Are you tired of being told you "should" lead a certain way? Do you feel boxed in by performance reviews and leadership models that don't fit your style or situation? In this episode, Hosts David Morelli and William Oakley are joined by Tricia Naddaff, a 40-year veteran in the world of leadership assessment and research, for a deep dive into the complexities of effective leadership. Tricia argues that there is no single right way to lead. Instead, she presents leadership as a dynamic formula involving the leader's unique self, the desired outcomes, the people involved, and the specific context.
Key Topics:
- There Is No Right Way to Lead: Effective leadership is not a fixed set of rules. It is a flexible approach that depends on the leader, the goal, the team, and the context. The answer to "How should I lead?" is always, "It depends."
- Self-Knowledge is the Beginning of Wisdom: You cannot know how to lead others if you don't first understand yourself. Self-reflection, aided by nuanced assessments, is crucial for identifying your motivations, behaviors, and blind spots.
- Leadership Development is an Ongoing Practice: Developing as a leader is not a six-month program or a one-week retreat. It's a continuous, daily practice of learning and adapting, similar to nurturing a relationship or maintaining your health.
- Beware the Promotion Trap: The skills and behaviors that earn you a promotion are often not the same ones you need to succeed in your new, more senior role. Each level requires a new mindset and a different leadership approach.
- The Brain Has a Leadership "Seesaw": Groundbreaking research shows that relational thinking and results-oriented thinking are controlled by separate neural networks that act like a seesaw. This is why very few leaders (<5%) are naturally strong in both areas; we all have a default preference.