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Values Based Leadership & Motivation. By: Syed Hussain Haider Director, Akhuwat Institute of Social Enterprise and Management Group Head, Akhuwat Education Services. “Hold on ! You can’t all have the front seat!”. Q&A. Write 5 attributes of a good leader.
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Values BasedLeadership & Motivation By: SyedHussainHaider Director, Akhuwat Institute of Social Enterprise and Management Group Head, Akhuwat Education Services
Q&A Write 5 attributes of a good leader.
LeadershipMatters, Character Matters • Influence others towards a goal and achievement of that goal • A Process where an individual influences others to do what s/he wants them to “A leader is a person who has the ability to get other people to do what they don’t want to do and like it” - Harry Truman
Leadership is … … about coping with change. The greater the competitive forces around you, and the more volatile the world around you, the more the need for leadership.
A leader is best when people barely know that he exists Not so good when people obey and acclaim him Worse when they despise him But of a good leader who talks little when his work is done his aim fulfilled they will say: “WE DID IT OURSELVES” - Lao-tse (c. 565 B.C.)
Leadership is about first thinking then deciding followed by acting swiftly and finally, reflecting
Leadership is about thinking – exploration deciding – evaluation/selection acting swiftly – edge reflecting – analysis/introspection All of the above are intense intellectual activities.
10 Commandments of Leadership • Treat everyone with respect and dignity • Set the example for others to follow • Be active • Maintain the highest standards of honesty and dignity • Insist on excellence and hold your people accountable • Build group cohesiveness and pride • Show confidence in your people • Maintain a strong sense of urgency • Be available and visible to your staff • Develop yourself to your highest potential
“Quite frankly, we’ve had so many applicants with attitude, over-qualification,inflated egos and hyper aggressiveness that we are looking for someone without a clue.”
Getting The Best As taught by Theodore Roosevelt • Hire people more talented than yourself • Talented people attract talented people • Look for the best in each person • Set standards for selection • Spend time evaluating and acculturating prospective team members
Getting The Best As taught by Theodore Roosevelt • Do not prolong consideration of people who will not receive a position • Ceaselessly search for new talent • Ruthlessly replace individuals who do not meet the standards of the organization • Work with the tools at hand
The New Rules Hire and promote: • first, on the basis of INTEGRITY; • second, MOTIVATION; • third, CAPACITY; • fourth, UNDERSTANDING; • fifth, KNOWLEDGE; • and than on EXPERIENCE.
The New Rules • Without integrity, motivation is dangerous. • Without motivation, capacity is impotent. • Without capacity, understanding is limited. • Without understanding, knowledge is meaningless. • Without knowledge, experience is blind.
LEADERS • Facilitate interpersonal interaction • Charisma • Innovate, inspire • Vision, communicate it • Ability to change things, set direction, look at larger picture, align people, look at competition and do better and different, willing to listen and learn, sensitive to concerns • Gains trust, empowers, enable others to reach potential MANAGERS • Plan, coordinate • Evaluate and supervise • Negotiate, budget • Reality check, sets time limits, copes with complexity • Bring order and consistency • Planning complementing direction
MANAGERS • Administers • Maintains • Accepts reality • Focuses on system & structure • Relies on control • Has short-range view • Asks how and when • Has eye on the bottom • Imitates • Accepts status quo • Does things right LEADERS • Innovates • Is an original • Develops • Investigates it • Focuses on people • Inspires trust • Has a long-range plan • Asks what and why • Has eye on the horizon • Originates • Challenges it • Does the right thing
Jack Welch: What Great Leaders Do • Relentlessly upgrade their team, using every encounter as an opportunity to evaluate, coach, and build self-confidence • Make sure people not only see the vision, they live and breathe it • Get into everyone’s skin, exuding positive energy and optimism • Establish trust with candor, transparency, and credit • Have the courage to make unpopular decisions and gut calls • Probe and push with a curiosity that borders on skepticism, making sure their questions are answered with action • Inspire risk taking and learning by setting the example • Celebrate
Vision Mission • Performance Measurement • Rewards Management • Employee Feedback • Recruitment Practices • People Development • Customer Feedback • Mission and Values Review • Quality Consciousness • Continuous Improvement Objectives Strategy Tactics Processes Foundation - Values Transformation to World Class A SYSTEMS APPROACH
Transformational or Charismatic Leadership • Leaders who, through their personal vision and energy, inspire followers and have a major impact on their organizations • Seeks change , are proactive • Innovative, creative and ethically attuned • Leaders who determine what followers need to do to achieve objectives, classify those requirements, and help followers become confident they can reach their objectives • Inspire others to do more than expected • Raise level to self-actualization • Empower others • Focus on Values
The Challenge Ahead Given the right circumstances, from no more than dreams, determination, and the liberty to try, quite ORDINARY people consistently do EXTRAORDINARY things.
MOTIVATION? • Motivation is defined as “the extent to which persistent effort is directed towards a goal” 1. Effort - must be defined in relation to its appropriateness to the objectives being pursued. 2. Persistence - relates to the willingness of the individual to stay with a task until it is completed. 3. Direction - measured in terms of how persistent effort is applied in relation to the goals being pursued 4. Goals - individual goals and organizational goals (must be compatible)
Types of motivation • Extrinsic Motivation • Intrinsic Motivation
5 Ways to Motivate a Team • Figure out what makes them tick (individual needs) • Give clear expectations • Consistent reinforcement and consequences • Healthy competition • Change out team members
Needs-based Motivation • Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs: • Physiological • Safety • Relationship • Esteem • Self-actualization • The more you move from basic to higher level needs, the more motivation depends on internal factors
Needs-based Motivation • Alderfer’s ERG Theory: • Existence • Relatedness • Growth • Similar to Maslow’s Hierarchy in that it focuses on differing levels of needs, which are usually satisfied in order of importance • Unlike Maslow’s theory in that it allows for higher needs to be met, before lower-level needs under certain circumstances
Needs-based Motivation • McClelland’s Theory of Needs: • Achievement • Affiliation • Power • Concerned with the behavioral consequences of need • Non-hierarchical