All Content from Business Insider 10月07日
成功领导者的共同特质:并非智慧或魅力,而是描绘美好未来
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行为科学家兼作家乔恩·利维(Jon Levy)在其新书《团队智慧》中,打破了关于领导力的传统迷思。他通过观察和与众多成功人士的交流,发现真正的领导者并非都拥有超凡的智慧或迷人的魅力,而是具备一种独特的共性:能够让追随者相信未来会更好。无论这种承诺是否最终兑现,描绘出积极未来的能力是吸引和激励他人的关键。利维还挑战了传统的领导力培训模式,认为与其试图弥补个体弱点,不如根据团队成员的特长进行分工,通过系统性解决方案提升团队整体效能,强调团队的整体协作是实现成功的根本。

🌟 **描绘美好未来是领导者的核心能力**:乔恩·利维通过研究发现,成功领导者并非依赖于智慧或魅力,而是他们能够让人们相信,追随他们将能获得更好的未来。这种对未来的积极愿景,无论是物质上的提升(如赚更多钱、事业成功),还是情感上的满足(如击败对手、让前任嫉妒),都是驱动人们跟随的关键因素。重要的是‘让人们感觉’未来会更好,而不一定需要立即兑现所有承诺。

💡 **挑战传统领导力培训模式**:利维认为,在抽象的环境中进行的短期领导力培训(如两天的课程)往往效果不佳,因为人类的复杂性和人际交往技能难以通过这种方式有效习得。他质疑了企业投入大量资源进行这种培训的有效性,认为这可能无法真正提升管理者的实际工作能力,例如进行有挑战性的绩效评估或主持更具吸引力的会议。

🤝 **团队整体效能优先于个体能力**:利维强调,团队是组织效能的基本单位,而非个体。他主张,与其强迫领导者去学习不擅长的技能,不如采取系统性的解决方案。例如,如果一位领导者不擅长给予反馈,可以指派另一位具备出色情商的团队成员来负责。这种基于团队成员特长的分工和协作,能够更有效地提升整个团队的绩效,就像海军陆战队进行整体演习而非单兵训练一样。

Behavioral scientist and author Jon Levy's latest book is out on Tuesday.

What do all successful leaders have in common?

Executive coaches might highlight shared qualities such as authenticity, charisma, or even the ability to foster psychological safety.

That's wrong, says Jon Levy.

Certainly, many influential people are intelligent and charming. But are any of these traits a prerequisite for wild success in a given industry? After all, some of the most famous leaders out there — say, Warren Buffett, Oprah Winfrey, and Elon Musk — don't really have all that much in common, personality-wise.

It's an epiphany that occurred to Levy, an author and behavioral scientist, after hosting hundreds of dinner parties for successful people across various disciplines. He said he realized how unique all the leaders he knew were.

"When you study behavioral science, you realize that basically in every area of life, the things that we assume are true are just completely wrong," Levy told Business Insider. "You can't tell me there are these universal things that leaders have to have."

What leaders share

Levy explores what makes someone a successful leader in his third book, Team Intelligence: How Brilliant Leaders Unlock Creative Genius, which is out on Tuesday.

What Levy found through his research and conversations with heads of business is that there is, in fact, something that unites leaders, but it's not as straightforward as charisma. After all, we can all think of bosses who are just plain awkward.

Instead, these individuals share an ability to make us feel like we will have a better future, he says.

"If you can help people feel that they will earn more, grow bigger yams, have more career success, raise better children, defeat their nemesis, or at least make their ex envious, they will follow you," he writes.

Leaders don't even have to execute on that promise, he points out. "Producing the results versus making people feel that the result will be produced are two completely different things."

Cultivating strong teams

Levy challenges several traditional management ideas in this book, including the notion that corporate leadership training is an effective means of improving how execs manage. It's an especially relevant subject, given that business coaching is a $20 billion industry in the US, according to IBISWorld.

Humans are complicated, and complex interpersonal skills can't really be learned effectively in the abstract, said Levy. That's why a "two-day leadership course at some Holiday Inn Express," as he writes it in Team Intelligence, doesn't actually result in managers suddenly being better equipped to give a challenging performance review or lead a more engaging meeting.

What does work, then? Leaning into what a specific leader is good at and coming up with a systemic solution to address their weakness.

"If you have a boss who is really terrible at giving feedback, then have somebody else give the feedback," he said. "Make sure that chief of staff is somebody with incredible emotional intelligence. Why do we have to force the boss to spend hours to learn to be better at something, if that's not their skill set?"

The smallest unit of effectiveness is not the individual, said Levy. It's the team. That means teams can be more effective when training happens at the group level, he said, pointing to how Navy SEALs practice drills as a cohesive unit, rather than individually.

"If we want the team to perform, then they need to be able to work together."

Read the original article on Business Insider

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领导力 团队建设 行为科学 Leadership Team Building Behavioral Science
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