Make practitioners of leadership roles more effective and efficient.
Leadership development is a collective term for all the measures taken to strengthen the manager's competence, self-awareness and behaviour, with the aim of turning management into a competitive advantage for the organization.
The purpose of leadership development, as commonly stated by the industry, is to ensure that leaders have sufficient:
However, the true purpose of leadership development can not just to enable great leaders, but rather to enable the practice of great leadership within an organization.
There's no use having Ronaldo on your team if he has to sit on the bench.
To develop great leadership, we also have to consider factors that a lot of the time might be outside of an individual leader's control, like:
The practice of leadership development can be broken down into four categories:
Assessing how well someone masters different dimensions of leadership.
Theoretical teaching of the leadership profession.
Opportunities to try out leadership in practice under guidance.
Activities which support reflections around individual leadership behaviour and personal dispositions.
A study conducted with 86,000 people revealed that managers who do not systematically follow up and talk to others about their improvement potential do not improve any more than random chance.
There are a myriad of ways a leader can develop themselves. Here is list of examples, grouped into four main leadership development categories:
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"As a manager, you are not hired to create to-do lists and PowerPoint presentations. You are hired to go up in a helicopter and see things in perspective." - Martin Lindstrom
Leadership development follow-up is a collective term for the actions carried out by a leader after they have learned or realized something new.
The purpose of the follow-up is to ensure that the insight gained produces not just new knowledge, but also new behaviour, and that the investment in leadership development has a measurable impact on both yourself, your fellow leaders and the organization as a whole.
If follow-up is not prioritized, there is a high risk of the leadership development efforts producing only leadership learning, and not leadership and organizational development.
The follow-up should contain the following steps:
Write down the insight gained in a knowledge bank accessible to the leaders within the organization. Managing leadership insight enables you to:
Embed the insight into relevant organizational structures, i.e. role descriptions, processes and developmental programs.
Operationalizing insight enables you to:
Reflect over your own ability to practice the insight gained.
Reflecting on insight enables you to:
Executive roles Leadership stages Leadership support and enablement Leadership development
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