Monday, March 28, 2011
Emergency "off switch"
I went on a 12-mile hike on Saturday. It was a beautiful spring day and the scenery was lovely. Our guide was an experienced hiker who was a volunteer who maintains local trails and leads hikes. He had a lot of passion about the outdoors and hiking in particular. His passion was infectious - he motivated me to plan some additional hiking trips for the spring and summer.
What occurred to me is that passionate people make the world go round. Think about it - most of the things we enjoy or that make our lives easier, were created, developed and supported by people with passion.
As I've mentioned on previous blog posts, the best alliance managers (or doctors, lawyers, nurses, teachers, housekeepers, etc.) have passion about their jobs. Their switch is in the "on" position.
Beware of those that try to dampen your enthusiasm or extinguish your passion. These people are toxic and should be avoided at all costs. Don't let them into your head and most of all don't let them into your heart. Use your emergency "off switch" to turn these people "off". Protect your passion. Despite the sideline jeering of the lazy cynics, passion is what makes the world go round!
Monday, March 21, 2011
The No Complacency Zone
In the early 90's, I worked for a Branch Manager who was an exceptional leader. His branch was consistently the top ranked sales branch in the region (of 25 branches) and in the years I was there, the branch was the #1 branch office in the country (out of 250 branches).
He was a master both at understanding people and how to best motivate and reward them and in building a high performance culture.
Some of the things he did were completely counter intuitive. For example, during good times - when we were blowing away our numbers - he would be absolutely brutal in our management staff meetings. Maniacally drilling down on the numbers, pipeline, etc. My fellow managers and I would look at each other like we were in the wrong meeting! Conversely, when we were having a tough quarter or two, he would make passing reference to the numbers, but there was no drilling.
I finally came to realize that Harry was building a high performance culture. He did not want anyone in his organization, particularly his management team, to be complacent. He was establishing a "No Complacency" Zone.
A website for safety officers defines complacency as "self-satisfaction, especially when accompanied by unawareness of actual dangers or deficiencies". Harry knew that complacency is death. It is the beginning of the end. Excellence, innovation and risk taking can not thrive in an environment where complacency lives.
Harry didn't have to apply the hammer during tough times, because he never let us get complacent during the good times.
As you manage your alliance relationships, make sure you establish a "no complacency zone"!
Monday, March 14, 2011
The "hole in the donut"
Do you know someone who revels in pointing out obvious problems with nary a thought of possible solutions?
I worked for a manager back in the early 90's that used to call these people folks who "point at the hole in the donut". He told us not to be caught doing this ......You know this person - Captain Obvious - the one who shows up at the meeting pointing out all the reasons your idea, your partnership, will fail.
As Alliance Managers, we don't have the luxury of simply pointing at the hole in the donut. If there's a hole in the donut, our job is to figure out how to address it, or identify risk factors to help management make go/no go decisions. Our job is to find the path to success...analyze ...problem solve and decide.
Pointing at the hole in the donut is for the weak, passive and afraid. That's not us!
Monday, March 7, 2011
Out of Your Head - Into Your Heart
I attended a networking luncheon today where the guest speaker was a life coach and personal friend of mine. Her topic was about getting "unstuck" and she said something that really resonated with me - to get "unstuck" you have to "get out of your head and into your heart".
What does "getting into your heart" have to do with alliance management?
Being good at managing alliances requires passion. I'd argue that being good at anything requires passion. Passion is what keeps you going when the going gets tough and things seem hopeless. You have to have something in you that motivates you, that makes you excited about attacking the day to day challenges.
Finally, as I've stated in other blog posts, fundamentally, alliance managers are leaders. I recently read "Who Says Elephants Can't Dance?" by Lou Gerstner, former CEO of IBM. It chronicles his turnaround of IBM and reads like a manifesto on leadership. In his book, Gertstner states -
Passion is the single most important element of personal leadership. I believe managers at all levels of a company should strive to develop the emotional side of their leadership skills.
Note that I'm not talking about manufactured passion. I'm talking about genuine, in your bones, "would you shut up about this already" passion!
Passion is infectious, and it's critical if you want to lead.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)