One of the most popular Dilbert comic strips in the cartoonâs history begins with Dilbertâs boss relaying senior leadershipâs explanation for the companyâs low profits. In response to his boss, Dilbert asks incredulously, âSo theyâre saying that profits went up because of great leadership and down because of a weak economy?â To which Dilbertâs boss replies, âThese meetings will go faster if you stop putting things in context.â
Great leadership is indeed a difficult thing to pin down and understand. You know a great leader when youâre working for one, but even they can have a hard time explaining the specifics of what they do that makes their leadership so effective. Great leadership is dynamic; it melds a variety of unique skills into an integrated whole.
Below are 12 essential behaviors that exceptional leaders rely on every day. Give them a try and you can become a better leader today.
1. Courage
âCourage is the first virtue that makes all other virtues possible.â âAristotle
People will wait to see if a leader is courageous before theyâre willing to follow his or her lead. People need courage in their leaders. They need someone who can make difficult decisions and watch over the good of the group. They need a leader who will stay the course when things get tough. People are far more likely to show courage themselves when their leaders do the same.
For the courageous leader adversity is a welcome test. Like a blacksmithâs molding of a red-hot iron, adversity is a trial by fire that refines leaders and sharpens their game. Adversity emboldens courageous leaders and leaves them more committed to their strategic direction.
Leaders who lack courage simply toe the company line. They follow the safest pathâthe path of least resistanceâbecause theyâd rather cover their backside than lead.
2. Effective Communication
âThe more elaborate our means of communication, the less we communicate.â âJoseph Priestley
Communication is the real work of leadership. Itâs a fundamental element of how leaders accomplish their goals each and every day. You simply canât become a great leader until you are a great communicator.
Great communicators inspire people. They create a connection with their followers that is real, emotional, and personal, regardless of any physical distance between them. Great communicators forge this connection through an understanding of people and an ability to speak directly to their needs.
3. Generosity
âA good leader is a person who takes a little more than his share of the blame and a little less than his share of the credit.â âJohn Maxwell
Great leaders are generous. They share credit and offer enthusiastic praise. Theyâre as committed to their followersâ success as they are to their own. They want to inspire all of their employees to achieve their personal bestânot just because it will make the team more successful, but because they care about each person as an individual.
4. Humility
âHumility is not thinking less of yourself, itâs thinking of yourself less.â âC.S. Lewis
Great leaders are humble. They donât allow their position of authority to make them feel that they are better than anyone else. As such, they donât hesitate to jump in and do the dirty work when needed, and they wonât ask their followers to do anything they wouldnât be willing to do themselves.
5. Self-Awareness
âIt is absurd that a man should rule others, who cannot rule himself.â âLatin Proverb
Contrary to what Dilbert might have us believe, leadersâ gaps in self-awareness are rarely due to deceitful, Machiavellian motives, or severe character deficits. In most cases, leadersâlike everyone elseâview themselves in a more favorable light than other people do.
Self-awareness is the foundation of emotional intelligence, a skill that 90% of top performing leaders possess in abundance. Great leadersâ high self-awareness means they have a clear and accurate image not just of their leadership style, but also of their own strengths and weaknesses. They know where they shine and where theyâre weak, and they have effective strategies for leaning into their strengths and compensating for their weaknesses.
6. Adherence to the Golden Rule +1
âThe way you see people is the way you treat them, and the way you treat them is what they become.â âJon Wolfgang von Goethe
The Golden Ruleâtreat others as you want to be treatedâassumes that all people are the same. It assumes that, if you treat your followers the way you would want a leader to treat you, theyâll be happy. It ignores that people are motivated by vastly different things. One person loves public recognition, while another loathes being the center of attention.
Great leaders donât treat people how they themselves want to be treated. Instead, they take the Golden Rule a step further and treat each person as he or she would like to be treated. Great leaders learn what makes people tick, recognize their needs in the moment, and adapt their leadership style accordingly.
7. Passion
âIf you just work on stuff that you like and are passionate about, you donât have to have a master plan with how things will play out.â âMark Zuckerberg
Passion and enthusiasm are contagious. So are boredom and apathy. No one wants to work for a boss thatâs unexcited about his or her job, or even one whoâs just going through the motions. Great leaders are passionate about what they do, and they strive to share that passion with everyone around them.
8. Infectiousness
âThe very essence of leadership is that you have to have a vision. Itâs got to be a vision you articulate clearly and forcefully on every occasion. You canât blow an uncertain trumpet.â âReverend Theodore Hesburgh
Great leaders know that having a clear vision isnât enough. You have to make that vision come alive so that your followers can see it just as clearly as you do. Great leaders do that by telling stories and painting verbal pictures so that everyone can understand not just where theyâre going, but what it will look and feel like when they get there. This inspires others to internalize the vision and make it their own.
9. Authenticity
âJust be who you are and speak from your guts and heartâitâs all a man has.â âHubert Humphrey
Authenticity refers to being honest in all things â not just what you say and do, but who you are. When youâre authentic, your words and actions align with who you claim to be. Your followers shouldnât be compelled to spend time trying to figure out if you have ulterior motives. Any time they spend doing so erodes their confidence in you and in their ability to execute.
Leaders who are authentic are transparent and forthcoming. They arenât perfect, but they earn peopleâs respect by walking their talk.
10. Approachability
âManagement is like holding a dove in your hand. Squeeze too hard and you kill it, not hard enough and it flies away.â âTommy Lasorda
Great leaders make it clear that they welcome challenges, criticism, and viewpoints other than their own. They know that an environment where people are afraid to speak up, offer insight, and ask good questions is destined for failure. By ensuring that they are approachable, great leaders facilitate the flow of great ideas throughout the organization.
11. Accountability
âThe ancient Romans had a tradition: Whenever one of their engineers constructed an arch, as the capstone was hoisted into place, the engineer assumed accountability for his work in the most profound way possible: He stood under the arch.â âMichael Armstrong
Great leaders have their followersâ backs. They donât try to shift blame, and they donât avoid shame when they fail. Theyâre never afraid to say, âThe buck stops here,â and they earn peopleâs trust by backing them up.
12. Sense Of Purpose
âYou donât lead by pointing and telling people some place to go. You lead by going to that place and making a case.â âKen Kesey
Whereas vision is a clear idea of where youâre going, a sense of purpose refers to an understanding of why youâre going there. People like to feel like theyâre part of something bigger than themselves. Great leaders give people that feeling.
Bringing It All Together
Becoming a great leader doesnât mean that you have to incorporate all of these traits at once. Focus on one or two at a time; each incremental improvement will make you more effective. Itâs okay if you âactâ some of these qualities at first. The more you practice, the more instinctive it will become, and the more youâll internalize your new leadership style.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Travis Bradberry, Ph.D.
Dr. Travis Bradberry is the award-winning coauthor of Emotional Intelligence 2.0 and the cofounder of TalentSmartEQÂź the worldâs leading provider of emotional intelligence tests and training serving more than 75% of Fortune 500 companies. His bestselling books have been translated into 25 languages and are available in more than 150 countries.
Dr. Bradberry is a LinkedIn Influencer and a regular contributor to Forbes, Inc., Entrepreneur, The World Economic Forum, and The Huffington Post. He has written for, or been covered by, Newsweek, BusinessWeek, Fortune, Fast Company, USA Today, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and The Harvard Business Review.