If you watch the news, it seems like every time we turn around, a new crisis appears. In times like these, good leadership is especially critical. Here are the top five types of tough choices good leaders make during tough times:
Courageous decisions. A leader has to be willing to stand up to all competing agendas and do what must be done.
Priority decisions. What must be done first? The Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto once said, "If you're Noah, and your ark is about to sink, look for the elephants first, because you can throw over a bunch of cats and dogs and squirrels and everything else that is just a small animal - and your ark will keep sinking. But if you can find one elephant to get overboard, you're in much better shape." If you're a leader, identify your elephants.
Change decisions. Leaders should know when it's time to make a change.
Creative decisions. Think outside of the box. Get every option out on the table. A good leader will be open-minded and explore all options on the spectrum between "change nothing" and "change everything." The right choice usually lies somewhere in the middle.
Support decisions. Leaders are responsible for having the right people on the team and making sure they are in the right places. In their book, The Wisdom of Teams, Jon R. Katzenbach and Douglas K. Smith write, Team leaders genuinely believe that they do not have all the answers-so they do not insist on providing them. They believe they do not need to make all key decisions-so they do not do so. They believe they cannot succeed without the combined contributions of all the other members of the team to a common end-so they avoid any action that might constrain inputs or intimidate anyone on the team. Ego is not their predominant concern.
Leaders are not MADE in a crisis. Leaders are REVEALED in a crisis. It's easy to steer a ship in calm waters. Only the turbulence of a storm shows a captain's true skill. If your organization is facing a storm, take the wheel and make the decisions that only a leader can make.
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