How Humble Leadership Really Works

How Humble Leadership Really Works

Power, as my colleague Ena Inesi has studied, can cause leaders to become overly obsessed with outcomes and control, and, therefore, treat their employees as means to an end. As I’ve discovered in my own research, this ramps up people’s fear — fear of not hitting targets, fear of losing bonuses, fear of failing — and as a consequence people stop feeling positive emotions and their drive to experiment and learn is stifled.

Take for example a UK food delivery service that I’ve studied. The engagement of its drivers, who deliver milk and bread to millions of customers each day, was dipping while management was becoming increasingly metric-driven in an effort to reduce costs and improve delivery times. Each week, managers held weekly performance debriefs with drivers and went through a list of problems, complaints, and errors with a clipboard and pen. This was not inspiring on any level, to either party. And, eventually, the drivers, many of whom had worked for the company for decades, became resentful.

ADAPTED FROM


Alive at Work

This type of top-down leadership is outdated, and, more importantly, counterproductive. By focusing too much on control and end goals, and not enough on their people, leaders are making it more difficult to achieve their own desired outcomes.

The key, then, is to help people feel purposeful, motivated, and energized so they can bring their best selves to work.

There are a number of ways to do this, as I outline in my new book Alive at Work. But one of the best ways is to adopt the humble mind-set of a servant leader. Servant leaders view their key role as serving employees as they explore and grow, providing tangible and emotional support as they do so.

To put it bluntly, servant-leaders have the humility, courage, and insight to admit that they can benefit from the expertise of others who have less power than them. They actively seek the ideas and unique contributions of the employees that they serve. This is how servant leaders create a culture of learning, and an atmosphere that encourages followers to become the very best they can.

Humility and servant leadership do not imply that leaders have low self-esteem, or take on an attitude of servility. Instead, servant leadership emphasizes that the responsibility of a leader is to increase the ownership, autonomy, and responsibility of followers — to encourage them to think for themselves and try out their own ideas.

Read here to learn how to do it.



Brad Sawyer

Genuine Person/Independent Thinker/Team Player

6y

I've been saying this for years. The real question is, how many more years will the masses be made to suffer at the hands of incompetent leaders and their shareholders? And can enough people survive long enough without creating a fatal negative stigma against employers in general? After all, children growing up get to see their parent killing themselves and hating their jobs. Those children will grow up already hating the modern day workplace. Just like millennials.

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Andrea Ferro

Technology leader delivering Power and Whitespace infrastructure including AI ready solutions

6y

The Power Paradox... when you achieve the highest level in the organisation is when you need to start giving away power and empower others!

Cormac M. Kelly

Partnerships Director - Mentor - Consultant - Founders Advisor

6y

Great piece -enjoyed it. I always believed great leaders were true collaberators with and servants to their teams. Will get the book now.

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Nicola Amiss

Commercial Growth Leader / Executive Coach / SVP Sales, Richardson

6y

Really enjoyed the Alive at Work book and especially the section on Purpose. The chapter on forming a narrative and the impact of leaders in helping create meaning was very thought provoking.

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