Climate for success. As we find ourselves in our new world, we are also starting to discover a new way of being. This time 2020 has demanded us to be more considerate, more thoughtful, more patient, and more supportive.
We now need to take this into business and create a sustainable leadership culture, use this time to self-audit the impact that you have on others. Take this opportunity to recognise how are attitudes and behaviours impact those around us and more importantly, how they seem to the world.
Let me take you back to the times when our ancestors lived in caves and survival depended on being part of a group. If we were ostracised from the group, we would be unable to feed ourselves or look after ourselves and ultimately fight off the sabre-tooth tiger.
Fast forward to the modern world, it’s important to realise that we still have the same animalistic part of the brain which is scanning for threat and reward. Making sure that we are safe and part of a group. Our brain is a social brain; we get warm feelings when we have a good social interaction. We have chemicals which flood through us, encouraging us to repeat the behaviour which is helping us prosper.
However when we come across somebody who we perceive as a threat, who could impact our social status, happiness or being, our engagement, motivation and productivity drops, as we are more focused on our survival as opposed to our work.
As a leader you need to be aware that you are impacting others through everything you do. Whether it is through video calls, emails, decision making or strategy, all your interactions and behaviours are being observed and perceived by others.
If we are displaying the more ‘self-survival behaviours’ such as:
Then we’re likely to bring out the worst in other people. This creates a tone of ‘all or nothing’ thinking, defensive behaviour and generally not feeling ok about each other.
This kind of behaviour starts to create a culture of covering ones back, not looking after each other and doing just enough to get by. You could quickly see how this would start to erode business success. There is plenty of research to show the organisations with this kind of tone and culture have high attrition rates and low engagement rates in the workforce.
The leader who displays more mindful behaviours, who is open, self-aware and manages their behaviours is likely to bring the best out of others, as they inspire and enable. This is the leader who creates a leadership culture of positivity, innovation, fun, and success.
By displaying these more mindful behaviours and working to come away from the more subconscious threatening and self-survival behaviours, you will see a shift change in the organisation and start to drive up productivity, engagement, and motivation.
Go and find that person that will give you honest feedback and ask them about your behaviours, and what the workforce might be seeing. Get some 360-degree feedback, ask people what they think, and then put a plan together to outline the leadership climate you are aiming for. You will be surprised at some of the alignments and synergies that come out of these conversations.
We can all strive to be better, different, and more aware of our behaviour. By looking inwards, as opposed to outwards you will see that the results show and reflect the effort that you’ve put in, and it will undoubtedly be one of the first things people start talking about.
That is when you start to build towards a truly positive leadership culture, a climate for success.
You can also download your FREE guide to Everything You Need To Know About Leadership here.