Leadership In Difficult Times

Leadership In Difficult Times

Leaders look at the landscape not seeing the challenges, but seeing the opportunities because of the challenges.

In an uncertain environment, your leadership is needed, desired and craved by your employees.

In John Maxwell’s words, “Leadership is influence, nothing more, nothing less.”

Regardless of when you’re reading this, one thing is certain: Your leadership is needed, desired and craved by your employees. Leaders look at the landscape not seeing the challenges, but seeing the opportunities because of the challenges.

There’s a tremendous opportunity to be the calm voice in the sea of worry, to lend a hand to your neighboring business, to help those who have less than you.

How do we lead in difficult times? Here are a few ideas.

Stay grounded

Get the facts and repeat them. Let those around you know that you have a handle on things, and things aren’t as dire as they might seem to be.

Watch what you consume

Having a 24-hour news cycle doesn’t help. The internet and cable news brings the latest “Breaking News” whenever we choose to tune in. The downside is that the abundance of “bad” news chips away at our confidence, which inhibits our ability to remain positive. Will worrying about COVID-19 make it any better or improve your chances of not contracting it? No it won’t, but having a calm sense about you will allow you as a leader to be your best.

Communicate

Have daily meetings with your team; remind them of your core purpose. A five-minute team huddle at the beginning of the day works wonders in keeping everyone rowing in the same direction.

Stomp out negativity

Get a hold of negative thoughts and speech before they have time to plant roots. I’d rather hear an optimistic view of when this thing will end versus the head of our country saying, “Well I just don’t know.” Nothing instills less confidence than being unsure.

Remain certain, hold fast to your convictions and know this will pass.

You May Also Like

Working Smarter Instead of Harder

Imperfect people can perform at or near perfection when they have perfect processes.

Work-Smarter

Each new year brings the promise things will be better. It’s a fresh start, after all, and a chance to finally do things differently so this year will be your best year ever.

But will it?

Creating real improvement isn’t a matter of willpower. You can’t strongarm your way to sustainable success. That can lead to short-term gains, but those will disappear as soon as your effort burns out, and you’ll be right back where you started.

What Would I Say To My Younger Self?

Hindsight is 20/20 – wouldn’t it be nice to have better foresight?

The Hidden Dangers of Inflation

You could be going backward if you’re not increasing sales fast enough.

How Many Holes Are In Your Management Bucket?

Being super busy isn’t always a recipe for super success. Make every car count.

The Necessity For Advertising

It’s not enough to just get customers through the door – keep them coming back for all of their service needs.

Other Posts

My Father’s Shop To Award Tools To Schools

Nominations will be open for a week. Trade schools, high schools and colleges in Continental US are eligible.

Building a Shop Culture of Success

Write out your plan for success and train your entire team to follow it!

Building A Winning Strategy

If you get one percent better each day for one year, you’ll end up 37 times better by the time you are done.

Beating The Tech Shortage Through Mentoring

How understanding the 80/20 Rule and creative mentoring can make the shortage less threatening.