Leaders Born or Made
Leaders Born or Made
Leaders Born or Made
Focus on leadership development first, selection second. - Don't be seduced by your past success: Continue your personal leadership development throughout your career. - Take concrete steps to grow leadership capacity in your company - looking within, rather than outside for your leaders.
business, skill in managing relationships, a sense of independence, and leadership. Hardship taught personal limits and strengths, while success bred confidence and an understanding of one's distinct skills. Diversity in experiences developed breadth and different bosses modeled values and taught key lessons. This mix set the stage for leadership ability to take hold. Opportunity cannot be overlooked. Frequently circumstances beyond all of the players' control led to opportunity for leadership to emerge. Thus, leadership must still be understood as a complex equation of birth and early childhood factors, shaped by later life experiences and opportunity. Conger and others in the "leadership is learned" (to some degree) school see opportunity in two lights. There is the opportunity of unforseeable circumstances mentioned above and there is the opportunity that can be designed and managed by those responsible for leader development. But he cautions that the best designed programs of leadership development - whatever their structure or intensity - are contingent on the motivational desire of the candidates. It appears that many gifted leaders choose not to lead when given the opportunity. The price is too great, the timing not right, the rewards too small and they settle for something else. Elements of leadership can be taught. But to be successful, training must be designed to (1) develop and refine certain of the teachable skills, (2) improve the conceptual abilities of managers, (3) tap individuals' personal needs, interests, and self-esteem, and (4) help managers see and move beyond their interpersonal blocks. The leadership training programs now available throughout the U.S. (and the world) can be broken down into a similar four emphases. Each of the leading companies providing leadership development seems to emphasize one of the following four factors over the others (though all tend to include some aspects of the other three as well): (1) leadership skills development, (2) conceptual thinking, (3) personal growth experiences, or (4) feedback. Biola University's M.A. in Organizational Leadership is designed to incorporate all four of these leadership development emphases while it focuses on those elements of leadership that can most effectively be taught in a highly dynamic university setting. FOR MORE INFORMATION ON THE MOL CONTACT: Master of Arts in Organizational Leadership Dept. School of Professional Studies, Biola University sarah.ailes@biola.edu (562) 906-4571 Request Information Footnotes 1 W.G. Bennis and B. Nanus, Leaders: The Strategies of Taking Charge (San Francisco: HaperCollins, 1985). 2 J. Conger, Learning to Lead, (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1992), 33. 3 W.M. McCall, M.M. Lombardo, and A.M. Morrison, The Lessons of Experience (Lexington, Mass: Lexington Press, 1988), 3-5. 4 J.P. Kotter, A Force for Change: How Leadership Differs from Management (New York: Free Press, 1990), 124-125.