Five Critical Mistakes That Blunt Leadership Effectiveness

Since 2000, according to numerous national surveys, less than one-third of workers in the United States are engaged in their work as measured by their involvement, enthusiasm, and commitment to their work. If you simply reflect on your most recent encounter as a consumer at your local retail store, restaurant, or government agency, your own experience will more than likely validate the reality of these startling statistics.

Written byDavid Waits
| 4 min read
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Leaders account for as much as 70% of the variance of employee engagement. A Gallup study of 7,272 adults in the United States revealed that one in two had left their job at some point in their career to get away from a manager in order to improve overall quality of life. People don’t leave jobs; people leave people! 

Effective leadership requires not only doing the right things, but also understanding what not to do. Here are five mistakes to aggressively avoid. 

Critical Mistake #1: Failing to schedule time for learning conversations

You do what you schedule. When you listen, you learn. Leaders should only be doing what no one else can do and no one can listen to your team members like you. 

Schedule regular opportunities to ask clear, concise, and clarifying questions to your team members and then discipline yourself to actively listen. This will provide you with vital intelligence to implement two of the main functions of a leader:

  1. Remove obstacles
  2. Provide resources 
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