Thread regarding ExxonMobil Corp. layoffs

Is XOM Still Following The 8 Rules of Leadership by Jack Welch?

The 8 Rules of Leadership by Jack Welch
BY DANA SEVERSON
@DANEROBERT

Leadership is best taught by example. Follow these eight indisputable rules directly from the playbook of the former head of GE.

Leadership is all about growing others. It's about your team and its welfare. It's about your direct reports and their performance.

Leadership is a tough act. It's a daily balancing act. As a leader, you're expected to use your insight, experience, and rigor to balance the conflicting demands of short- and long-term results.

So, what do leaders do? Does leadership have rules? Former General Electric boss Jack Welch says so in his classic 2009 book Winning, which he wrote with Suzy Welch.

His rules of leadership are as follows:

  1. Leaders relentlessly upgrade their team, using every encounter as an opportunity to evaluate, coach, and build self-confidence.

The team with the best players wins--and leaders should expend their energy and time in evaluating, coaching, and building the self-confidence of team members.

"People development," Welch writes, "should be a daily event, integrated into every aspect of your regular goings-on."

As a leader, it's important to recognize and acknowledge the good work of your team in order to continue to encourage peak performance, why instilling confidence.

  1. Leaders make sure people not only see the vision, but they also live and breathe it.

Good leaders cast the vision of the future and motivate people to buy into it. They constantly talk about their vision and reinforce it with rewards, which may be in the form of a salary, bonus, or significant recognition of some sort.

Even without the rewards, just sharing your vision as a leader can in itself bring about the motivation your team needs to accomplish the most difficult of assignments.

  1. Leaders get into everyone's skin, exuding positive energy and optimism.

Effective leaders fight the negative forces of life and encourage their teams with a high level of optimism that keeps members upbeat.

Welch says they do not allow a bad economy or brutal competition to put them down to the extent that their team catches the bug.

Why? "Unhappy tribes have a tough time winning," Welch writes.

Nothing brings down the morale of a team more than an unenthusiastic or disengaged leader. Your job is to be part coach and part cheerleader.

  1. Leaders establish trust with candor, transparency, and credit.

Welch decries a situation where leaders hoard information that could benefit direct reports in the performance of their duties. This, he says, drains trust right out of a team. And that, "trust happens when leaders are transparent, candid, and keep their word."

Leaders, he also says, establish trust by giving credit where it is due. They detest a situation where they'll take credit for someone else's idea or work.

If you want your team to be transparent with you, you need to lead by example.

  1. Leaders have the courage to make unpopular decisions and gut calls.

Effective leaders listen to their gut, Welch says, regardless of what team members think.

"Obviously," he writes, "tough calls spawn complaints and resistance. Your job is to listen and explain yourself clearly but move forward. Do not dwell or cajole."

Decision making is ultimately what you'll be judged on as a leader, as your choices could determine the overall success of the organization. With transparency, trust and a clear vision, you'll find that your team will stand behind your decisions (right or wrong).

  1. Leaders probe and push with a curiosity that borders on skepticism, making sure their questions are answered with action.

To get bigger and better solutions, Welch says leaders probe proposals and presentations by asking questions and stirring up a healthy debate.

He writes:

"When you're a leader, your job is to have all the questions. You have to be incredibly comfortable looking like the dumbest person in the room. Every conversation you have about a decision, a proposal, or a piece of market information has to be filled with you saying, 'What if?' and 'Why not?' and 'How come?'"

Challenging your employees is an art, not a science. Each individual requires a unique approach. It's your job as a leader to get their best without diminishing their productivity.

  1. Leaders inspire risk taking and learning by setting the example.

"Winning companies," Welch writes, "embrace risk-taking and learning." Leaders set the example and encourage team members to experiment without being afraid of making mistakes.

Experimentation is a major key to growth. Make sure your team feels confident in making mistakes.

  1. Leaders celebrate

While noting that leaders don't celebrate enough, the former GE boss advocates that leaders make a big deal out of small wins because "celebrating makes people feel like winners and creates an atmosphere of recognition and positive energy."

Don't be afraid in celebrating early and often. Far too many leaders believe celebrating small victories leads to complacency. Nothing could be further from the truth.

https://www.inc.com/dana-severson/these-8-simple-rules-of-leadership-from-jack-welch-are-more-important-now-than-ever-before.html

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Post ID: @OP+1atSMRaD

3 replies (most recent on top)

Jack Welch also terminated the employment of the bottom 10% of GE employees every year when he was the CEO. At some point, every CEO needs to wake up and realize that their corporation no longer has any "poor performers" after 2 or 3 years of firing the bottom 10%.

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Post ID: @1hmf+1atSMRaD

Jack Welch made GE successful, but he's also partially responsible for GE's fall. There's no need to follow his words as gospel.

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Post ID: @nct+1atSMRaD

Tearing up the Jack Welch playbook
The Six Sigma master was once the undisputed authority in management. But Fortune is finding that today's smart CEOs are following a different set of rules.
By Betsy Morris, Fortune senior writer
July 11 2006

NEW YORK (Fortune) -- Once upon a time, there was a route to success that corporate America agreed on. But in today's fast-changing landscape, that old formula is getting tired.

New Rules vs. Old Rules

1 Agile is best; being big can bite you. / Big dogs own the street.
2 Find a niche, create something new. / Be No. 1 or No. 2 in your market.
3 The customer is king. / Shareholders rule.
4 Look out, not in. / Be lean and mean.
5 Hire passionate people. / Rank your players; go with the A's.
6 Hire a courageous CEO. / Hire a charismatic CEO.
7 Admire my soul. / Admire my might.

  • What came to be known as Jack's Rules are by now the business equivalent of holy writ, bedrock wisdom that has been open to interpretation, perhaps, but not dispute....Corporate America needs a new playbook. The challenge facing U.S. business leaders is greater than ever before, yet they have less control than ever - and less job security. The volatility of the markets is so unpredictable, the pressure from hedge funds and private-equity investors so relentless, the competition from China and India so intense, that the edicts of the past are starting to feel out of date....The practices that brought Welch, Goizueta, and others such success were developed to battle problems specific to a time and place in history. And they worked. No one questions today that bloated bureaucracy can ki-l a business. No one forgets the shareholder - far from it. Yet those threats have receded. And they have been replaced by new ones. The risk we now face is applying old solutions to new problems....

***

Cheered on by academics, consulting firms and investors, more and more companies tried to defy history (and their own reality) to sustain growth and dazzle Wall Street as Welch was doing. Accounting tricks, acquisition mania, outright thievery - executives went overboard.... In breathtakingly short order, the rock star of business is no longer the guy atop the FORTUNE 500 (today Rex Tillerson at ExxonMobil), but the very guy those FORTUNE 500 types used to love to ridicule: Steve Jobs at Apple.

The biggest feat of the decade is not making the elephant dance, as Lou Gerstner famously did at IBM, but inventing the iPod and transforming an industry. Dell spectacularly upended Compaq and Hewlett-Packard, yet few big companies paid close enough attention to see that new technologies and business models were negating the power of economies of scale in myriad ways. Nobody has proved that more than Google....

http://money.cnn.com/2006/07/10/magazines/fortune/rules.fortune/index.htm?cnn=yes

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