Leadership Lesson: Look for the Comeback
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I've spent my entire career studying and teaching the discipline of leadership.
If there's anything I've learned it's that leadership is like fashion. It has
different styles, looks and feel and operational methods. Leadership is as unique as the leader
exerting or exuding the leadership.
Regardless of the leader: man or women; or style: autocratic, or
manage by objectives or consensus, there are established laws or rules of
leadership used by leaders to shape and manage the actions of followers.
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I’ve worked with hundreds of leaders and have planned, facilitated
and executed change in a wide variety of operating environments complementing
and aligning with a wide variety of leadership styles. Through this work I’ve developed my own
first rule of leadership:
First
Rule of Leadership: You
Can’t Work with NO
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Let me give you some examples.
You want to speak to your boss or a leader in your organization and you
get his or her secretary. In three
recent exchanges, the secretary says: 1) she’s at an executive off-site and not
scheduling appointments, 2) she’s working on completing an important
deliverable for a current initiative, and 3) she’s only taking appointments on
Fridays – and all Fridays until August are booked. This leader, rather her
secretary, has said “no” three times.
The rub is not that your leader has other things on her plate or even
that her focus is not on you or your issues of late. The rub is that you did
not get a straight answer. You got a no that sounded more like “try again”;
which by the way you did twice. After
three “try-again” ‘s the real message is “no”.
In my next example, you are trying negotiate a pay raise or a role
advance (from Director to Senior Director for example) or both with your boss.
You are feeling that your work load does not match your salary or compensation.
The former is so overwhelmingly out-of-balance with the later, in your opinion,
that you’d like to discuss a reset in your professional obligations or duties
(reduced) or an increase in your compensation or advancement in your role (or
both). You are interested in
right-setting the gap between the value you believe you provide to your boss
and your organization and the reward you receive for providing that value. Things feel “off” to you and you want to discuss your thoughts
and feelings with your boss. Your first
request for a discussion was met with a firm “We have a salary freeze in effect
right now” and a denial to discuss in further detail. Six months ago you tried again and got the
lecture on the company’s poor year-end results. You changed your tactic this
third time and asked your boss to discuss the scope of your responsibilities
and how you feel it is more challenging to meet the objectives set before you.
This last meeting request was left unanswered. The response you got was the silent “no” we
so often get that makes us feel uncertain, ignored and unwanted. A silent “no”
leaves us with hollow feelings of isolation and abandonment. It doesn’t feel
good.
“We are in a hiring freeze” – means NO.
“We’ve had a tough year” – means NO.A silent non-answer – means NO.
“My calendar is booked” – means NO.
“I or the Company has another focus at the moment” – means NO.
Understand me. We are all human and as humans we are less than perfect. Sometimes we are really FAR from perfect. There are definitely more unhealthy working relationships and operating environments than there are healthy ones. Every operating environment has a degree of darkness – and unspoken truths. You are here to shed as much light on your own world and work as you can. Your authentic leadership is activated when you shine your light on any aspect of darkness in your environment. You are charged with holding up your end of the universe. People are depending on you to be the leader in your sphere of influence.
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Look
for the Comeback
One strategy to help you develop the core skill of recognizing “no”
is to look for a comeback – or some sign of “yes.” If you’re asking for a raise and you get any
kind of “give” in the conversation or the posture of your boss, then there’s
a path to a positive outcome. A
positive comeback might sound something like “OK Sharon – I hear that you are
frustrated with the work/reward balance of your current position – Why don’t
we find some time to talk about it?”.
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If you’re trying to schedule time with someone who is completely booked over the next month – an apology and/or recognition for your many attempts at connecting with him or her is a comeback and a signal of some degree of “yes”. In this example, he/she can offer to meet in some alternative way – such as extending an offer for you to attend one of his/her other meetings with a chance to spend a few minutes chatting afterward. This is a sign of a comeback – a “give” in the relationship. It’s not a hard “no”.
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