Leading through Service

Every so often a buzz word catches on in the business world. It might be “synergy”, “positioning” or “the long tail” (I kid you not) but somehow, some way, through the magic of pop culture an innocuous word suddenly starts appearing in boardrooms across the nation. Often times the people uttering the words can’t even define them, but that doesn’t stop them from encouraging their adoption. Usually there’s a banner company like GE that advocates its acceptance and business leaders (who are more rightly called followers in this regard) flood to training seminars to learn the habits of those who have proven effective. It’s management by the masses and usually the process leads to nothing but the readiness to adopt the next guru’s cure.

A few years ago, the cause of hysteria in the business world was “servant leadership.” Books from previously unknown authors abounded. Everyone was willing to get in on the act – to help leaders learn how to act like servants in order to further their own causes. This organizational mindset even had religious undertones which carried it further upstream. The idea was that if leaders embraced the notion to give of themselves for others, that they, and the organization would be better off. In certain respects, it worked. Given the choice between leading humbly and leading with pride, the former is bound to beat the latter in the long-run every time.

However, I don’t think the management textbooks completely got the idea right. See – they tried to take leaders and teach them to serve – a worthy endeavor. But I wonder how often we overlook those who are already serving and therefore providing leadership? We try to take those who are exalted and teach them humility. How much more can we learn from those who are already humbled? Whether its the tech guy who’s willing to burn the midnight oil to solve the computer glitch, the cleaning crew who is the last to leave or the first to arrive, or the artist who doesn’t ever get to put their name on a design because its created for another – each of these are already leading, even if their title speaks otherwise.

Maybe leading through service is a higher aim than servant leadership. It’s something we’re all capable of regardless of what our business cards say.

Continue Reading

Skewed Priorities

Like many, I was shocked yesterday to hear of Heath Ledger’s death. If you asked a sample of people about who the next young celebrity to die would be, I would guess that Heath’s name would never come up. He didn’t seem to get a lot press for anything outside of his body of work (and his relationship with co-stars), but critically he received much acclaim. All of which probably combined to make his death all the more shocking.

As startling as news of the young actor’s death was, more astonishing has been the press coverage. A quick visit to People.com and you can receive a timeline of the young man’s life, hourly updates as to what friends are saying, what the medical examiner is saying, who could have seemed this coming, etc. Random eulogies from former co-stars abound. It’s all mind-boggling. All the more so because young people’s lives from across the globe are terminated every day – often through choices not their own – and the press barely pays attention. As mentioned previously, I have a personal interest in the violence in Kenya and now – even as things once again intensify – I have to search for news on the subject. A whole country is being torn apart and in less than three weeks time, we’re too bored to pay attention.

I understand the fascination with new. In fact, since I’m in marketing, I exploit it. But somewhere along the line, news became sensationalism and what was the most sensational is what we discussed. Import is based on the extent that the subject shocked us, and not on the impact it has. We’ve focused on the latest in abandonment of the lasting.

Writing this, I know I’m the worst offender. I’m fascinated by lives of people whose claim to fame is the ability to pretend they’re something their not. Maybe if I was a little bit more impressed by those who were genuine, my priorities would be more aligned with God’s.

Continue Reading