Go North, Lost Leader
Former CEO Bill George argues that
leadership is a journey that requires a special compass if it is to be
authentic.
Discover Your True North
(Expanded and Updated Edition)
by Bill George (Wiley & Sons, 2015)
It is tempting to put Bill George’s latest book — a substantial
update of a volume published in 2007 — in the same genre as those written by
other formidable CEOs, such as Lee Iacocca of Chrysler, Jack Welch of General
Electric, or Martha Stewart. But this book is different. That’s mainly because
after serving as CEO of Medtronic from 1991 to 2001, a period during which the
company’s market capitalization grew at an average annual rate of 35 percent,
George became a Harvard Business School professor and taught for 10 years.
Thus, he has a track record as both a corporate leader and a leadership
professor.
Discover
Your True North is not a book about how George led
Medtronic. Although he does spend a few pages on his own time in the corporate
world, the bulk of the book is about the lives of others. Lots of others. In
addition to tapping into 125 interviews conducted for past books with an array
of leaders, George did 47 new interviews. And from this mass of insight, George
distilled what is, for him, the essence of leadership (in business, the
nonprofit world, and government). He illustrates his points with examples of
leaders he has known, worked with, interviewed, or helped train. The upshot:
Although there are many ways to lead, George insists that only leaders who
honor their own “true north” have a chance to leave a positive and enduring
legacy. To follow your true north means, in essence, to lead others by
mastering and sharing what is special and unique inside you, your authentic
self.
Finding your true north involves three steps, which are detailed
in the three parts.
Part One, George stresses
how important it is for a leader to review his or her past in order to understand
the significance of the leadership journey. People too easily forget, he
implies, both positive and negative events that happened in their early life
and relationships that were either compelling or repelling. Analyzing these is
an essential first step toward better knowing oneself, especially if they help
decode how one’s current behaviors as a leader evolved from these moments. The
key events to dwell on, he says, are those times when someone experienced a
“crucible,” a time of personal transformation caused by illness, divorce,
poverty, discrimination, rejection, failure, or some other form of personal
testing.
In Part Two, George
explains the five areas important to a developing leader. These are being
self-aware, sticking to one’s values, staying with a career sweet spot, having
and utilizing a support team, and, lastly, living an integrated (balanced)
life. These are the core building blocks for becoming an authentic
leader. This term is, of course, central to George’s whole approach to leadership.
In his introduction, he asserts, “Today authenticity is seen as the gold
standard for leadership.” He shuns leadership based on charisma, imitating
others’ styles, looking good, or acting on self-interest. “Nor should
leadership,” he says, “be conflated with your leadership style, managerial
skills, or competencies. These capabilities are very important, but they are
the outward manifestation of who you are as a person. You cannot fake it to
make it, because people sense intuitively whether you are genuine.”
In Part Three, George discusses what occurs when your unique and
distinct “true north” is challenged by the real world. Since no one can lead
alone, he advocates leading from a position of “we” and not “I,” and thereby
avoiding any kind of lone ranger-ism. Further, he believes that what unites a
team (no matter the size) is not the force of one leader but the common focus
on a core purpose that rallies all to succeed. This force is strongly amplified
when the leader has instilled a spirit of empowerment. “Authentic leaders focus
on building personal relationships with people and empowering them to lead,
each in his or her own way,” he writes. Finally, George believes that the world
has become so interconnected that leaders must develop a “GQ,” or global
intelligence [quotient]. To lead a workforce that is increasingly international
and multicultural requires “adaptability, awareness, curiosity, empathy,
alignment, collaboration, [and] integration.” And George says that one of the
best ways to develop one’s GQ is to live and work in another country as soon as
possible.
That is the structure of his book in a few hundred words. What
fills the other 250-plus pages? To put it simply, George tells lots of stories.
Every point he makes is developed by a story. In a paragraph or a few pages,
George writes about someone who exemplifies the lesson he is trying to teach.
The stories come fast and furious. How cyclist Lance Armstrong’s “ruthless
quest for glory” poisoned his personal values and aspirations. What Starbucks
founder Howard Schultz learned from his encouraging mother and his defeatist
father. We read about Warren Buffett’s discovery of his sweet spot (“I don’t
want to live like a king. I just want to invest.”) and his adamant refusal to
abandon it. How publisher Arianna Huffington’s midlife collapse and physical
breakdown triggered a desire to find a “third metric” — aside from money and
power — by which to measure worldly success. We learn how South African
president Nelson Mandela decided to leave behind 27 years of prison and
dedicate himself solely to fulfilling the hopes of others, denying himself any
desire to wreak vengeance on those who imprisoned him. And how Chade-Meng Tan’s
teaching of meditation to thousands of Google employees has boosted morale at
the company.
You’ll find many, many more
names, organizations, and stories — so many that it was impossible for me to
consume this book in my preferred single sitting. And although the volume is
impressive, the faces start to blur, the incidents start to jumble, and the
points of the stories start to get lost. Then again, George probably knew this
might be the case and would undoubtedly recommend reading only a part of
a chapter at a time. He knows that leadership development is never speedy.
“Discovering your True North is hard work. You may take you many
years to find it, as was the case for me,” he notes at the beginning of the
book. He closes by noting that the goal of a leader should be to “make this
world a better place to live for all the people who inhabit it.” Thus, this
book will be helpful for at least two kinds of people. If you’ve been feeling
lost in either your leadership role or your leadership quest, consider this a
new verbal compass to get you back on the right track. And if you have been
living your life as a leader consumed by a unilateral desire to make more and
more money without societal benefit, consider this a compendium of the lessons
about leadership that you forgot to learn.
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