Lead the charge
The hallmark of a good leader is his ability to set the tone of the organization. That means showing up first and leaving last. It means that if you want your salespeople to make 50 phone calls per day, show them you’re willing to make 100.
No one can discredit a leader who is willing to work harder than everyone else. That’s why certain generals are famous; they led the charge into battle, demonstrating a willingness to lead and to assume more risk than anyone else.
Say as little as possible
Very often the most commanding role you can take in a meeting is to say nothing at all. Young people harbor the misconception that the smartest guy in the room does all the talking and is, therefore, in the leadership role. Later on they learn that the smartest guy in the room needs to say the least.
If you’re in a leadership position, and you want to project an image of being more confident and more mature, keep your mouth shut in a meeting and stay intently focused on the conversation. When you do speak, your words will carry more weight.
Listen first, speak second
Instead of rushing into http://www.askmen.com/money/successful_60/71_success.html requires you to spend a great deal of time listening to other people’s points of view before forming your own. If possible, because it’s an effective way to project leadership, have the last word in the meeting once you’ve collected as much information as possible.
Ask lots of questions
A common misconception that many people have is that those who ask lots of questions must have the fewest number of answers. Not so. The smartest leaders learn to ask lots of questions in order to get to the bottom of challenges. Learn to dig. Most leadership decisions become very obvious when a manager digs deep enough into the problem.
What you’ll also find is that many “obvious” questions go unanswered because the answers seem equally obvious. If a project is behind and no one seems to know why, don’t just stop at “
who’s responsible?” Find out the entire order of events and begin to see if there is a larger problem behind why the work isn’t getting done. Many larger problems go overlooked by unseasoned managers because they are afraid to ask the hard questions.
Make firm decisions
A bold leader makes
confident decisions. Waffling on an issue is a horrible way to project the importance of your decision.
Imagine an army general giving his squad the command to take a hill and then, halfway into the order, pausing to say, “Well, maybe we shouldn’t.” Even if it’s a bad decision, your troops want to know that it’s the only decision you’re willing to support.
This doesn’t mean that you can’t change your mind, but if you do, be sure to make those changes few and far between and only in the most dire of circumstances. Every time you change your mind there is a ripple effect -- it not only makes people question your current decision, it causes them to potentially question other decisions down the road.
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