Innovation, New Ideas and How The World is Changing

Give Poeple Wings, Not Keep Under Your Wings

Bad leaders keep people dependent on them. Great leaders unleash people

Bad managers, good managers, great managers. What’s the difference? I understood the distinction when I was 18 years old. I worked at FedEx Ground, and I was protected by my Manager because I made him look good as a result of my breaking rules that hadn’t been broken but were bottlenecks to unrealized value; I unlocked that value by systematically breaking them!

As a result of the attention and power I gained from creating new value, a group of managers saw me as a threat. But instead of pushing me to do more (only one of them did), they started acting as if I were doing them a favor and wanted to keep me under control.

It didn’t work!

The one guy who did push / challenged me to do more was the guy I hung out with the most because we had that communication. He never once told me to take it easy, to do less; he told me in his own words: “Carpe Diem!”

He was an ex-NAVY SEAL, that might have been why he encouraged me.

Bad leaders keep people dependent on them. Great leaders unleash people.

To me, bad leaders keep people dependent on them; it’s part of what feeds their ego. I’ve always kept my FedEX Ground experience close to my heart because I learned a lot when I was very young. My leadership style has evolved since then, but one thing I learned quickly back then is that I’m all about unleashing people.

Last week I was talking to an employee who’s been with our company 1 month. He expressed his feelings on wanting to grow with us, and how he wants to learn more and more. This is what I told him: We’re creating an environment where people are unleashed; not trapped. I want to see people grow beyond their current roles, and if they stay with us great; if they don’t, that’s great too.

That last part hit him, he asked why?

Because I want our company to be a great place to be from. That way if he / she goes to another company, they’ll see them as exceptional people because they worked with us.

Again, unleash; not trap.

I’m a firm believer that a company grows as its people grow. So you put a limit on your company’s potential if you put a limit on people’s potential. A leader’s job is to create the conditions where people can thrive, and to create other leaders.

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