By: David Mielach
Ask any number of entrepreneurs, business owners or other leaders in
the business community to define leadership and you're likely to get a
different answer from each person. Therein lies part of the problem
when it comes to leadership — or more specifically, defining leadership.
To help, BusinessNewsDaily compiled a list of definitions from
different leaders in the business community asking how they define
leadership.
As Dr. John Maxwell, the most published author on Leadership says… 'Leadership is Influence!'– Ken Courtright, founder of Today's Growth Consultant
Leadership is expecting as much of your workers as they are
capable of, but never of more than you are yourself. It is never asking
someone to do something you haven't done yourself, or aren't perfectly
willing to do again. Lastly, leadership is understanding that your
workers have different ideas and being able to flex to incorporate their
ideas in the plan. — Jonathan Hines, director of sales and marketing at PILLO1
We are all leaders — by choice or by default — so the question is not so much "are you a leader?" as "how well do you lead?" Effective leaders are,
first and foremost, self-aware and conscious of how they impact the
people within their sphere of influence. A leader must be vulnerable
enough to have an authentic connection to others, charismatic enough to
engage others and humble enough to realize that true leadership involves
being of service to others.— Jeannea Spence, leadership coach at indiSPENCEable Coaching
Leadership is a way for talented individuals to share their
perspectives and knowledge by influencing others. Using their own
charisma and influence, leaders should have the ability to inspire
others to learn more, do more and become more. — Jeet Banerjee, a serial entrepreneur
Leadership is an attitude. Management is a position. In the same way that service is an attitude and customer service is a department. It is a state of being — a way to approach life.— Kevin Burns, president and CEO of BGi Consultants
Leadership is about values and priorities. A leader's
values are measured by how they act, not by what they say. And a true
leader will communicate priorities that match the values he or she
espouses. — Greg Marcus, author of "Busting Your Corporate Idol: How To Reconnect With Values & Regain Control Of Your Life"
A leader knows how to keep perspective of the big picture,
understand priorities, and perceive context. They are fearless, cynical
and cannot be afraid to act on instinct. They are clear in his goals and
an excellent communicator. — RJ Díaz, CEO and creative director at Industry Portage Co
Leadership is getting people to do what everyone else knows
is the right thing to do, but who do not have the self-confidence to
act on their own! — Kevin Gazzara, senior partner Magna Leadership Solutions.