FOURTH OF JULY

Founding Fathers Four Pillars of Leadership

             Over two hundred years ago a small group of men were credited as the leaders of our nation and created the foundation of freedom we are able to experience today.  These men demonstrated four pillars of leadership which I will cover in just a moment and essential for leaders at any level.

               In their excellent book CEO Excellence McKinsey & Company senior partners Carolyn Dewar, Scott Keller, and Vikram Malhotra explain six essentials elements for a CEO.  I would suggest these six major mindsets can be broken down into four simple pillars that hold the roof of influence: leadership at its core.

 

6 CEO Mindsets

4 Pillars
Set the Direction Leadership

Engage the Board, Connect with Stakeholders

Communication
Manage Personal Effectiveness Self-Leadership
Mobilize through Leaders, Align the Organization Teamwork

 

These four pillars and six mindsets can be seen in our founding fathers in the following ways.

Teamwork

We’ve heard of the Boston Tea Party on December 16, 1773 where people were throwing tea off of ships in opposition to the British taxation without representation.  This bold move was what became the beginning of the American Revolution.1  How does something like this happen?  By a group of 30  to 130 men working together to disguise themselves and dumping 342 chests of tea into the water.  A small group of people mobilized and aligned for a common purpose created the event that began a revolution.

Within your organization, a small group of people may be willing to be mobilized and aligned to accomplish something that could trigger great momentum.  Identify those people and put them together to start something great for everyone.

Communication

April 18, 1775 Dr. Joseph Warren asked Paul Revere to ride into Lexington, Massachusetts to warn key leaders of the American Revolution of the possibility of their arrest by the British.2  On a secret mission, Revere rode and eventually arrived at his destination to inform these leaders of what could happen.

Revere modeled the importance of communication as a leader.  First, he learned about the situation and then he went into action to spread the message.  When working with organizations and teams one of the most significant challenges is effective communication.  Revere’s communication led to a chain reaction of communicating to key stakeholders that helped the Sons of Liberty prepare for battle.  As leaders, we must communicate in a timely and effective manner to mobilize our team.

Self-Leadership

The most difficult person to lead is us.  One of the self-leadership challenges they mention in CEO Excellence is perspective.  At the beginning of this war, I imagine many of those enlisted were excited to fight for the cause, but as they saw the cost they had to remain steadfast in their mental fortitude.

As a leader you have a vision of where you want to go, but at times you may wonder if this is the right direction or not.  Evaluate, adjust, tweak the plan, but it takes courage and a willingness to get out of our comfort zone to hold the vision.  These men believed in their vision for freedom and were willing to continue to fight, are you?

Leadership

George Washington.  A quiet farmer with a family joined the military and when the Continental Army was formed to combat the British he became commander.  During the following eight years of fighting the British alongside his men, he only spent ten days at his home.3  Washington understood a key principle of effective leadership:  example.

By being out with his troops suffering alongside them, he could set the direction and adjust in a timely manner.  As leaders, we need to know what the front line is doing.  We must sometimes experience it with them so our decisions are more informed.  If you think you aren’t getting good information from your team, take time to be among the “troops” and learn for yourself.  Not only will it inform your decisions, but it will increase your influence.

As you look at these four pillars, which do you need to develop more?  Need help developing in these four pillars?  Check out my new online self-guided course you can invest in to grow yourself as a leader.  If you want to get multiple for your team, then contact me and put 4 Pillars in the subject line to learn about a group discount.  In the meantime, Lead Well!

© 2023 Wheeler Coaching Systems, All Rights Reserved

  1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Tea_Party
  2. https://www.paulreverehouse.org/the-real-story/
  3. https://www.battlefields.org/learn/biographies/george-washington
Posted by Randy Wheeler in Leadership Blog