An Article Written by Dave Kraft
Stephen Covey wrote a book describing the seven habits of
highly effective people. Well, if there are habits that people
can acquire to make them effective, then there are also habits
that leaders will want to shed that cause them to be
ineffective. Here are some I have been thinking about and
working on:
Leaders who want to be effective will be careful that they are not:
1. Spending too much time managing and not enough time leading.
Leadership guru Warren Bennis notes that most organizations are
over-managed and under-led. There are major differences between managing
and leading. Here are a few:
*Managers think short term, leaders long term
*Managers control and minimize change, leaders initiate change
*Managers are reactive (responding to ideas) leaders are proactive
(creating ideas)
*Managers solve problems, leaders create excitement generating more
problems
*Managers are process-oriented (how it is done), leaders are
result-oriented (why and if it is done)
*Managers motivate by rules and regulations, leaders by empowerment and
vision
John Maxwell makes the observation that people with very strong mercy
gifts don't function well in visionary leadership. They don't want to hurt
anybody or make decisions that offend or cause conflict. My experience
would verify that. Those leaders who know they have a strong mercy side
must be very careful about who they spend time with. All their available
time and energy will go to the hurting and the discouraged, leaving no
time to develop future leaders which is the leader’s main
responsibility.The hurting will find you. You will have to find the
leaders.
3. Spending too much time fighting fires and not enough time lighting
fires.
The leader needs to be a proactive fire lighter, not a reactive fire
fighter. Many leaders spend so much time dealing with issues in a crises
mode that they have precious little time left to deal with the longer term
issues so as to not be caught behind the change curve.
4. Spending too much time doing and not enough time praying,
dreaming and planning.
We have all heard the expression, "Just don't sit there, do something."
Leaders need to practice, "Just don't do something, sit there." A good
leader will balance out doing and dreaming, active and quiet, energized
and hibernating. A good leader will have less on the "do list" and free up
time to "just sit there" and not be always chasing his own tail light in
the traffic of life.
Many leaders are entirely too busy with the day-to-day issues and spend
comparatively little time in creative dreaming, and time alone with God.
Peter Drucker says that action without thinking is the cause of every
failure.
5. Spending too much time teaching the many and not enough time training
the few.
The war will not be won from behind the pulpit. Many leaders invest
entirely too much time in public teaching in spite of the fact that
statistics show that 70-80% of most audiences are not listening and will
not apply what they are getting. Speaking to the crowds needs to be
balanced out with investing quality and quantity time with the few who can
and will reproduce (2 Timothy 2:2).
6. Spending too much time doing it themselves and not enough time doing it
through others.
Little people do it all by themselves, big people get others to help them.
You have two choices in your leadership. Do it yourself, or get others to
help you carry the load (Number 11:17). Your willingness and determination
to work through others, more than anything else, may well define your
effectiveness and success in ministry.
Today is the day of the team and collaborative leadership, not "the Lone
Ranger." I have been in the hiring position numerous times through the
years and the person I'm always looking for is the one who does ministry
through people, not for people, or with people. Delegate or suffocate,
which will it be?
7. Making too many decisions based on organizational politics and too few
decisions based on biblical principles
I wish we had more leaders (in the church as well as in the private and
public sectors) who do the biblically correct thing and are not overly
worried about the politically correct thing. Leaders who don’t hold their
wet finger in the wind to see which way it is blowing but using that same
finger to turn the pages of Holy Writ to see which way the Spirit of God
wants to move.
Truly effective leaders will:
*Develop future leaders
*Light new fires
*Spend time praying, dreaming and planning
*Do ministry through others
*Make biblically correct decisions
So, my fellow leader, how are you doing? What do you need to change, do
differently?
These practical, real-life ideas will help you grow personally as a leader
and help you become better at developing the leaders around you.If you
have any comments send e-mails to dkraft3851@aol.com
© 2000 Dave Kraft, The Navigators Church Discipleship Ministry.
*Generally speaking:
2. Spending too much time in counseling the hurting and
not enough time in developing the leaders
*Lead, not merely manage
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