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Leadership Exercises: Putting the Best Ideas to WorkBut how do you ensure the ideas of leading thinkers can be effective in your particular situation? This is the subject of our third "Guru" article. Below we outline a tool which will help you learn from the best then implement that learning. In our first article we discussed how good leaders learn from the best, we discussed what makes a guru, who they are, and how we determine their worth. In the second article, we focused on developing good leadership qualities by asking: do gurus provide any value and why should you bother to learn from the best? We then proposed six reasons why learning from the best matters. In this final article in the series, we introduce a tool which can be used apply the "best" ideas in your organisation. This tool will help you to evaluate these ideas in the context of your own business or sector. Use it to combine the ideas of gurus with those of leaders and managers in your organisation. Properly used, these leadership exercises can produce better work practices. Making The Ideas of Gurus Effective in Your Situation.Our approach to making the most of the management gurus is to take a “T” break! The "T" break process - Think, Talk, Try, Tell - combines leadership exercises which help filter ideas, test them, and feedback successes to others in the organisation. The "T" Break Model![]() THINKRead more widely and think through the ideas you read. This is the best way to distinguish fad from fact, Why is this an important first step? Because, as Peter Drucker wrote: "Management fads are an excellent way to replace the discipline of hard thinking.” Ask yourself: what books, articles, journals or professional magazines have you read recently? How do you keep yourself up-to-date? Use the sources and resources of leading thinkers from our first article Good Leaders Learn from the Best.TALKUse the wisdom and insights of those around you by discussing these ideas with your colleagues. Do the ideas apply in your situation? Can they make a significant difference to your workplace? How would you apply them? What benefit could they bring? Would it be useful to talk the ideas through with anyone else? Use Reg Revans' "3 who’s", explained fully in our management tools: who knows; who can and who cares. Who knows about the situation, who can do something about it, and who cares enough about the situation to want to do something.TRYNext it's time to use one of the most powerful leadership exercises: get things done. Try the ideas. Test or experiment (if possible on a small scale), then gather evidence and evaluate outcomes. Do the ideas seem to work? Is anything else is needed? How have they benefited your organisation?Peter Drucker, probably the leading management thinker of his time, proposed three criteria for assessing new ideas. To screen your ideas apply the three filter tests:
TELLFinally, discuss what you have found. Share what works and what hasn’t. What might you do next? How could the ideas be applied more widely in your organisation? Build reviews into all that you do. Whether it’s a pilot or a review of a project, learn from the experience and tell others. Take time to record what works and why.These leadership exercises are iterative. Once the ideas have been tried and the results disseminated, return to the THINK stage for further analysis. Given the experience that you now have, what new things do you need to find out about? What else should you consider? What new opportunities may now be open to you?
To See Further....Stop treating old ideas as if they are new. Recognise that you are building on the wisdom of others. “Managers build on and blend with what’s come before.” Be suspicious of “breakthrough ideas and studies – close examination of “breakthroughs” almost always reveals “that they were preceded by painstaking, incremental work of others.” Celebrate and develop collective brilliance. Knowledge is rarely generated just by the lone genius. Regularly develop leadership exercises which learn from the best, including those around you: “If I have seen farther than other men, it is because I stood on the shoulders of giants.” Sir Isaac Newton
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Other related pages....Leadership Stories Characteristic of Leadership: Seeing Things DifferentlyLeadership Concept: Valuing Ideas Leadership Quote: the "Ultimate Measure of a Man" Leadership Philosophy: it's the Little Things That Count Essence of Leadership? Seeing Triumph in Tragedy Leadership Quality: Seeing the Bigger Picture |
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