Awaken the Leader in You:
10 easy steps to developing your leadership skills
by Sharif Khan

"The miracle power that elevates the few
is to be found in their industry, application, and perseverance, under
the promptings of a brave determined spirit." - Mark Twain
Many motivational experts like to say that leaders
are made, not born. I would argue the exact opposite. I believe we
are all natural born leaders, but have been deprogrammed along the
way.
As children, we were natural leaders - curious and
humble, always hungry and thirsty for knowledge, with an incredibly
vivid imagination; we knew exactly what we wanted, were persistent
and determined in getting what we wanted, and had the ability to motivate,
inspire, and influence everyone around us to help us in accomplishing
our mission.
So why is this so difficult to do as adults? What
happened?
As children, over time, we got used to hearing, No,
Don't, and Can't. No! Don't do this. Don't do that. You can't do this.
You can't do that. No! Many of our parents told us to keep quiet and
not disturb the adults by asking silly questions. This pattern continued
into high school with our teachers telling us what we could do and
couldn't do and what was possible.
Then many of us got hit with the big one institutionalized
formal education known as college or university. Unfortunately, the
traditional educational system doesn't teach students how to become
leaders; it teaches students how to become polite order takers for
the corporate world.
Instead of learning to become creative, independent,
self-reliant, and think for themselves, most people learn how to obey
and intelligently follow rules to keep the corporate machine humming.
Developing the Leader in you to live your highest
life, then, requires a process of unlearning by self-remembering and
self-honoring. Being an effective leader again will require you to
be brave and unlock the door to your inner attic, where your childhood
dreams lie, going inside to the heart.
Based on my over ten years research in the area of
human development and leadership, here are ten easy steps you can
take to awaken the Leader in you and rekindle your passion for greatness.
1. Humility. Leadership starts with humility.
To be a highly successful leader, you must first humble
yourself like a little child and be willing to serve others. Nobody
wants to follow someone who is arrogant.
Be humble as a child, always curious, always hungry
and thirsty for knowledge. For what is excellence but knowledge plus
knowledge plus knowledge - always wanting to better yourself, always
improving, always growing.
When you are humble, you become genuinely interested
in people because you want to learn from them. And because you want
to learn and grow, you will be a far more effective listener, which
is the #1 leadership communication tool.
When people sense you are genuinely interested in
them, and listening to them, they will naturally be interested in
you and listen to what you have to say.
2. SWOT Yourself. SWOT is an acronym for Strengths,
Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats.
Although it's a strategic management tool taught at
Stanford and Harvard Business Schools and used by large multinationals,
it can just as effectively be used in your own professional development
as a leader.
This is a useful key to gain access to self-knowledge,
self-remembering, and self-honoring. Start by listing all your Strengths
including your accomplishments. Then write down all your Weaknesses
and what needs to be improved. Make sure to include any doubts, anxieties,
fears, and worries that you may have. These are the demons and dragons
guarding the door to your inner attic.
By bringing them to conscious awareness you can begin
to slay them. Then proceed by listing all the Opportunities you see
available to you for using your strengths. Finally, write down all
the Threats or obstacles that are currently blocking you or that you
think you will encounter along the way to achieving your dreams.
3. Follow Your Bliss.
Regardless of how busy you are, always take time to
do what you love doing. Being an alive and vital person vitalizes
others. When you are pursuing your passions, people around you cannot
help but feel impassioned by your presence. This will make you a charismatic
leader.
Whatever it is that you enjoy doing, be it writing,
acting, painting, drawing, photography, sports, reading, dancing,
networking, or working on entrepreneurial ventures, set aside time
every week, ideally two or three hours a day, to pursue these activities.
Believe me, you'll find the time. If you were to video
tape yourself for a day, you would be shocked to see how much time
goes to waste!
4. Dream Big. If you want to be larger
than life, you need a dream that's larger than life. Small dreams
won't serve you or anyone else. It takes the same amount of time to
dream small than it does to dream big.
So be Big and be Bold! Write down your One Biggest
Dream. The one that excites you the most. Remember, don't be small
and realistic; be bold and unrealistic! Go for the Gold, the Pulitzer,
the Nobel, the Oscar, the highest you can possibly achieve in your
field.
After you ve written down your dream, list every
single reason why you CAN achieve your dream instead of worrying about
why you can't.
5. Vision.
Without a vision, we perish. If you can't see yourself
winning that award and feel the tears of triumph streaming down your
face, it's unlikely you will be able to lead yourself or others to
victory.
Visualize what it would be like accomplishing your
dream. See it, smell it, taste it, hear it, feel it in your gut.
6. Perseverance.
Victory belongs to those who want it the most and
stay in it the longest. Now that you have a dream, make sure you take
consistent action every day. I recommend doing at least 5 things every
day that will move you closer to your dream.
7. Honor Your Word.
Every time you break your word, you lose power. Successful
leaders keep their word and their promises.
You can accumulate all the toys and riches in the
world, but you only have one reputation in life. Your word is gold.
Honor it.
8. Get a Mentor.
Find yourself a mentor. Preferably someone who has
already achieved a high degree of success in your field. Don't be
afraid to ask. You've got nothing to lose.
Mentors.ca is an excellent mentoring website and a
great resource for finding local mentoring programs. They even have
a free personal profile you can fill out in order to potentially find
you a suitable mentor.
In addition to mentors, take time to study autobiographies
of great leaders that you admire. Learn everything you can from their
lives and model some of their successful behaviors.
9. Be Yourself.
Use your relationships with mentors and your research
on great leaders as models or reference points to work from, but never
copy or imitate them like a parrot. Everyone has vastly different
leadership styles.
History books are filled with leaders who are soft-spoken,
introverted, and quiet, all the way to the other extreme of being
out- spoken, extroverted, and loud, and everything in between.
A quiet and simple Gandhi or a soft-spoken peanut
farmer named Jimmy Carter, who became president of the United States
and won a Nobel Peace Prize, have been just as effective world leaders
as a loud and flamboyant Churchill, or the tough leadership style
employed by The Iron Lady, Margaret Thatcher.
I admire Hemingway as a writer. But if I copy Hemingway,
I'd be a second or third rate Hemingway, at best, instead of a first
rate Sharif. Be yourself, your best self, always competing against
yourself and bettering yourself, and you will become a first rate
YOU instead of a second rate somebody else.
10. Give. Finally, be a giver.
Leaders are givers. By giving, you activate a universal
law as sound as gravity life gives to the giver, and takes from the
taker. The more you give, the more you get. If you want more love,
respect, support, and compassion, give love, give respect, give support,
and give compassion.
Be a mentor to others. Give back to your community.
As a leader, the only way to get what you want, is by helping enough
people get what they want first. As Sir Winston Churchill once said,
"We make a living by what we get, we make a life by what we give."
Sharif Khan is a professional speaker, coach, and
author of "Psychology of the Hero Soul," an inspirational
book on awakening the Hero within and developing your leadership potential.
You can reach him at sharif@herosoul.com or by visiting http://www.herosoul.com

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