Leaders need to plan for, accept and welcome the difficult times, the opposing points of view and the criticism. How? By managing how you respond to everything that is thrown your way.
Leaders can prepare in two areas: what to do and how to be.
The first area—“what to do”—involves the competencies required to be an effective leader, especially in times of turmoil. These competencies include, but are not limited
to, creating a future vision for the company, designing the processes and systems to support that vision and ensuring long-term profitability. These are things you
learn in business school.
The second area—“how to be”—involves behaviors required to be an effective leader. These include the organizational culture you develop, how you communicate and the way you hold people accountable for executing the vision you have established.
The “how to be” area is much more difficult to cultivate and sustain. Yet it is the very area that needs your attention if you are going to thrive. In short, this is about developing your leadership maturity.
You develop as a leader when you are repeatedly forced out of your comfort zone by business challenges. These learning experiences test a leader’s limits and force her or him to develop new skills to be successful in times of stress and discomfort.
Unfortunately, rather than embrace these difficult situations, reflect on them and learn from them, most leaders scamper as quickly as they can back to their comfort zones to nervously await the arrival of the next difficult situation.
In the end, leadership is still difficult and often uncomfortable. This is the essence of leadership. However, the more you build your leadership maturity, the more comfortable you become with being uncomfortable.