Joobeelicious

10 Characteristics of a Great Leader

October 20, 2009 · 2 Comments

Lately, I’ve been reading A LOT on leadership. I came across this article here from the CEO of P&G, Bob McDonald:

1. Lead a life guided by purpose.
Only work for a company that you believe in, said McDonald. When looking for a job, examine a company’s purpose, values and people to see if they align with your own beliefs and ethics.

2. Everyone wants to succeed and success is contagious,
Treat your employees like they want to succeed, not like they want to fail. “Most of us manage by exception: We wait until someone does something wrong to interact with him or her,” McDonald said. “Spend enough time in your leadership role finding people succeeding.”

3. Put people in the right jobs.
McDonald emphasized the importance of identifying your employees’ strengths, and then placing them in roles that feed into those strengths. “At P&G, we have 130,000 employees around the world,” he said. “Imagine what would happen if we put them in jobs that they weren’t good at.”

4. Character is the most important trait of a leader.
It’s important for leaders to have integrity and take responsibility for their mistakes. “Choose the harder right, rather than the easier wrong,” McDonald said, citing a prayer that he learned as a cadet at the United States Military Academy at West Point.

5. Diverse groups of people are more innovative than homogenous groups.
Diversity sparks ideas and innovation, so companies must employ a diverse group of people. “We try to plan innovation, but there’s a little serendipity involved,” McDonald said. “Diversity is what helps these nodes to connect.”

6. Ineffective strategies, systems and culture are bigger barriers to achievement than the talents of people.
It’s important to blend a high-performance culture with robust systems and sound strategies, McDonald said. Those ingredients, coupled with technical competencies and a strong company mission, will create a high-performance organization.

7. There will be some people in the organization who will not make it on the journey.
Some employees won’t turn out to be a good fit for your company. As head of a company, it’s your responsibility to find the right place for them. “Your job as a leader is to be committed to them as people, not employees,” said McDonald.

8. Organizations must renew themselves.
Leaders should always think about what changes are needed to stay relevant in the marketplace and fulfill the company purpose. “Organizations are like biological organisms — they constantly need to change,” said McDonald.

9. Recruiting is a top priority.
“Somewhere here is someone who will be giving a presentation here years from now,” said McDonald, pointing to the audience of Kellogg students. “And that excites me.”

10. The true test of a leader is the organization’s performance after the leader departs.
If you want to determine whether a leader has been successful, “look at their fingerprints and footprints,” concluded McDonald.

I couldn’t agree more… I encourage you to comment if you have any thoughts?

Categories: JOO's So Called Life
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2 responses so far ↓

  • sk // October 26, 2009 at 2:29 am | Reply

    I find myself reading more books about leadership and biographies of successful people. The last book I finished was Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell. I highly recommend it if you haven’t read it yet!

    Thanks for sharing the 10 Characteristics. It’s a good refresher :)

  • hana // October 21, 2009 at 2:50 am | Reply

    amen to all. but double amen to the first. thats what i believe always believed [even interning]. and this doesnt make me a snob, its fash! i like high end more. to survand even in this economy, im going to be picky… JUST a bit! im not going to work just to work. im very fortunate that i dont have a fam or morgage that i NEED a job to survive right now.
    whatever happened to graduating college and working for that position… only to be hit with this economy!? ;P

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