Your Leadership Legacy
by Regina Barr
Published on this site: January 9th, 2006 - See
more articles from this month

When the New Year is upon us most smart business people take
inventory and make plans for the coming year. Most of these
actions focus on external items, like deciding on how many
widgets you are going to make and sell, or how many new clients
you hope to acquire by the end of the first quarter. While
this type of inventory and planning is necessary, it is important
as a business leader that you take time to inventory and plan
for your own development as a leader, and this involves both
reflection and introspection.
A good place to start is simply by asking yourself the
question: what do you want people to say about your impact
as a leader 10, 20 or 30 years from now? Or what would you
like your leadership legacy to be? Even better: write down
your responses to both of these questions. What comes out
on paper may surprise you.
Cartoonist Johnny Hart once noted that a legacy is "something
that one should be able to hand down, without having to trump
up." It is not a strategic plan that can be nicely quantified
and measured. Rather, it is the sum of all of the outcomes
resulting from our behavior that others continue to remember
about us.That's the key here - it's what others continue to remember
about us, not how we remember ourselves. Put another way,
it is the cumulative record of how others think we measure
up to the person that we had intended to be or that they expect
us to be.
Take a moment to think of some of the current or former
public or corporate leaders that have been in the news during
the past year: The Apprentice's, Donald Trump; The Oprah
Winfrey Show's, Oprah Winfrey; South Dakota's former Senator,
Tom Daschle; LA Laker's Guard, Kobe Bryant; Martha Stewart
Omnimedia, Martha Stewart; Secretary of State, Condolezzaa
Rice; and U.S. President, George W. Bush. For most of us,
it is probably very easy to articulate their leadership legacy
- the good, the bad, and the ugly.
So, what can you do as a leader to insure that your legacy
is the one that you want to be remembered for? First, successful
leaders have a strong sense of their personal values beyond
their business values. They have a personal mission and vision
for their life as well as their business. And, as you probably
guessed, the most successful leaders are those who have found
a way to combine the two proactively.
Second, successful leaders have passion. Find what you are
passionate about in life and then find a way to incorporate
this into your life in some way every single day. To me, passion
can be defined as the current that propels us forward to fulfill
a purpose or a goal. It is often the source of the creativity,
energy, rejuvenation, and inspiration, that all leaders rely
on everyday in order to be effective. For me, that passion
revolves around helping others be successful leaders.
And finally, successful leaders take time every day for personal
reflection and renewal. Reflection is critical because self-reflection
is the greatest source that we have for tapping into our own
self-knowledge. And, it is by tapping into our own self-knowledge
that we grow both personally and professionally, helping us
to become the authentic leaders we hope to be.
If you hope to obtain greater self-knowledge, the only way
to do that is to find time for silence. In today's 24/7 media-bombarded
world, there are fewer and fewer opportunities that present
themselves naturally for reflection. That's why it is critical
that you schedule time for reflection as frequently as you
can. Daily would be best but weekly and monthly can work too.
You don't always have control about what people will remember
as your leadership legacy. However, there are things that
you can do to ensure that you are remembered the way you want
to be remembered. Identifying what you would like your leadership
legacy to be is a good first step. Combine that with a strong
sense of your personal values and your passion, and, take
time for personal reflection and renewal, and you will be
well on your way to achieving a lasting legacy that you can
be proud of.

Regina Barr is a business consultant with a passion
for helping companies develop their full potential by focusing
on their most valuable asset: their people. For more information
on her programs and services, check out her website, http://www.RedLadder.com
and sign up for her free email newsletter, Developing People...Inspiring
Success.

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