Blowing Your Own Leadership Horn
Your career advancement is predicated not only on your being a good leader but also on your being recognized by others that you're a good leader. Many leaders, however, handicap their careers by failing to have this recognition come about in the right ways. The author shows the right ways to cultivate the right recognition of your leadership.
By Brent Filson - 2005
There are two streams of competitiveness running through every
organization. The first goes outward: It's the organization's
competitive activities toward its competitors. The second goes inward:
It's the competitiveness of leaders inside the organization who are
vying against one another for power, recognition, privilege and
promotion.
To be successful in the second, leaders must not only do well in their
jobs but they must also be able to have their bosses and colleagues
perceive they do well.
In other words, they must be able to publicize themselves -- or, to use the vernacular, blow their own horns.
I submit, however, that if one simply puts lips to the horn of
publicity and blows hard -- i.e., makes an outward show of publicizing
oneself -- such efforts will turn out to be discordant and
counterproductive. The result will be people turning their backs on you
rather than having them hum your tune.
Though it is necessary to blow one's own horn as you climb your career
ladder, it is also necessary to know how to do it. After all, there is
an art to the effort. Here are four steps that you can follow.
(1) Identify an area in your organization that needs better results.
The art involves not just selecting the right results but doing so in
cooperation with others. Make sure that when you shine light on the
lack of results, you do not embarrass somebody who has been tasked to
get those results. Instead of making beautiful music, you could end up
on somebody's enemies list! Get the responsible person's permission to
focus on the area.
(2) Put together a team whose task it is to achieve those results.
Blowing your own horn means that you want to be seen, not as the Lone
Ranger, but as a team player. Ensure the results can be achieved with
a team. Enlist members to join the team by giving leadership talks.
(What's in it for them to be part of the team?) Be aware, as you form
the team, of any hard feelings or rough edges that might surface
between and among team members and others in your organization who have
a stake in the results. If you lead an endeavor that causes hard
feelings, it's better to have never started it in the first place.
Moreover, the new team must be not only be formed, it must be
MARKETED. Both of these efforts require communications tools and
skills, which can take numerous forms. First, to describe the new team
or service, communications must be employed to fully define its purpose
and operating principles, and the people who are involved in it. These
communications tools are descriptive in nature and may include
everything from biographical back-grounders to product descriptions and
data sheets.
(3) Achieve the results. Execution and achievement of the targeted
results is absolutely critical to this phase of horn blowing. Make sure
you score a win even if it's only a partial win. The idea is to get the
low hanging fruit at the outset to show others that your team is
succeeding, and then go for the bigger results later.
(4) Publicize the results. This is one of the most important steps of
all, and it is a step that few leaders follow. They might put together
a team that gets a few wins, but they have no idea how to publicize
their efforts. The first rule in this is: To blow your own horn most
effectively, make sure YOU DON'T TAKE CREDIT FOR THE RESULTS -- YOUR
TEAM MEMBERS TAKE CREDIT INSTEAD! Your efforts will get torpedoed if
they look at all self-serving.
To highlight the successful products and services achieved by your
team, you can put together white papers, data sheets, presentation
papers and case-history articles.
Don't make this a one-time effort. You must be continually looking for
results that are flagging, putting together teams to achieve the
results, then marketing and publicizing the achievements.
In this way, when you blow your horn in your organization, the music
you'll be making can accompany you on a fast-rising career-trajectory.
2005© The Filson Leadership Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
The author of 23 books, Brent Filson's recent books are, THE LEADERSHIP TALK: THE GREATEST LEADERSHIP TOOL and 101 WAYS TO GIVE GREAT LEADERSHIP TALKS. He is founder and president of The Filson Leadership Group, Inc. – Celebrating 25 years of helping leaders of top companies worldwide achieve outstanding results every day. Sign up for his free leadership e-zine and get his FREE report "7 Steps To Leadership Mastery"
