7. Make it personal
I often use a variation of this expression in reference to recruiting. It also applies in this context: To be an effective leader, you need good people around you.
In fact, the most important factor in this entire exercise may be an emphasis on finding good people and keeping them on board. A sports psychologist might have a field day with this, but I always felt that I was too busy to try to separate work and family. I talked with my players the way I spoke with my children, and the values that mattered at home were carried in to the locker room.
What is the difference between Carolina and Virginia, Penn and Brown, Lehigh and Colgate? Generally, it is us. You need good people. You want to keep good people. Make it about you and your family. Make it about their family. Don’t be afraid to show vulnerability. Show them you care.
8. Authenticity is a scent. So is a lack of authenticity
I may not quite be sure how to define this quality, but I sure as heck can tell when it enters the room. Authenticity is about honesty, and it is some combination of walking the walk and making it personal.
It is hard to say something meaningful to a team every day. On those days, rather than making up some false narrative, I often will open by simply saying, “I can’t think of anything clever to say today.”
I can’t tell you how satisfying it is to look at their faces and have their expressions calmly replying in an unspoken way, “No sweat, Coach. We’ve got your back.”
One of my favorites is telling the players that motivating them the day before a game is like getting ready for a first date. Man, you just want to say the right thing to have this girl think you are just the coolest. We all know that impression fades quickly.
What prevails in the end is the substance of your character, your preparation. That is what will truly make the difference. When your team is woven into the fabric of your life, when the people around you know you would do anything for them and they would do anything for you, that is the picture of effective leadership.
9. It’s worth it
If you asked me to boil down in to one sentence what it is that I have been doing these past 42 years, it has been trying to convince young men that it is worth the sacrifices that are required to be successful.
If leadership is defined as an individual’s ability to influence others, then hardly an hour has gone by in my life when I was not considering how to make that point more effectively — gathering good people and convincing them that it is worth the sacrifices, whatever it is we are asking them to do.
Don’t be afraid to tell your team that it is hard. It’s supposed to be hard. Hard reminds us that the endeavor is special. In fact, if it doesn’t feel hard, tell them that they are not working hard enough at it. At the same time, don’t forget to tell them there hardly anything is more worthwhile than can be attained by accomplishing something as a group.
10. One last thought
It is how you treat people that will ultimately define the measure of your ability to lead them.