Assume the best
Make room for innovative ideas
Admit when you are wrong
Trust is a powerful leadership tool. Use “antennae” questions as often as possible, such as “Why did you decide to do it that way?” Avoid “horned” questions altogether, such as “What gives you the right to mess up everyone else’s schedule?”
For example:
How can you show your team members that you trust them? How can you “treat them gently?” How can you build a better team?
Cross train team members; give them more responsibility; use team members to train other team members.
Empower them to believe in themselves by believing in them first; respect your team.
Be patient when correcting mistakes; give them the information they need to do it right the next time.
Ask yourself: “What do they need from me to succeed?”
RESPECT your team: employees are more effective when they feel respected.
It is your responsibility as a leader to be open to innovative ideas. The quickest way to destroy an atmosphere that encourages innovative ideas is to fail to listen. Furthermore, non-verbal messages can also shut down innovative ideas. Let us list a few of those:
Non-verbal Messages
How can you tell when the person you are speaking to…?
Verbal messages
A sample of lethal phrases includes:
Cut lethal phrases from your conversations and open the doors for co-operation problem solving.
One of the worst ways we can show our inflexibility as a leader is not to to admit when we are wrong. On the job, we may believe that a confession will compromise our authority – but a manager who is incapable of realising and confessing a mistake or a misunderstanding will never be elevated to the status of leader in the eyes of her team.