Friday, May 22, 2020
Managers and Leaders
Managers and Leaders Embed from Getty Imageswindow.gie=window.gie||function(c){(gie.q=gie.q||[]).push(c)};gie(function(){gie.widgets.load({id:'6Te2vXxISep3gdEs1iuI-g',sig:'W-d3WKhTveopXLLurFGH1XhqJwkZP9HFLpneqzXK9WM=',w:'488px',h:'354px',items:'645973085',caption: false ,tld:'com',is360: false })}); William Arruda, writing for Forbes online, says, âWhen you are promoted into a role where you are managing people, you donât automatically become a leader.â Managers and leaders are both essential to a company, but they play very different roles. Managers work with what is; they understand the goals of their team, their assets, their constraints, and their timeline. They manage these factors to maximize efficiency in achieving goals. Vineet Nayar, writing for Harvard Business Review, says âManagers count value; leaders create value.â Leaders work on what could be. Their job is to look into the future, to imagine what could be possible. Whether theyâre starting a company, building new products or services, or turning around a troubled organization, they must understand what needs to happen and articulate that vision. Their job is to get others (investors, creators, and staff) to see what they see, believe, and eventually, follow the vision. William Arruda says that a managerâs job is to make the status quo more efficient. A leaderâs job is to disrupt the status quo. My favorite quote about leadership comes from Stephen Covey: âThe leader is the one who climbs the tallest tree, surveys the entire situation, and yells, Wrong jungle! Busy, efficient producers and managers often respond Shut up! Weâre making progress!â Managers often fear failure; their job is to make sure the company or team succeeds. Leaders, he says, can â" and should â" fail at times. If youâre not failing, youâre not trying enough new things. Arruda says fundamentally, leaders are in the business of building relationships. âLeaders focus on people â" all the stakeholders they need to influence in order to realize their vision. They know who their stakeholders are and spend most of their time with them. ⦠Managers focus on the structures necessary to set and achieve goals. They focus on the analytical and ensure systems are in place to attain desired outcomes. They work with individuals and their goals and objectives.â Another essential difference between managers and leaders is that managers have employees, and leaders have followers. Leaders influence people throughout the organization, even if they donât directly report to them. You can find managers at the top of companies, and leaders among the ranks. Youâll recognize leaders because they often cross org chart lines. Theyâll have relationships throughout the organization and influence beyond their own team or job description. Author Bryan Tracy once said you should aspire to âbecome the kind of leader that people would follow voluntarily; even if you had no title or position.â If youâre a manager who aspires to leadership, donât be afraid to be yourself. Managers often feel they need to fit in; often leaders are strong â" even difficult personalities. (Think Steve Jobs.) But eccentric isnât synonymous with cruel. After reading Walter Isaacsonâs brilliant biography of Jobs, I thought to myself: If youâre going to behave like that, youâd better be sure youâre a genius. Otherwise, youâre just an *sshat. I want to reiterate that every company needs both strong managers and strong leaders. Weâll let Peter Drucker have the last word on the difference: âManagement is doing things right; leadership is doing the right things.â Youâll need both to succeed.
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