Meet the MasterMinds: Steve Farber on Why Leadership Is
Extreme
Steve
Farber is the president of Extreme Leadership, Inc., an
organization devoted to the development of leaders in the
business community. He is also the co-founding director
of The
Center for Social Profit Leadership.
A thought leader in management, Farber is a leadership
coach, consultant, and a former consultant for the Tom Peters
Company.
Farber’s first book, The
Radical Leap, introduced the concept of
extreme leadership, which led to a Readers’ Choice
Award from Fast Company magazine.
Farber hasn’t finished exploring the extreme concepts
he created. His latest book, The
Radical Edge, is an intriguing fable that
connects the lessons of life to the realities of leadership.
We asked Farber about the shift in mindset that leaders
must make to re-engage the commitment and ignite the passion
of the people around them.
MCNews: You’ve talked about The Radical Edge
being a “personal” book. What do you mean by
that?
Farber: Ultimately, leadership—or what I
call extreme leadership— is a very personal endeavor.
The ‘radical edge’ stokes your business, amplifies
joy and meaning in your life, and changes the piece of the
world that you touch for the better, all at the same time.
You bring yourself to bear on everything that you do—whether
it’s related to work, family, or a cause that you
deeply believe in.
It's all personal and demands reflection on what is really
important in your life in terms of, for example, your value
system. That comes from your own perspective, so the whole
exploration has to be personal. It comes down to who are
you? What's important to you? And how can you exert a positive
influence in all facets of your life?
MCNews: Well, that is a great guiding philosophy
for leadership, but what about it seems “extreme”
to you?
Extreme
leadership should be a redundant phrase. |
Farber: Extreme leadership should
be a redundant phrase. There should be no reason to modify
the word leadership with extreme because if you’re
doing it—and not just posing as a leader—it's
already extreme.
Leadership is about transformation. It's about taking people
to places they've never been before; it's about taking nothing
and turning it into something; it's about taking something
good and turning it into something extraordinary. It's about
stretching and growing our own skills and capabilities as
human beings and also doing that for the people around us.
Those acts of transformation are already extreme. So extreme
leadership is just my way of saying the real deal—the
authentic leader, somebody who's intensely engaged in the
act of leadership and not just talking about it, thinking
about it, or understanding it, but really in it.
MCNews: So the modifier “extreme” may
not be necessary but “poor” before leadership
might be?
Farber: Yeah, right. And one aspect of
poor leadership is incompetence. Some people have the best
intentions to accomplish something significant and fire
up others, but they're not competent to do the job in that
particular arena. They may have the right idea, the right
heart, and the right intent but they are just in over their
heads for whatever reason.
MCNews: What do you think the role of inspiration
is in the context of leadership?
Farber: Inspiration is right at the heart of everything.
It's not just a nice idea and it's not a just my conclusion.
For example, Jim Kouzes and Barry Posner, the authors of
The
Leadership Challenge, found over and over
again that the real motivation for a leader comes from the
heart.
Leadership is an act of love or passion—the expression
of deep conviction—and that's where the inspiration
comes from. When I talk about stoking your business, what
I’m referring to comes from a desire to do great things
for people, whether you're focusing on customers, or employees,
or whatever it might be, and that desire is an act of the
heart.
That comes from a deep-rooted desire to make things better—to
add value. We throw around these buzzwords in the world
of business. We talk about how important customer focus
is, for example, or how important responsiveness is. Obviously,
you must have strategies and skills to be good at those
things, but you won’t get there without the desire—the
inspiration—to achieve greatness for others.
You
can't inspire others unless you're inspired yourself
first. |
We all say we want customers to love doing business with
us. Well, we can't expect anybody to love doing business
with us unless we love it ourselves. You can't unless you're
inspired yourself first. Over the nearly twenty years that
I've been involved in leadership development, whenever I've
asked people to describe what is it that leaders do, the
word inspiration is always at the top of the list.
MCNews: Is the inspiration you need to lead others
related to your concept of finding your frequency?
Farber: Yes, exactly. Finding your frequency
is a process of clarifying what's crucial to you. I'm sure
many of your readers have participated in exercises to define
their values, and that's great work for individuals, teams,
and companies. But finding your frequency takes it to another
level, which is where you find out what really defines you.
What frequency do you operate on in all areas of your life?
Another way of asking the question is, what's the one core
principle, value, or characteristic that best says who you
are? And that’s not at the exclusion of everything
else. I think it gets kind of artificial to ask— like
Curly in the movie, City Slickers—what
“one thing” is important to you? That's over
simplified.
But if you can get clear on what's most important, then
you will find that your other values wrap naturally into
that. Your frequency carries through your work, personal
life, and social endeavors. Once you get clear on that,
you have a basis on which to evaluate your actions and activities.
If, for example, your frequency is service and you’re
working in a company that doesn't value service to its employees,
or customers, or on whatever level, then the question you’ve
got to ask is how can I bring more of a service attitude
into this work environment? And if you can't, then perhaps
you’re in the wrong place.
MCNews: Can you give an example of someone that
you think has got his or her frequency right?
Farber: Simon Billsberry, the CEO of the tech placement
company, Kineticom,
is a good example. His company recruits talent for its clients
in some ways that are fairly standard and in other ways
that are revolutionary. The company started in 2000, and
in 2005 it had revenues of $52 million.
No matter who you talk to in the company’s corporate
offices, to a person they all love the place. They say it’s
because the expectation is that you are authentically yourself
when you come to work and that you shouldn't put on a mask
or pretend to be somebody that you're not.
When I talked to Billsberry about this, his comments were
right in line with the frequency idea, but he said it in
a different way. He said, “Think about how much energy
it takes to pretend to be somebody that you're not. I'd
rather have people use that energy in their work to get
better at what we're trying to do here.”
MCNews: It's interesting that so few organizations
encourage you to be yourself at work. Do you have any insights
on why organizations have developed that way?
Farber: Somewhere along the line, we created
what I think is an artificial separation between our work
selves and our home selves. Granted, we do different things
at work and at home, but literally, we're the same people
in both places.
I think that we're evolving to a point where people are
beginning to see how ridiculous that line is. That realization
is dawning partly because we're spending more and more of
our time at work and the physical boundaries between work
and home are dissolving.
Of course, those boundaries have not entirely dissolved,
but they've certainly gotten more transparent because we're
wired in all the time. Essentially we’re always working
and, at the same time, we don't lose touch with our personal
lives either. So we can't keep up that artificial separation
much longer.
MCNews: You’ve talked about the importance
of knowing people’s stories, not just their resumes.
What do you mean by that?
Farber: One of the principles in The
Radical Edge is how important it is to know
the people that you work with, not as functions or what
they do at work, but who they are as human beings.
That
old saying “It ain't personal, it's just business”
is ridiculous. |
This is a little provocative for some people who think
their personal lives are not anyone’s business at
work and, to a certain degree, that's true. But, contrary
to popular opinion, business is very personal. That old
saying “It ain't personal, it's just business”
is ridiculous.
Think about how agitated we get when things are not going
well at work, and think about how great we feel when things
are going well. We take it all personally, right? Let's
acknowledge that.
So how well do you know your co-workers, teammates, or
clients personally? I don’t mean do you hang out with
them on Saturday night, but do you know their stories? Do
you know where they came from, do you know how they got
to where they are? Are you fascinated with finding out who
this person is and what makes her tick?
Again, that comes down to a very personal point of view.
Once you develop that fascination, it's much easier to express
gratitude for who that person is. So it's a combination
of fascination with and gratitude for the people either
that we work with or that we serve in the consultant/client
relationship.
MCNews: Let's assume somebody just finished reading
the book. What's the first thing you'd tell that person
to do?
Farber: Well, that’s a hard question because
I find that people resonate with different things in the
book. But one idea that I carry through all of the lessons
is the WUP—the wake-up pad. The idea is to approach
life in all of its phases as consciously as you can and
capture your observations of the world.
Carry a notebook or pad of some sort, whether it's literally
a notebook or an electronic version. Don’t just write
down lists of ideas. Make it a practice to be awake enough
to notice what’s going on around you, and then ask
questions about what the relevance might be for whatever
it is that you're trying to do. This is not a methodology
that I invented—lots of people keep notebooks of ideas
or do low-level forms of social research like following
what people are reading and watching on TV.
But very few people make a regular practice of it. I have
this vision of companies and teams where everybody has a
version of the WUP and every so often they get together
to compare notes and talk about the implications of their
observations. So that's the place I’d like to see
everybody start: keep a WUP with you and use it.
MCNews: Thanks for your time.
Find out more about Steve Farber, his books, and his services
at www.stevefarber.com.
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