5 Habits of Successful Leaders
I wanted to share this great article I recently received from Vistage Worldwide, Inc.
Across a wide array of industries and geographies, the world’s greatest business leaders know all goals must be rooted in consistent habits that support them. Top leaders regularly evaluate and reassess whether their daily practices enable them to lead effectively and efficiently, and ultimately, whether they are paving the path for their long-term plans.
Great leaders prioritize keeping consistent lines of communication by maintaining a regular cadence of one-to-ones and department meetings. They keep meetings productive and results-oriented by leveraging some combination of the following best practices:
- Share a brief with all participants ahead of every meeting. This allows everyone to come ready to share relevant updates and answer questions, and to offer fresh thinking and well-thought-out solutions, rather than spending the first part of the meeting getting everyone up to speed.
- Open meetings by outlining the purpose and intended outcome. This helps to set the tone, align on expectations, ensure the conversation doesn’t get sidetracked, and eliminate surprises.
- Come to meetings prepared and ready to lead. A great way to accomplish this is to create a 15-minute buffer between meetings. Avoiding back-to-back meetings allows leaders to debrief from a previous meeting and prepare for their next.
2. Make planning programmatic.
Rather than spending all day reacting to emergencies, effective CEOs take proactive control of their planning process. They routinely build planning checkpoints into their day: In the morning to set themselves up for the day, mid-day for reflection on critical projects, and in the evening to plan for the following day.
This strategic and forward-thinking approach to planning allows leaders to be thoughtful in their responses rather than constantly responding on the fly.
3. Master the calendar.
Great leaders don’t leave their priorities up to chance — they bake them directly into their calendars. Instead of simply creating a to-do list and hoping they’ll get through it by the end of the day, they set aside specific blocks of time for each item they want to accomplish, even if it’s as simple as walking around the office to connect with the team.
This principle applies to both personal goals like exercise and business priorities like strategic planning. An effective CEO’s schedule often appears to be booked solid, but instead is carefully tailored to ensure important projects don’t fall by the wayside.
Business is the same — breaking bad habits and implementing and maintaining new ones is hard work. However, great CEOs find joy in the process and are patient as they work toward growth goals.
This story first appeared in Entrepreneur.
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