paths which increases anxieties, fears and stress. You, the more mature leader, know the pitfalls and realities of life they aren’t seeing. But, when you play the expert as opposed to promoter, then Millennials have a tendency to move on. The most effective developers of Millennials I have seen really do promotion well–they are (in today’s lingo) the “hype-man.” You may not like it, agree with it or believe in it, but it is true. Hype is for a Millennial is belief. When you hype them, they feel you believe in them. For many of us, to hype someone goes against everything we believe in and stand for. Don’t be afraid of it, hype is just a modern way to think about encouragement, attention and praise. Everyone likes encouragement, just as every millennial likes to be hyped! I’m not encouraging you to resort to flattery, but don’t be afraid to take your organizational encouragement to a new level and explore new methods.

Lesson #7 – Millennials are going to move on, don’t be afraid to talk about it. They don’t know this causes you anxiety. They are discussing it among themselves. You must create a system that encourages them to move on. This will engage them on a deeper level for you.

I spend time with a lot of leaders who are afraid of their people moving on. This is an error. Don’t be afraid to talk about your Millennials moving on. In fact, you increase your credibility with your Millennials when you talk about what they will do next in life. When your people see that you are not afraid to loose them, they will often stay longer. I don’t have any science to back me up, but by the behavior I have observed, there is clear evidence that this has a reverse-psychological effect, which in turn often creates greater capacity for patience. Stop trying to keep them and start preparing to help them leave. In doing this, you become their model.

Conclusion

The bottom line is this: If you want to go up, then you have to grow up. This is for both the Baby Boomer/Gen Xer and the Millennial. Don’t play the expert. Be a learner. Some of the greatest joy you will ever experience is the joy of seeing a young leader who you’ve poured into grow, blossom and bear fruit. Invest deeply and be prepared to let go. This requires patience and selflessness. Chances are, one day you will look up and see a “mini-me” looking back at you!

Develop leaders, it’s always worth it.

 

(c) Alex Vann, 2017

The Power of Making a Difference – Lessons for Leaders

Everyone wants to be different, but very few people really want to make a difference. Making a difference is a nice idea, but actually making a difference has a price that all but a few are willing to pay.

“I was brought up to believe that a person must be rescued when drowning…”

Irene Sendler

Do you know the story of Irene Sendler?

It is fascinating, terrifying and inspiring. Irene Sendler lived in Poland during World War II. The Nazis had invaded her country and were rounding up Jews and placing them in ghettos (preparing them for extermination). When you are faced with insurmountable odds you can either think of yourself or you can think of others. Most people simply think about themselves. In order to make a difference, a positive difference you must not count your life as valuable. You must lay your life down for others. Irene Sendler did this.

She was a social worker. This gave her access to the Jewish Ghettos. Now when she became a social worker did she think, “Hey, one day, I am going to win a Nobel Peace Prize for my efforts in helping children?” By her own admission, not a chance. She became a social worker to help others. But, she didn’t quit her job when the Nazis took over, she kept working. And her work gave her a social work card. This card allowed her access to the ghettos. And she got involved. She began smuggling Jewish orphans, babies and children out of the ghettos. She would place them with sympathetic Polish families who would raise them. Each child she smuggled out, she would place their name in a glass jar and bury it in the ground in hopes of reuniting children with parents after the war (very few were ever reunited as almost all of the parents were exterminated in camps).

What kind of a difference did she make?

She rescued some 2,500 children from certain death.

People that make a difference see a need and get involved. 

To make a difference in your world something drastic and dramatic must occur. But, most who desire to make a difference will not choose the drastic thing. Instead they will choose the easy thing, the convenient thing or the thing that benefits them the most. This drastic thing happens inside you at your very core where no one else can see, where no one else can touch, and no one else resides. What you must choose, because like taking an exit off the highway it is a choice of departure, is to intentionally forget about yourself. No, please do not forget to brush your teeth, wash your clothes or put on deodorant. In order to make a difference, you must get out of the way and get involved.

Every coach knows this to be true: Spectators never make a difference, but Participants do.

Making a difference is actually pretty simple. Most people who want to make a difference, don’t often know where to start. The good news is you don’t need a commission to make a difference, you don’t need money, you don’t need power, you don’t need a network and you don’t need vision. You just need to see a need and respond. Let’s make it simple…

Those who make a difference:

A. Live intentionally. When you live intentionally you don’t miss your moments. Your moments are your opportunities. Leonard Ravenhill said,

The opportunity of a lifetime must be seized in the lifetime of the opportunity.”

You can waste your opportunities and miss your moments when you live unintentionally. An unintentional life is a life that lacks focus. An unfocused life, leads to a frustrated and often wasted life. Focus demands preparation and attentiveness. If you are only attentive to your needs, your wants and your wishes, then you will miss your moments and waste your opportunities. Opportunities don’t last for ever. So if you don’t seize the opportunity, then you will miss it. And when you miss, you don’t make a difference.

You say you want to make a difference in the lives of your children, your marriage or your employees, but merely thinking about something never made a difference. The way you rescue a drowning person is to jump in or throw them something (depending on your training). You don’t rescue a drowning person by watching from the shore shouting “You can do it!”  You get involved.

B. Live in their why. The stronger your why, the higher you can fly.

Knowing your why simply means your purpose, your calling and your motivation. Your why is where you build from, launch dreams from and make a difference in the lives of others from. People who live for the why-of-me make little difference in their world. They are always looking for someone to meet their needs and make a difference in their lives. Sadly today, many people today have no idea about their why, their purpose, their calling and subsequently their motivation is inward focused instead of outward focused.

Those who make a difference live in a different land.  This land can be anywhere on earth. When you have your why right, you begin to live in a new land. These difference makers live in the land of opportunity. The land of opportunity is full of optimism and positivity not depression and negativity. The land of opportunity is a mindset that is different from mere opportunity. Mere opportunity is unexpected and must be acted upon quickly. People who live in their why are looking for opportunity. When you live in the land of opportunity, you are on the hunt to help others and expect opportunities to open up.

C. Live in the light of eternity. Those that truly make a difference realize that they are small part of something much bigger than themselves. Those that don’t make a difference feel that they are a big part of something very small and insignificant. When you live in light of eternity, you begin to realize that there is always a next.

Have you ever woken up to not have a tomorrow?

There’s always something next. I mean if you’re breathing, then you’ve taken a next breath. If you’re walking, then you’ve taken the next step. If you went to sleep and woke up, then you’ve had a next day. Living in light of eternity gives you a different perspective on your life and the value of others’ lives. There is a next after this life. Those that make a difference realize that what you do in this life affects. Maximus (Russell Crowe) in the movie Gladiator said it well,

What we do in this life echoes in eternity.

As a Christian, I not only believe that what you do echoes in eternity, but that it is written in eternity. Your soul is stirred by eternity. Eternity is a gentle yearning on the soul of every man, woman, boy and girl that has ever walked upon the face of the earth. Our souls long for more, for higher and for freedom. These are the cries of eternity.  Jesus was crystal clear on this topic when he said, “Do not store up for yourselves treasure on earth, but store up for yourselves treasure in heaven” (Matthew 6:19-20). Those who truly make a difference value the eternal weight of people, especially the people closest to you.

D. They live in the library. The library is where we find stories. We find good stories and bad stories. Exciting stories and boring stories. There are only two places that you can live: fiction or nonfiction, fantasy or reality. Too many people spend their entire lives living in their own fiction section. Their story is fiction. A life of fiction is a life of self-deception. You can’t read yourself into a story that is already been written. Every person has a biography, but not every person has a biography worth reading.

I mean, Chick-fil-A, nailed it. They made a video called “Every Life has a Story.” It’s a vignette of walking through a restaurant and reading a caption that summarizes the story of each persons’ life both in front of and behind the counter. I tell my people all the time, we are not real people serving robots. We are not robots serving real people. We are significant people serving significant people. Seeing people as significant will make a difference in your world and their world. Treating people as significant will make even a bigger difference. The more significant you treat people, the greater the impact you can make in their life.

The greatest story ever told is the story of Jesus Christ. You want to study a story worth emulating? Study his story! If you don’t like your story, stop trying to change that which has already been written and start trying to write a new chapter. Turn the page. Get out of the fantasy and into the reality. Get out the fiction section and start writing your biography. The most powerful biographies are not the stories of great exploit and conquest, but the stories that impacted other people the most.

Conclusion

You don’t need a degree to make a difference. You don’t need money. You don’t need to be famous or appreciated. You simply need to be willingly, see a need and then respond to make difference. Irene Sendler saw a need, used what she had and did what she could. She paid a high price. Her ankles and wrists were broken from a beating at the hands of the Gestapo. She was sentenced to execution, but managed to be freed to live in hiding for the rest of the war. She wasn’t recognized until the end of her life. She was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. She didn’t see herself as a hero. She said,

The term ‘hero’ irritates me greatly. The opposite is true. I continue to have pangs of conscience that I did so little.

Those who respond make a difference, those who refuse are really no different at all.

 

 

(c) Alex Vann, 2017