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effective leaders
Needs-Based Leaders
They Gain Competitive Advantage
By Marie R. Miyashiro
 

EFFECTIVE LEADERS understand personal, team, and organizational needs and can distinguish needs from strategies. Fluency in understanding the needs can be called empathy. Many people think empathy is solely about listening to others and understanding their feelings. However, they often don’t realize the value of feelings as accessible indicators of needs. Keep reading this article below >>

 
 
 
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NVC Quote of the Month

"In many of the organizations I've worked with, people can't talk
about their feelings.
Nobody cares about what you feel and need. It's all about production."

"But when you can't
express your feelings and needs, when you just keep going into intellectual discussions about different strategies, you end up with unproductive use of time
by not getting down to the root of the problem."

 
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Needs-Based Leaders... continued

A so-called negative feeling indicates an unmet need; a positive feeling indicates a met need. At its most effective level, empathy requires honestly assessing your own feelings and needs and then connecting with the feelings and needs of others. When both happen, you increase the likelihood of meeting more needs.

In meeting needs, you decrease the likelihood of conflict and improve productivity— and with higher productivity come greater profits.

Empathy on Three Levels

Effective leaders are skilled in empathy on the intrapersonal, interpersonal, and organizational levels.

1. Intrapersonal level. Needs-based leadership first involves being the leader of your own mind. It calls for being self-connected, with a sense of personal needs and values. For example, you may have a need for integrity, progress, meaning, or making a contribution. Steve Jobs needed to make a difference in the world with Apple. Needs run far deeper than wishes, wants, or requests. They’re powerful motivators. A needs- or values-based perspective helps you achieve more in an innovative way. When you become the leader of your own mind, you’re less triggered by what you hear or see around you. You have a steady reference point within yourself—a compass by which to navigate change.

Consider Bill Gore, founder of W. L. Gore & Associates, creators of Gore-Tex® waterproof material and other technology-driven innovations. Gore held the values of relationships and employee autonomy and cooperation, a vision evident in its website, www.gore.com. For years, W. L. Gore & Associates was considered one of the best places to work.

When you are the leader of your own mind, you can maintain your inner clarity, which your team and organization can then mirror. Take the example of Nick Swinmurn, later joined by Tony Hsieh, who built Zappos, an online shoe company, into an organization so successful it was bought by Amazon in 2009 and allowed to run as an independent entity. These leaders had a need to enjoy their work as well as be financially successful. This led to a culture that not only embraces and drives change, but is known for its fun.

When you become aware of your feelings, you can begin to discern the needs they indicate. When you understand your needs—such as consistency, clarity, honesty, individuality, consideration, order—you can make requests of yourself or others to meet those needs, and when needs are met, productivity rises.

2. Interpersonal level. The interpersonal aspect of empathy is how leaders engage with their team. What qualities do people want most from their leaders. Rather than wanting vision, purpose, drive, or wisdom from their leaders, people most wanted trust, compassion, stability, hope, honesty, integrity, respect, and empathy.

Connecting with others and seeing what’s going on for them and being (as well as being perceived as) someone who cares about the human side of the equation are attributes of authentic leaders. People want and expect it.

As a leader, you can help bring out and meet the needs of others, which in turn, increases productivity and leads to collaboration and a sense of being connected to others and to a shared purpose. Needs involved in interaction between leader and team include trust, respect, and collaboration. Those three are enhanced and encouraged by empathic connections. Team leaders who can discern the feelings and needs (values) beneath what is said can create mutual respect and trust with their team members. Failure to do so is much more likely to foster misunderstandings.

3. Organizational level. The leader’s role is to facilitate a shared understanding of six basic organizational needs: the three Source needs of Identity, Life- Affirming Purpose, and Direction, and the three Leveraging needs of Structure, Energy, and Expression.

Zappos began as an online purveyor of quality shoes and since expanded its line of products, thus morphing its Identity while maintaining its promise of quality. Clearly, the core value that drives the company is over-the-top customer service. Because of the company’s clarity and consistency about this core value of its Identity and Life-Affirming Purpose, its growth has been exponential.

An organization’s Identity and Life-Affirming Purpose (why it exists) must be guided by its Direction (where it’s going). These needs are supported by its Structure, driven by its Energy (profit, morale, and technology), and manifest through its Expression (unique position in the marketplace and world).

Needs Versus Strategies

In every interaction, the empathic approach is: Connect-Think-Act. In the Connect phase, you discover your values/ needs; in the Think phase, you plan strategies based on your needs; in the Act phase, you implement your strategies.

Followers tend to work from a strategy-based perspective, skipping the Connect phase; true leaders work from a needs-based perspective. This is beneficial since conflict occurs only at the strategy level, not at the needs level.

When leaders coalesce people around needs, they decrease the odds of conflict and increase productivity.

Leaders facilitate the creation of a system that leads to more empathic connection with the customer—a way to systematically track and understand the customer’s needs. The information is gathered from and shared with the entire organization. This is how your efforts can lead to system change.

Your needs-based approach to leadership can effectively drive strategy, team productivity, marketing, product and program development, and sales since it facilitates collaboration, innovation, and managing changes in the market and workplace. The approach is based on the Nonviolent Communication Process.

ACTION: Become a needs-based leader.

Marie R. Miyashiro, APR is president of Elucity Network, an empathy-based training firm, and author of The Empathy Factor. Visit www.EmpathyFactorAtWork.com.

Reprinted with permission of Leadership Excellence:
1-877-250-1983

 

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effective leaders

"If an organization values 'production over all else,' where that's the only thing that counts, human
feelings, human needs, humanness doesn't matter.

The company pays for this
in terms of both morale and production, because when people believe that their feelings and needs
are not understood, production will go down."
~ Marshall Rosenberg, from Speak Peace in a World
of Conflict