Influence. Persuade. Convince. Sway. Engage. Motivate. Your team. Your organisation. Your community. Your relationships. Yourself.
How do you use your leadership voice to influence to get the outcomes you want?
To get the results you desire? To make your vision come alive? To realise your purpose?
What does being influential look like? How do you get people to follow you? To listen to you? To believe in you? To trust you?
Leadership is influence.
– John C. Maxwell
Influence is not about your title: Chief executive officer. Manager. Parent. Owner. Vice-president. Supervisor.
You don’t need a title to influence. You need confidence in your ability to set a vision and rally your tribe around that vision.
Influence is not about speaking louder or shouting your opinions. That only makes you look weak, not persuasive.
Many times, the people who have the most influence are not the people in power. The successful influencers have a quiet voice which is used as a persuasive force not only for their needs but for the needs of others as well.
Becoming a captivating leader who can influence means having a calm yet strong and confident tone so that your impact is understood and respected.
If you’ve been following Finding Your VOICE as a Leader series, you know that defining your values and establishing your outcomes are essential parts of becoming an effective leader.
However, discovering your values while aligning your outcomes aren’t enough to find your VOICE as a leader.
You need to be able to inspire your team to achieve your vision.
In other words, you need to develop and flex your persuasive muscle to engage your followers so that you are influential, not invisible.
How do you build your influence?
Once you have identified your Values and created your Outcomes as a leader, how do you Influence and align yourself and your team to maximise your opportunities and garner the needed results?
Recognising and developing your spheres of influence is key to being successful in finding and using your leadership VOICE.
To do this, follow these three steps.
You need to cultivate a trustworthy network.
Networking may be a catch-phrase from the 1980s, but the concept is as relevant today as it was 30 years ago. No one person has all of the answers or all of the ideas.
The larger you build your community as a leader, the more opportunity you will have to influence and be influenced.
In addition, becoming a successful influencer means that you focus on what you can influence versus what you cannot.
In other words, you need to determine your “spheres of influence” so you can focus your values and your outcomes on what you can change and influence.
Don’t waste your time and energy on things you cannot change. Understand the difference.
Even the best ideas will languish if you’re the only one who supports them.
A good leader needs to also be a good salesperson – to garner support from your peers, leaders, investors, clients, team members and your community.
Although considerable effort goes into the creation of your leadership vision, the harder part may be selling and advocating your vision so that people get onboard because they want to get onboard, not because they have no choice.
It’s not “telling”, it’s “selling”.
So don’t shy away from being a salesperson. It’s a key role that leaders play to realise their vision and build their influence.
You need to be self-aware.
The best and the most effective leaders know how to adjust their style to fit the diverse individuals and different types of teams they work with.
To be successful in influencing your outcomes is to really believe in your values and your beliefs.
How can you expect people to believe in what you say if you don’t really believe it yourself?
How can you expect to influence people, if you are not clear on the values that influence you?
Knowing who you are as a leader – your strengths, your weaknesses, your ethics, your judgments, your preferences, your reactions, your insights – provides you the mirror and reflection so that you establish trust, credibility and influence within all of your relationships, and not remain invisible. Let go of your ego.
In summary
By integrating the Emergenetics Profile into my executive coaching practice, I am able to guide leaders into greater insight and awareness of what is important to them in their life, and, thus, how creating their vision with aligned outcomes impact their leadership brand and create the vision they desire.
Finding your VOICE as a leader does not mean shouting to make an impact. It means using the Emergenetics Profile to reveal your brilliance as a leader by:
Discovering your critical leadership Values.
Creating a compelling vision to obtain the Outcomes you need.
Influencing your relationships with trust and credibility.
Making decisions that reveal your Courage and confidence to take a stand.
Communicating your overall Expression for lasting impact.
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Paul Larsen will be speaking at the Malaysia Leadership Summit 2019: Connect, Collaborate, Contribute on July 11, 2019. To find out more and register for the event, head to leaderonomics.com/mls-2019. Tickets for this event are HRDF claimable.
Larsen is a certified executive coach and an engaging leadership consultant, speaker and author of the book, ‘Find Your VOICE as a Leader’.
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Check out this corresponding Leadership Nuggets video here on Leaderonomics Media YouTube channel:
As employees, we spend more time in the office than our homes. Despite this fact, there is a significant shortage of empathy in the workplace. What happens to the organisation if this shortage of empathy persists? Alvin Teoh from Leaderonomics shares with us the need for empathy and its effect in the workplace.