Starting your Journey to becoming a Servant Leader

Life is funny. It constantly amazes me how close despair can be to victory at times.

Recently, a friend’s adult son was concerned about the direction the new owners of his workplace would take. For a time, they were worried about losing their job as the new owners “cleaned house.” However, his worry was replaced with excitement as they made him their new sales manager.

The transition from an employee to a manager can feel daunting. As a servant leader, I want to share practical advice that may help new managers focus on the true purpose of leadership: serving and developing their people.

Lead by Listening First – I have learned the hard way that a leader can never assume they know everything. Realize that actively listening to your team’s input, their frustrations, and their solutions will foster trust, loyalty, and success.

Learn and know your people’s jobs – Lead by walking around and noticing what people do well publicly. When you see the need for improvement, do so quietly and with respect. You have to earn your people’s respect; it does not come with the title.

Your job is to support and help your team, period. If someone comes to you for help, regardless of how busy you are, always be available and approachable. An “Open door” policy only works if your approach makes people feel safe when they ask you something.

Do what you say you will – Few things earn trust faster than your people knowing you can be trusted to deliver, but breaking even small promises can undo that trust faster than you can imagine.

Develop your people – Solicit your people’s feedback on “How can I help you grow?” Training is something you have full control over; take the opportunity every day to increase their knowledge and abilities. Every day and every situation is an opportunity to coach and help your people get better. Your goal is progress, not necessarily perfection.

You don’t have to be the smartest person in the room – A good leader surrounds themselves with capable people, develops their abilities, trusts them to make decisions, and supports them. Learn to facilitate, not to dominate.

Make at least three people feel better about themselves each day – As a leader, you should be noticing how your people are doing, be genuinely interested in them and their lives. Help them celebrate every victory and be there when they need support.

Share the “Why,” not just the “what” – Your people will be more engaged if they understand why a goal or change matters, trust them with your reasons, invite their feedback, and use their suggestions when appropriate.

Always go last at company events. At staff events, make a point of being the last person to be served.

The law of unintended consequences – As a leader, you have some control over the timing of certain things. A good leader understands how their actions and decisions ripple across departments, people, and outcomes. Servant leaders need to zoom out regularly and see how everything connects and is constantly aware of the need to tear down silos.

Lead – Be visible and involved when difficult conversations are taking place, and do not hesitate to take action. During times of crisis, situations may call for extra work and staying late; your people will look to you for leadership. Don’t be absent.

Teach, inspire, and expect your people to leave – A leader worth following imparts their knowledge and trust, inspires their people to grow, and knows some people will grow beyond their team. When someone leaves for a position of greater responsibility in part because of your leadership, that is success, and it should be celebrated; hopefully, it is within your organization but even it is not it is still success.

Blind spots – I have blind spots you could drive a truck through, but I use self-reflection examining my  habits, actions, and am always trying to grow. Always be learning, always be trying to improve, and always try to learn from everyone, including your competitors.

Humility – A good leader never exercises their power or authority to serve themselves; a servant leader uses their skills and authority for the organization and their people’s goals.

Performance does matter – Being a servant leader does not mean sacrificing goals and targets. A good servant leader uses the “how” of achieving goals as their mission and their focus. Servant leaders create inclusive strategies for holding high expectations without slipping into harshness or over-correction.

Planting Seeds – Good leaders commit to building people and culture even when it doesn’t have an immediate return on investment. Additionally, invest in yourself; read, listen, attend seminars, and workshops; your job isn’t only to make your people better, it’s also to make you better.

My advice for my friend’s son, or for any aspiring manager, is to aspire to be a leader, a servant leader. Servant leadership isn’t a tactic or strategy; it’s an identity. A good servant leader doesn’t just use their tips and tools at work; they live them in everything they do. You can’t fake being a servant leader, but as you learn, know your people will be able to see the difference and always remember your success is the direct result of the success of the people you lead.

Would you want to work for yourself?

Good luck,

Paul

One thought on “Starting your Journey to becoming a Servant Leader”

  1. Generally I don’t read post on blogs, but I would like to say that this write-up very forced me to try and do so! Your writing style has been surprised me. Thanks, quite nice article.

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