Leadership is not management. Leadership is the first
creation whereas management is the second creation.
Management is a bottom line focus. How can I best accomplish
certain things? Leadership deals with the top line: What are the things I want
to accomplish? In the words of both Peter Drucker and Warren Bennis,
“Management is doing things right; leadership is doing the right things.”
Management is efficiency in climbing the ladder of success; leadership
determines whether the ladder is leaning against the right wall.
You can quickly grasp the important difference between the
two if you envision a group of producers cutting their way through the jungle
with machetes. They’re the producers, the problem solvers. They’re cutting
through the undergrowth, clearing it out.
The managers are behind them, sharpening their machetes,
writing policy, and procedure manuals, holding muscle development programs,
bringing in improved technologies and setting up working schedules and
compensation programs for machete wielders.
The leader is the one who climbs the tallest tree, surveys
the entire situation, and yells, “Wrong jungle!” But how do the busy, efficient producers and mangers often
respond? “Shut up! We’re making progress.”
As individuals, groups, and businesses, we’re often so busy
cutting through the undergrowth we don’t even realize we’re in the wrong
jungle. And the rapidly changing environment in which we live makes effective
leadership more critical than it has ever been-in every aspect of independent
and interdependent life.
We are more in need of a vision or destination and a compass
(a set of principles and directions) and less in need of a road map. We often
don’t know what the terrain ahead will be like or what we will need to go
through it; much will depend on our judgment at the time. But an inner compass
will always give us direction.
Effectiveness – often even survival – does not depend solely
on how much effort we expend, but on whether or not the effort we expend is in
the right jungle. And the metamorphosis
taking place in most every industry and profession demands leadership
first and management second.
In business, the market is changing so rapidly that many
products and services that successfully met consumer tastes and needs a few
years ago are obsolete today. Proactive powerful leadership must constantly
monitor environmental change, particularly customer buying habits and motives,
and provide the force necessary to organize resources in the right direction.
Efficient management without effective leadership is, as one
individual has phrased it, “like straightening deck chairs on the Titanic.” No
management success can compensate for failure in leadership. But leadership is
hard because we’re often caught in a management paradigm.
At the final session of a year-long executive development program in Seattle, the president of an oil company came up to me and said, “Stephen, when you pointed out the difference between leadership and management in the second month, I looked at my role as the president of this company and realized that I had never been into leadership. I was deep into management, buried by pressing challenges and the details of day-to-day logistics. So, I decided to withdraw from management, I could get other people to do that. I wanted to really lead my organization.
At the final session of a year-long executive development program in Seattle, the president of an oil company came up to me and said, “Stephen, when you pointed out the difference between leadership and management in the second month, I looked at my role as the president of this company and realized that I had never been into leadership. I was deep into management, buried by pressing challenges and the details of day-to-day logistics. So, I decided to withdraw from management, I could get other people to do that. I wanted to really lead my organization.
It was hard, I went through withdrawal pains because I
stopped dealing with a lot of the pressing, urgent matters that were right in
front of me and which gave me a sense of immediate accomplishment. I didn’t
receive much satisfaction as I started wrestling with the direction issues, the
culture building issues, the deep analysis of problems, the seizing of new
opportunities. Others also went through withdrawal pains from their working
style comfort zones. They missed the easy accessibility I had given them
before. They still wanted me to be available to them, to respond, to help solve
their problems on a day-to-day basis.
But I persisted. I was absolutely convinced that I needed to
provide leadership. And I did. Today our whole business is different. We’re
more in line with our environment. We have doubled our revenues and quadrupled
our profits. I’m into leadership.”
I’m convinced that too often parents are also trapped in the
management paradigm, thinking of control, efficiency, and rules instead of
direction, purpose and family feeling.
And leadership is even more lacking in our personal lives.
We’re into managing with efficiency, setting and achieving goals before we have
even clarified our values.
- Stephen R. Covey, an excerpt from The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
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