Consistent Leadership is Key to Success by Rumana Maner

Consistent Leadership is Key to Success

 @Rumana Maner

Consistent leadership is one of the most important strengths of successful managers. As a business leader you are in charge of establishing a consistent culture and value system in your company.

Consistency in your business is far more important that you can imagine. Being consistent allows you to establish awareness, build trust and deliver your services efficiently and profitably. Without it, your business is more likely to fail. Here’s some advice to help you show up a little more consistently…

1. Ensure your Efforts are Aligned.

It is crucial to remember that every decision and action you take should contribute to accomplishing a greater purpose for your business. Every business operates like a machine, and whether it works efficiently or not depends on the stability and smooth function of every one of its parts.

 

2. Define your Brand – and stick to it!

As creative entrepreneurs, it’s understandable that we get bored using the same brand elements every day. But the truth is consistency is critical when it comes to your visual brand. Constantly changing your colours, images and fonts can make your brand appear unprofessional and even untrustworthy.

 

Forbes Magazine suggests that solid branding differentiates your company from the competition, but if you don’t consistently live up to the promises your brand delivers, customer loyalty is massively reduced.

When you study the actions of powerful brands all over the world, you can see that they are highly consistent in both strategy and implementation, and any changes are few and far between.

 

3. When you make a plan, see it through. 

Let’s be honest. If you do not commit to following a specific plan of action, you can put yourself in danger of generating high amounts of debt, or even going out of business.

Every time that you choose to change your plans too early, you are likely to rack up the costs without receiving any benefits from your prior initiative.

A start-up or a small business cannot afford to make terrible financial decisions based on inconsistent actions, or the company may sink quickly.

 

4. Analyse the results of your efforts

It is crucial to remember that it often takes time to see the results of your efforts. If your business processes, sales, and marketing efforts are inconsistent, you receive wavering results.

For example, running an ad for a day or two won’t give you much insight into how successful the ad is, but using it for a set period can provide a great deal of insight into if a particular marketing strategy is working.

If you end a campaign before it has a chance to gain traction, you may be sabotaging your own efforts.

 

5. Consider how changes affect your clients

Consistency in the interactions that you have with your clients allows your business to build a loyal customer base and provide a memorable customer experience for all. Understanding what customers want and giving it to them every time is important. 

Whether you are establishing your brand or determining the course of your sales and marketing strategy, you have to recognise the power of consistency. Give yourself an advantage over fickle competitors by becoming consistent in how you operate your business, and what you present and offer to your customers.

 

Why inconsistent leadership often fails.

The manager is annoyed: The business goals are not reached; decisions are not implemented and deadlines with customers are not met. It’s enough.

“We need to implement what we have agreed. We need to be more consistent in what we do. As a boss I must and will be more consistent! From now on I will consistently check results and take action if needed!”

Employees hear it and they understand the reaction of the manager. Inconsistency is a waste of time and money. A company can’t afford it long term.

Everyone agrees – but after a while everything is as it was before. The manager has failed to act and stay consistent. This is unfortunately a typical leadership mistake.

The question is why? Why is it so hard to be consistent as a boss? What can you do as a boss in order to be consistent in your daily activities?

Punctuality

The Managing Director called his 8 department heads for a meeting at 10 am. Now it is 10:15. Everyone is there – only he is missing. Suddenly the door of the meeting room opens. The Managing Director enters the room and apologises briefly:

“Sorry for the delay, but I had to talk to John about the production figures for tomorrow.”

What goes through your head when you read that? You might think:

“I understand that. As a boss, I have so much work to do. My employees sometimes also have to wait for a few minutes.”

This short wait can be quite expensive. In the above example, each of the 8 departments has 15 minutes to wait idly. At an assumed hourly rate of $ 150 for each head

$ 150 x 15/60 x 8 = $ 300!

are wasted in this 15 minute!

Perhaps you’re thinking now:

“$ 300 is not that much. That can happen even once. The meeting with John regarding production numbers was surely important!”

The point is: It is not about the $ 300 loss. It is crucial that the manager acts as a role model. If you demand punctuality of your employees – and you should – then you need to be on time as well – always. No excuses.

If you want consistent leadership in your company you have to act consistently. The first thing is to be consistent with yourself. Walk the talk! The fish always stinks from the head!

Act consistently!

As an executive you have to act consistently. What does it mean? You must define the goals properly, agree measures and actions with your staff and check the outcome, control the results.

If you don’t control results regularly, you aren’t consistent – and you and your employees aren’t neither effective nor efficient. You give a wrong impression. It looks like you do not care about the results. It looks like that the work of your employees doesn’t really matter to you. That’s fatal!

But don’t act as a micromanager. Control results, but not the steps towards the result. Avoid micromanagement by all means.

How can you avoid being inconsistent in your day-to-day work?

7 Tips to achieve consistent leadership!

1. Your commitments are a word of honour!

Your deeds must follow your words. Little things count.

Keep your commitments – always – no matter whom you gave it, and no matter how seemingly unimportant it may seem to you. You gave the commitment voluntarily. No one put the gun to your head, right?

If you tell one of your employees, you send him the email on Wednesday, your employee should not receive the email on Thursday! Otherwise, you destroy employee motivation. You don’t want that, do you?

Take any of your commitments seriously – as serious as a word of honour. That’s what true leaders do!

2. Focus! Ask only what is truly important!

If the boss wants to become consistent, he wants this change immediately. He changes his behaviour and wants his employees to change immediately as well.

But change is mostly not working that quickly. It takes time to get all on board. The new rules must not only be heard but also understood and accepted. Your employees need time to realise that your behaviour change is serious and will stay long term.

So do not change everything at once, but go to the things that are really important. Name the important things by name and be there consistently. But do not get bogged down with consistency in unimportant trifles.

3. Keep a written record of agreements!

If you make arrangements or give a commitment, write it down. No need for a comprehensive protocol. A short e-mail just mentioning the results is fine.

4. Define objectives and actions verifiable and transparent!

Qualitative goals can become a great danger. Pseudo Goals such as:

“We will improve our communication!”

“We will increase our supply rate!”

do nothing if they are not quantified or if at least measures and actions with deadlines and responsible are derived.

General calls for greater customer focus and for increase of competitiveness will not do any good. These calls are getting lost in the daily operating business. The manager has to make sure goals and actions are clearly defined: Who is doing what until when? Only then he can control the results later on.

5. Plan the dates for reviews well in advance!

As a manager you should regularly check milestones. Have the objectives been achieved? It is helpful to develop your own appropriate control structures to remove your own inconsistency and inefficiency.

One problem is often that managers understand that the regular control is important, but they do not classify them as a matter of urgency.

A customer call or a problem in the production is urgent. It appears suddenly. Are these things strongly important? Mostly not. In contrast, regularly checking results is crucially important, but has mostly no urgency. Therefore it often falls by the wayside.

You can change this. Just make important things urgent! How? Assign dates for important things – do it months in advance!

For example: Fix a date once a month for a review meeting. In that meeting your employees report on the progress of their projects and you review the departmental goals regularly.

With the start of the year, fix all these monthly meetings for the next 12 months in advance. Instruct your secretary that these dates are important and should not be cancelled or postponed.

In this way these review meetings will become a habit for you. Believe me you will make a big step towards consistent leadership if you do this.

6. Put sanctions for seemingly mundane missed deadlines!

A Meeting must start on time. You need to make that a habit. To force all participants – including yourself – to be on time you can do the following:

Have a piggy bank in the meeting room. Anyone who is late must interject $ 1 per minute he is late. You as the executive have to throw in $ 5 per minute!

If the piggy bank is full, donate all the money to a charitable organisation.

You will be surprised how quickly you and your employees get used to being on time.

7. Celebrating Success!

If your team and you have achieved important goals, celebrate. This doesn’t need to be expensive. It can be a nice dinner at an Italian restaurant or just a chocolate cake that you bring to the meeting.

The celebration of success will not only strengthen the team spirit. Rather, it also means that you and your employees connect positive experiences with the consistent checking of results – and that helps to be more consistent.

 By

@Rumana Maner [MBA]

HR Manager

AirCrews Aviation Pvt Ltd

manerrumana@gmail.com

rumana.aircrews@gmail.com

www.AirCrewsAviation.com











Good Communication Skill leads to be a Successful Business Leader by Rumana Maner

Good Communication Skill leads to be a Successful Business Leader

@Rumana Maner


Communication is key if you want to be successful in anything.

In business, the person who is able to communicate the best, is often the one who succeeds, and is able to gain respect from other people. Transparency and honesty are critical for good leaders in any industry.

Today’s communication methods are evolving, and it’s important to be fluent in many different communication styles. If you’ve been put into a manager role, your biggest growth may be in learning how to communicate and connect well. One of the biggest myths about work culture is that people with titles automatically do their job better than others. Someone can be a boss or manager but still not be an effective leader. It’s actually fairly easy to obtain a big job title sometimes. Knowing the right people, and having connections can land people in big roles, even when they are not experienced. People in power often lead with dictatorship styles and fail in honouring employees and effectively managing business well and leading well. Leadership failures are hurting businesses — one report showed that 77% of organisations have a leadership gap.

It takes time to be able to communicate in superior ways and lead in positive ways. I do believe we all are working on communicating better, and especially listening. It’s true that women often possess better leadership styles than men. The biggest obstacle in business is often lack of integrity and an unwillingness of people to collaborate and communicate well. Everyone can learn new things and adopt more mindful behaviours in order to improve their character and communication skills.

Effective leaders know that they learn from relationships and experiences and are always willing to adapt, change their behaviours, and continually improve their communication skills. They eliminate blame, sarcasm, and silly comments and negativity, and instead attack solutions. With whatever business industry you are in, there are many valuable reasons to work on your communication and leadership skills.

Everyone needs to be accountable in how they show up at work, how they work with others, and how they utilise communication and business skills. In everything, there is power in our word, and how well we utilise our word in every moment and own it. Utilise these communication tips to build leadership skills and create a better work and business culture.

1. Have an Open Mind, and Empathy

When it comes to communication, having an open mind and being willing to shift your perspective is key. Your reality isn’t the only reality; it is your perception. Failing to truly listen and practice empathy can lead to misunderstandings and resentment. This is especially true when conflicts arise. Without an open mind, no compromise will be possible and someone will walk away feeling disrespected. Knowing that everyone sees the world different, and has their own perception can eliminate errors, grudges, and problems.

2. Listen to Your Employees

A big part of communication isn’t talking, it’s listening. Most people are really very bad at actually listening. They pick and choose from what they hear or are simply waiting for the other person to be done speaking so they can talk. By listening, you’ll promote open communication and actually understand your employees’ needs. Listening is key for empowering employees, establishing trust, and showing you are supportive of your team.

3. Influence Your Team with Your Actions

Many managers simply see their role as overseeing day-to-day operations, but it’s much more than that. The old cliché “actions speak louder than words” is completely true when it comes to management. What you do sets the expectations for your team — you’re their role model.

Action should be deliberate, not arbitrary. Don’t just call meetings because you can. Only request action when it has a purpose. Everything you say and do communicates something to your team, and it’s important to think about what kind of influence your actions will have. Do your actions line up with your values? Are your requests reasonable? These are the kinds of questions you need to ask yourself. Above all, set a good example.

4. Encourage Growth, Creativity, and Innovation

Some leaders feel threatened by their team’s growth, which can quickly erode credibility and trust. As a leader, you need to be willing to encourage growth, creativity, and innovation. Help your employees gain new skills and pursue opportunities for self-development. Reward the employees who want to grow, learn, and share their ideas. Nurturing the next generation of leaders is one of the best things you can do.

5. Be Authentic and Real

People can see right through someone who isn’t authentic. Strive to be transparent, clear, and real in how you interact with people. Own up to mistakes and show people your human side. Keep your word, stay true to your values, and always communicate with honesty. Your own, authentic voice and real personality is the most valuable leadership asset you have. People will want to interact with you more and work with you as you build trust and show them who you are.

Leadership Means Being Vulnerable

Many leaders are reluctant to show their true selves because it makes them feel vulnerable. Insecurity kills us all and limits us greatly. However, without honesty, integrity, and authenticity, employees will not feel they can trust, respect, or count on their leaders. Vulnerability is often what forms those all-important connections. Part of being a leader is learning how to communicate well, show vulnerability, and positively impact others — in life and business.

Without good communication skills, people won’t be motivated and won’t feel satisfied to work with you. Everyone wants respect and wants to feel valued. Ultimately, how you lead and manage shows your personality and core values. It’s everyone’s responsibility to constantly improve communications and be the best leader you can be.

What is Leadership Communication?

Leadership communication is a type of communication most commonly used by leaders to relay information about the company’s culture, core values, mission, and crucial messages to build trust and encourage employees.

In practice, it involves delivering a shared vision and inspiring others to buy into that vision. It is describing the values inherent to the company and showing how the company is living up to that promise. With clear communication, leaders can navigate their organisation through all types of changes, big or small.

Leadership communication also builds trust within the organisation, both between leaders and employees and between employees and the organisation itself.

By clarifying company culture and structure, it helps employees to align better within the organisation. This communication then inspires open dialogue throughout the company, promotes collaboration, teamwork, and honest feedback.

Finally, it helps prevent miscommunications within the organisation and ensures that all employees are kept up to date with important information.

Why is Leadership Communication Important?

It is very difficult to be a good leader without good communication skills. However, good communication skills are not as common as they should be.

According to a Harvard Business Review study, 69% of managers’ report that they are not comfortable communicating with their employees in general.

That is a significant number - especially because of the vital importance of good leadership communication.

1. Good communication improves engagement

Employee engagement is massively important - engaged employees will work harder, stay with the organisation longer, improve customer service, and in general lead to better business outcomes.

To get employees engaged, they must trust both their leaders and the organisation.

This can be done with effective leadership communication. Leaders share the vision of the company and show by actions that they are dedicated to that vision.

2. Clear communication aligns employees with strategic goals

How can employees be aligned with organisational goals if they don’t know what they are or don’t understand them? The answer is that they simply can’t.

It is the leadership’s job to evangelise these goals, to create awareness of them among the workforce. Not only that, leadership needs to deliver consistent updates about what the goals are, why they have been chosen, and what the path to reaching them is.

All of this serves to engage employees - their strategic alignment with organisational goals will deliver better business outcomes.

3. It builds trust and encourages transparency

There is a worldwide crisis of leadership, according to the 2021 Edelman Trust Barometer.

No matter the type of leadership, from government leaders to religious leaders, from CEOs to journalists, there is a growing trust gap. Not one type of societal leader is trusted to do what is right. People are also increasingly rejecting talking heads, who are viewed as partisan and not credible.

Trust in CEOs has dropped to an all-time low in many countries. In Japan, CEOs have the credibility of just 18%, while in France it sits at 22%. As CEOs work to address problems within their business, industry, and the world in general, this lack of credibility will present a huge challenge to overcome.

However, despite this lack of trust, people still expect business to step in where governments are absent or ineffective. There are heightened expectations for CEOs to use their skills for the good of society and the world at large, rather than just for the good of their company and shareholders.

 

 

 

 By

@Rumana Maner HR Manager

manerrumana@gmail.com

rumana.aircrews@gmail.com









Best Stress Management for Business Leaders by Priyanshi Singh

Best Stress Management for Business Leaders

by Priyanshi Singh 


Stress in the workplace may be unavoidable.  Deadlines, sales quotas, budgets, fear over job security, and performance worries can all lead to anxiety at times even in great companies.  As a leader, it’s crucial that you recognise the signs of stress and take action to prevent it from becoming a problem. It’s time to take control of the workplace culture.  Good leadership means managing stress to ensure your health and to create a healthy work environment for your teams.

Pay Attention to Your Body’s Signals: - Listen to your body’s signals.  If you are experiencing these symptoms regularly, you may be experiencing prolonged stress which can be problematic.

Warning Signs of Executive Stress at Work

o Anxiety, irritability, depression

o Apathy or loss of interest in work

o Sleeping problems

o Consistent fatigue

o Trouble focusing or concentrating

o Muscle tension, headaches, migraines

o Stomach pains

 

MAKE A LIST: - Try listing out the most pressing issues with which you need to handle.  Pick one and take the first step.  Action helps you take control of the situation and feel like you are taking proactive steps to get things done.  Some leadership training experts suggest you start with the most difficult tasks first.  Others suggest starting with a few easy ones so that you can cross things off the list and feel like you’re making progress right away. Leaders are used to being responsible for everything.  The list of things that need to be accomplished and the pressure to perform can take a toll.  It helps to get started.

PRACTICE MINDFULNESS: - As a leader, you’re used to juggling a lot of important details.  Your mind is constantly working.  It may be reflecting on the past or worrying about the future.  Mindfulness is a conscious act of bringing your attention to the present. Breathe and focus on the moment with judgment.  When thoughts arise, it’s OK to make a note of them, but then let them go and return to the present.

TAKE REGULAR BREAKS: - This can be especially effective when you are struggling with a situation at work.  When you are doing “think work,” the prefrontal cortex of your brain keeps you focused on your goals.  This part of your brain is responsible for logical thinking, executive functioning, and willpower to control impulses.  Research shows that regular breaks allow your prefrontal cortex to recharge.  A lot of “aha moments” occur when you take that break.

DELEGATE TASK: - Too many executives suffer from superhero syndrome.  They believe nobody else can do as good of a job as they can, so they fail to delegate.  Instead, they feel like they always have to save the day!

You need to know what tasks your team can handle and help nurture their growth.  Can you use a task as a teaching moment for your team?  This can also help reduce your stress by training others to take on more so that you can concentrate on the bigger projects.

DON’T FOCUS ON PERFECT: - Help can also come in the form of leadership training designed to create a strong workplace culture.  This can include how to de-stress the workplace for your benefit and your employees. 

Avoiding the stress trap is surely not an easy task for someone who takes their leadership role seriously. However, being able to prioritize mental well-being and physical health over any other task is an important step that leaders must take if they want to remain effective and positive. It takes conscious effort, practice, and the willingness to improve your life to deal with stress and to prevent it from disrupting your life and your business.

Priyanshi Singh 

Manager HR  

AirCrews Aviation Pvt. Ltd.

www.AircrewsAviation.com

Priyanshi@Air-Aviator.com