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Answers
are often before our very eyes or in front of our noses
- particularly if we read the American Heritage Dictionary!
Explore
with me how some of the multitude of definitions for
the word "leader" actually serve as a performance standard
for leadership.
Leaving
behind the standard definition of "one who leads or
guides", consider the second definition: "one who has
power or influence". Have you known people in a leadership
role who seem unable to influence the people around
them? The ability to make connections, to speak clearly
and to frame information so everyone hears a "what's
it in for me" message are essential for influence. We
are also persuaded by people with conviction and passion.
We are influenced by people whom we think we can trust.
Lose or misuse any of this and a leader's power vanishes.
A leader
is defined as "a conductor or the principal performer
in an orchestral section". Finding ways to bring together
the different talents of employees or volunteers so
that all play from the same sheet of music and blend
their instruments into a harmonious whole is a skill
demonstrated by the finest of leaders! As a principal
performer, we look to a leader to have one talent that
is heads above the other people in that arena of "play".
We don't want a leader who professes to best at everything.
But we do want a leader to have one clearly recognizable
skill.
The
foremost animal in a harnessed team is a leader. Do
we not look to leaders to guide the way, joined shoulder
by shoulder to the rest of the team? Remember how the
presence of a leader at a front line became the rallying
point for many a battle?
Leader
is also defined as "a duct for conveying warm air from
a furnace." Care is a four-letter word heard more and
more frequently in business circles. Employees want
to know that a leader cares for them. The cold, stern
dictator might get some results but never the full-blown
commitment, creativity and loyalty of a warm and caring
leader.
There's
the leader that is an economic indicator and the leader
that is "loss". A leader better be in command and have
a clear indication as to the economic viability of the
enterprise. A leader also needs to know when something
is done to attract talent or customers - not to make
money.
A short
length of gut, wire or similar material by which a hook
is attached to a fishing line is a leader and so is
the blank strip at the end or beginning of a film or
tape used in threading or winding.
What's
the correlation with the world of leadership in these
final definitions? Both are used for setting up the
profit potential of the venture. Depending upon the
type of fish one wishes to catch, a fishing leader strengthens
the connection between the hook and the rest of the
line. There are times in which the executive's presence
helps solidify the relationship between the customer
and the sales team so that the customer "bites the hook".
Other times, a leader gently paves the way for the real
presentation to the potential buyer or the investment
community. He is the "blank tape" that opens the doors
for the full presentation of the company.
If a
picture is worth 1000 words, a metaphor is worth 1000
pictures. Using the metaphors provided by other meanings
to the word "leader", we gain a rich image of the scope
and possibilities of true leadership.
© 2003 by Eileen McDargh. All rights
reserved
Article reprinted with permission
through www.IdeaMarketers.com
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