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As A Leader How To Provide Guidance Your People Will Follow

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Release Date: 03/12/2025

Common Leader Achilles’ Heels show art Common Leader Achilles’ Heels

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

We know the name Achilles because of Brad Pitt and Hollywood or we may have read the Iliad.  He was a famous mythical Greek hero whose body was invulnerable, except for the back of his heel.  His mother plunged him into the river Styx to protect his body, but her fingertips covered the heel, leaving it vulnerable.  Research by Dr. Jack Zenger identified four common elements which comprise Achilles’ heels for leaders. Blind spots are a problem for all of us.  We can’t see our foibles, issues and problems, but they are blindingly obvious to everyone else working for...

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Are You Authentically Aggressive Or Assertive As A Leader show art Are You Authentically Aggressive Or Assertive As A Leader

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

In today’s business world, leaders need to be “authentic” leaders. We have all come across this somewhere, endorsed by self-proclaimed gurus and prophets.  I often ponder what does that actually mean?  I am sure all of those Japanese leaders screaming abuse at their staff, when they make mistakes, are being authentic.  They are authentically terrible, dictatorial, abusive leaders.  Actually this worked like a charm for a very long time in postwar Japan.  You joined a company for life and there was only one route for those who changed jobs and that was down into a...

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Three Tools To Engage Your Team show art Three Tools To Engage Your Team

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Engaging your team as a leader is a relatively new idea.  When I first started work in the early 70s, none of my bosses spent a nanosecond thinking about they could engage their staff as a leader.  What they were thinking about was catching mistakes, incompetence, error and willful negligence, before these problems went nuclear.  That meant micro managing everyone.  “Management by walking around” meant checking up on people.  The construct was that the team were problematic and the boss needed to have forensic skills to stop problems escalating.  That was the...

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How To Be A Role Model As A Leader show art How To Be A Role Model As A Leader

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Smirks emerge quite quickly when you mention “role model” and “leaders” in the same breath.  Most peoples’ experiences with leaders as role models have been that they encompass the “what not do as a leader” variety.  Hanmen Kyoshi (反面教師) or teacher by negative example, as we have noted in Japanese.  What are some of the things we should be focused on in our quest to become a real role model for our teams? We can break the role model aspect into four major areas: Self-Aware; Accountability; Others-Focused and Strategic.  Within these four categories,...

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The New Leader Mindset Shift Needed show art The New Leader Mindset Shift Needed

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

We are recognised for our capabilities and potential and promoted into our first leadership role.  We have been given charge over our colleagues and now have additional responsibilities.  In many cases we don’t move into a pure “off the tools” leadership role. We are more likely to be a player/leader hybrid, because we have our own clients and also produce revenue outcomes.  One of the biggest difficulties is knowing how to balance the roles of “doer” and “urger”.  Jealousy, bruised egos, sabotage, mild insurrection can be found amongst our former colleagues...

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Four Superheroes Of Coaching For Leaders show art Four Superheroes Of Coaching For Leaders

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

We have seen Hollywood pumping out comic heroes as movie franchises to get the money flowing into the studios.  The premise is always the same.  The super hero comes to the rescue and saves everyone.  What about for leaders when coaching their team members?  Fortunately, we have four super heroes we can rely on to help us do a better job as the leader. They are Encourage, Focus, Elevate and Empower. Encouraging our team sounds pretty unheralded and straightforward. But do we actually do it?  Leaders are busy people and have tons of pressure on their shoulders. ...

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Working Through Others Who Are Not Working show art Working Through Others Who Are Not Working

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

The chain of command is a well established military leadership given.  I have three stripes, you have none, so do what I say or else.  In the post war period, this leadership idea was transposed across to Civvy street by returning soldiers.  This worked like a charm and only started to peter out with the pushback against the Vietnam War, when all authority began to be challenged.  Modern leaders are currently enamoured with concepts like the “servant leader”.  The leader serves the team as an enabler for staff success.  Dominant authority is out and a vague...

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House Clean The Team Every Year show art House Clean The Team Every Year

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Japan has a wonderful year end tradition where the entire house is given a massive clean up. Dust is dispatched, junk is devolved and everything is made shipshape.  We need to do the same with our business and I don’t mean cleaning up your desk.  We have two types of people working for us.  There are those who receive a salary of some dimension, be they full time or part-time and then there are those who get paid for their services.  Some of these services are delivered regularly throughout the year.  Others are intermittent, on a needs basis.  Regardless, we...

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Is Japanese Charisma The Same As Western Charisma show art Is Japanese Charisma The Same As Western Charisma

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

I met the owner of a successful business recently.  He had bought the company twenty years ago and then pivoted it to a new and more successful direction.  So successful, that he employs over 230 staff and was recently listed on the local stock exchange.  It was a business meeting to discuss collaboration and I was expecting an entrepreneurial leader, charismatic and personally powerful.  Why was that my expectation?  Being raised in Australia, that is what successful entrepreneurs in the West are like, so I expected a Japanese equivalent.  He was totally...

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Leadership Silk Purses From Sow's Ears show art Leadership Silk Purses From Sow's Ears

THE Leadership Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

The ad on social media said, “we are looking for sales A players”.  I know the guy who put out the ad and he had recently moved to a new company, a new entrant into Japan and they were aggressively going after market share here.  I was thinking I would love to be able to recruit A players for sales as well, but I can’t.  The simple reason is that A players in Japan are seriously expensive.  If you are a big company, with deep pockets in a highly profitable sector, then this is a no brainer.  Why would you bother with B or C players, if you can afford A players?...

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Giving people orders is fine and fun, when you are the leader.  Not so great when you are on the receiving end though.  Collaboration and innovation are two seismic shifts in workstyle  that are fundamentally different from the way most leaders were educated.  Command and control were more the order of business back in the day.  Hierarchy was clear, bosses brooked no opposing ideas or opinions and everyone below knew their place.  Things have moved on, but have the bosses moved on with it?

Basically, the people you see in your daily purview are arraigned against a similar team in another steel and glass, high rise monstrosity somewhere across town.  The quality of their teamwork and their ideas determines who wins in today’s marketplace.  All the cogs have to intersect smoothly and the quality and speed of the output are the differentiators.  Are your salespeople better than the opposition, is the marketing department punching above its weight, are your mid level leaders really rocking it?  Clarity of purpose, inculcation into the cult of the WHY, dedication combined with smarts, make so much difference when competing with rival organisations.

The leaders are what make the difference.  They are hiring the people, training them and promoting them.  There are so many deeper aspects to this.  Is the culture profound or anaemic?  Is talent recognised, rewarded and embraced as a competitive advantage or are we checking the age and seniority of the straps on the slave galley oars?  What is the communication mode?  Is this monologue boss city or are we engaging with a firestorm of vibrant, powerful ideas from below.  Is the boss the chief know-it-all or the orchestra conductor, moulding the raw untrained troops into a stellar team?

Communication is at the center piece to all of this.  When the boss communication is focused on direct orders on the what and how all day long, we breed robots.  Why don’t we push ourselves much higher and go for motivational leadership, where words capture souls and move mountains.  The key to this pivot is to dump the olde style locker room halftime rousing call for maximum blood and guts in the second half.  Today’s sports coaches are geniuses of psychology.  They know their athletes’ temperaments, aspirations, fears and hot buttons at such an intimate level, that it is simply breathtaking.

Bosses have to be in the same mould.  Knowing each person thoroughly as an individual is the starting point.  On top of that is knowing what they are trying to achieve.  We become their cagy corner man in the ring, wiping away the blood and helping to focus their dizzy brains through the fog of the daily beatings going on in the marketplace. 

When we tell someone what to do, all we do is trigger negativity.  Their cynical brains are burning with reasons why that is a bad idea. They feel the prime insult of being told what to do and consequently lack interest in executing a plan not of their own design, desire or creation.  The reason they are so sceptical is that the plan is unleashed in a finished format, with no context or background attached.

We need to get to the point tangentially with a short story.  By the way, we don’t say, “I am going to tell you a story from my glorious past”.  That would be amusing. I would love to see their reaction to that little doozy of an opener.  No, instead we go straight into a place in time, to a location they can identify, with people they probably will know and we spin a yarn, a true yarn, about what happened to us and what we learnt from it.  This whole narrative is short, under two minutes.  We certainly don’t flag our conclusion MBA executive summary style at the start.  No, we are more crafty than that.  We are like Iga Ninja, luring the listener into our web of charm. We expose the background that led us to an experience and viewpoint on a topic.  At the very end, we give them the order, the action we want them to take and then we finish off with the benefit to doing it that way.

Next comes the hard bit for olde style leaders like me.  We ask them if they can see a way of taking that idea or method further and bettering it.  The old ego can take a battering at this point, when they trot out their half baked and crappy ideas, with all the aplomb of tender, ignorant youth.  That is why we make an important intervention. We say, “Get together with others, you select them and then together think about what I have said and come back to me tomorrow with your best ideas”.  This momentum breaker is important, otherwise only first phase, shallow musings will spill out of their mouths. We have also forced them to collaborate with their peers, giving us a better chance to reap richer alternatives.

In the end, they either adopt your suggestion as the best alternative or they adapt and improve on it.  Either way, they have been given ownership of the next steps and so are more likely to execute it with commitment and enthusiasm, compared to following your lofty commands.  This is a different way of leading. It is the methodology needed to match the future of work we are all facing.