BY EMILY TAN
FINANCIAL DAILY, FRIDAY 11 FEBRUARY 2011
Career paths are
littered with many bosses, but few leaders. A truly great leader is someone who brings out
the best in you, who you can respect for who he is, and who genuinely cares
about your success and growth.
To be a leader, you
must understand failure and you must feel deeply about current inadequacies and
feel driven to do something about it. The first step to becoming a leader is to
close your eyes and clearly see a better future. Leader aren’t lone wolves, they understand
the need to enlist co-leader and to galvanise the entire enterprise to work
towards their goals.
When you become a
leader you have to become a net giver and not a net taker. A leader’s primary role is to build the
‘brains’, ‘bones’ and ‘nerves’ of the organisation and not to seek to create
result themselves.
BRAINS
|
BONES
|
NERVES
|
Vision
|
Quality of talents
|
Cultural Philosophy
|
Strategy
|
Supporting systems and processes
|
Compensation and rewards
|
Unique Capabilities
|
Roles and responsibilities
|
Quality of leadership
|
Resources allocation
|
Learning and renewal
|
|
Design and structure
|
A company’s greatness
doesn’t truly lie in its technology. Technology
will be out dated. Innovation can be
copied. Talent can be poached. The single thing a leader can create that is
hardest to replicate is its culture.
Leadership is what your
team does when you’re not around. Too
many bosses say one thing and do another which undermines the corporation’s
culture. The difference between leaders
and bosses in a nut shell is that leader set out to create a better future
while bosses cling to the past and cope with the present.
Talk by Rajeev
Pashewaria CEO of the International Centre for
Leadership in Finance (ICLIF)
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