Friday, November 22, 2019

The counter-intuitive personality traits of the worlds best leaders

The counter-intuitive personality traits of the worlds best leadersThe counter-intuitive personality traits of the worlds best leadersA friend of mine recently left Tesla, the renowned electric car maker, saying both, It was incredible, and Id never work there again.His sentiment echoed that of several former employees of anotlageher of todays most celebrated companies, SpaceX, when I interviewed them formy 2014 bookon innovation. Direct quotes include, We were in the presence of brilliance and, It scared me.Follow Ladders on FlipboardFollow Ladders magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and moreThese two companies share much in common. Aside from the billion-dollar valuations and ambitious technology they produce, they share a chief executive the infamous Elon Musk, a polymathic self-made billionaire who also founded Zip2 and PayPal and currently chairs the energy company SolarCity. If anyone in ur generation has the chance of being remembered 200 years from now for his or her work, its probably Musk.Ironically, the thing that makes his companies and inventions so impactful is also the thing that makes him frustrating to work with.One former employee told me that for example, an engineer might spend nine months working 100 hours a week on something because Musk has pushed him to, and then out of nowhere Musk will change his mind and scrap the project.THE BLESSING AND CURSE OF AN OPINIONATED LEADERA good leader needs to be extremely persuasive to get people to follow her, and to push people hard to stretch whats possible. That persuasion comes with expressing strong opinions.Think of the best leaders in history- Mandela, Churchill, King, etc.- and youll see a pattern they tell great stories, with boldness, absolutely convinced that they are right. They both inspire and grab attention.Says Dolly Singh, former HR head at SpaceX The thing that makes Elon Elon is his ability to make people believe in his vision. Jim Cantrell, SpaceXs first engineer, adds, The guy is pure ambition. Hes three or four steps ahead Most of us cant conceive unterstellung things working he cant conceive it failing. Period. This is the hallmark of an opinionated leader.Jason Fried, the founder of Basecamp, put the power of opinionated leadership well Some people love us, and some people hate us. But very few people ignore us.The problem with opinionated leaders is that even the smartest people get things wrong, and many leaders fear changing course once theyve expressed an opinion for fear of appearing weak.And yet, the hallmark of innovative thinking is the ability to be open and adaptable. Continuing on a path just because youve committed to it is not a formula for success (or happiness, for that matter).And as I documented inSmartcuts, the fastest-climbing people and companies are willing to deviate from their original business or career plan. Whereas a strong leader needs to be resolute and persuasive, an innovat ive leader needs to be open to changing her mind.The best leaders in the world are bothOPINIONATED BUT HUMBLEApples Steve Jobs lived in the bottom right quadrant. He was fiercely opinionated in his vision, highly charismatic in his delivery, and often abrasive with those who didnt agree. But when he changed his mind about something, he became fiercely opinionated in the opposite direction.Most of us are not Steve Jobs. We should be humble enough to admit that were not right about everything. But most leaders who invoke Jobs when passing down orders forget thathe was humble enough to change his mind and double down. Being strong-willed alone didnt make Apple successful.Only when the company combined a strong point of view with the willingness to change did it succeed- after years of middling performance in the 90s.Its, for this reason, Im convinced that one of the best things we can do for children is to sign them up for debate class. Debate trains you to be opinionated and persuasiv e about a topic, and then to turn right around and be just as opinionated on the other side of that topic. It trains you to let go of ego and jump into deep water with both feet.Theres a stigma associated with leaders who change their minds. Yet the best presidents of the United States were the ones who changed their minds (and their careers) the most. We forget that Hillary Clinton was a staunch conservative before she was a zealous Democrat (and Ronald Reagan in the other direction).We forget that Nokia used to be a paper mill and Twitter was a podcast company before it about-faced and went all in on social networking. If my own company hadnt shifted its business model and jumped into a new swimmingpool with both feet, we wouldnt have 1/10th of the impact we have today.You need an open mind to invent, and a strong will to execute. We dont have to be insufferable to make that happen (it is possible to be opinionated, adaptable, and pleasant), but breakthrough organizationsrequire b oth elements.So perhaps we shouldnt be so quick to dismiss flip-floppers. Theyre the ones, it turns out, who change the world.This article first appeared on Linkedin.com.You might also enjoyNew neuroscience reveals 4 rituals that will make you happyStrangers know your social class in the first seven words you say, study finds10 lessons from Benjamin Franklins daily schedule that will double your productivityThe worst mistakes you can make in an interview, according to 12 CEOs10 habits of mentally strong people

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