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Leadership and Winning the Lottery
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| Guest post by: Sylvia Lafair |
Article Overview: Matthew was promoted to CEO of his company. He decided he had "made it". He learned everything he need to know, then why was he depressed and exhausted by the daily interactions with his senior team.
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Free Download - 3 Competencies of Leadership By Sylvia Lafair |
Leadership and Winning the Lottery
Matthew was promoted to CEO of his biotech company one year ago today. He thought he had won the lottery, and looking from the lens of business success, he did.
When he was able to hold the brass ring of personal fame high over his head he decided he had "made it" and no longer needed executive coaching. He had learned everything he needed to get where he wanted to go. He was, he told me, "happy and ready to run with all he had learned."
So, why was I not surprised when the phone rang yesterday, Sunday, with a despondent Matthew on the other end of the phone? Yes, he had learned everything he needed to learn to get the prize. It had been an exciting year and yet, something was missing. Winning the CEO lottery was only the beginning of the journey; keeping the stash from disappearing was the bigger challenge. He said he reserves were low and he needed help to keep his place in the prestigious, corner office.
Matthew had, like most of us, looked at life in freeze frames. Success, what really matters, was seen as a series of snap shots rather than as a continuous flow of tests and challenges to help us grow. There was a belief that winning his position would keep him safe from disappointments and emotional lows.
He had learned how to play the game of winners and losers. He had learned to master office politics, all the back biting and gossip that is part of the trip up to the C-Suite. He was a winner and therefore knew all he needed to know, until the last few months.
There is a belief that once we land the title it will keep us safe from hurt and disappointment. Not that different than the belief that once we walk down the aisle after a marriage ceremony we will be happy ever after.
Leadership development programs are all too often like fairy tales. We have a wish, we have a dream, we do whatever it takes to win, and winning is the end of the book. No matter how much I suggested to Matthew that happiness and success in a static state is overrated he was not ready to hear.
Now, one year later, the honeymoon period over, he is all ears! We had a long Sunday conversation. He talked about the workplace conflict that was becoming like a tidal wave. He talked about the jealousies and sabotage in his senior team that was creating a stagnant environment. He talked about how everyone was highly skilled in the core products of the company, yet behaved like children when it came to emotional interactions. He was exhausted and depressed most of the time.
He admitted that yes, I had warned him the real work of leading would start when everyone stopped congratulating him, stopped pandering to him, and started getting down to business. He now was able to see that being at the helm made the daily stress look different.
We agreed to restart our executive coaching sessions. He is ready to learn the strategic leadership capabilities of how to read and lead a team of highly competent individuals who are also complex human beings with their own underlying issues that have to be considered.
Matthew agreed that he was intellectually ready for his position, yet emotionally still had to get strength training for continued success. His new study will include how to create a safe stress zone at work, how to learn and then teach his leadership team how to "practice safe stress".
What Matthew, what all leaders must learn sooner or later, is that when stress hits the hot button at work we all revert back to behaviors we relied on as children for security and survival. When there is team conflict it is from these old behavior patterns. When a team can become aware that the positioning, power plays, politeness and unwillingness to really talk truth is there for protection, they can put down the shields and start to talk openly. Telling the truth is the route to a safe stress zone and every leader, everyone who has won the lottery and entered the C-Suite needs to learn how to handle the underlying issues.Winning at work is always in a fluid rather than a static state. That is what Matthew is now learning, and that is what will keep him in the CEO role for however long he will want to stay there.
Article Tags: Behavior Patterns, Executive Coaching, Leadership Development Programs, Safe Stress Zone, Workplace Conflict
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About the Author: Sylvia Lafair RSS for Sylvia's articles - Visit Sylvia's website Developing leaders and transforming teams is my speciality. As a clinical psychologist I know that we bring the behaviors we learned in our original organization, the family, into our present work organization. The key to leadership is understanding how individuals form a system and how that system impacts the bottom line. I have worked globally and find that the core of relationships is much the same whether in California, China,or Chile. My book "Don't Bring It to Work (Jossey Bass) offers tools and strategies for developing collaborative work cultures and important core techniques for entrepreneurs to have motivated and fast moving teams. I am a speaker at national conferences, radio, and television. You can follow my blogs at http://www.sylvialafair.com/blog/ . You may contact Sylvia Lafair, PhD, author of "Don't Bring It to Work" directly at, sylvia@ceoptions.com or 570-636-3858 for any questions or feedback you may have. Click here to visit Sylvia's website Leadership with a Twist of Lemon The Good Part of Conflict in the Workplace Yearning For Integrity Entrepreneurs and Dancing with the Stars Lessons on Leadership No Clowning Around |
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