Time changes everything except
something within us which is always surprised by change – Thomas Hardy
In a recent
USA Today feature (http://usat.ly/ROMSvv) leaders from various walks of life
shared their insights as to what they believe world will look like in 30 years.
It was a fascinating read. Here are a few highlights.
Bill Ford,
executive chairman of the Ford Motor sees exciting developments in the future
of ground transportation over the next three decades: a world in which cars
will run on electricity, hydrogen or other energy alternatives and will be
interconnected with smart phones in ways that make getting from one place to
another more efficient and safer than ever. They have even begun tinkering with
systems that monitor pollen counts for asthma suffers and heartbeats for heart
patients.
British
entrepreneur Richard Branson predicts space flight will be nearly as common for
travelers as taking a plane trip. “In the past 30 years, only 500 people have
been to space. I suspect in the next 30 years there may be like 5 million
people who will have had the opportunity to become astronauts,” he said.
Sebastian
Thrun, a Google vice president and Stanford research professor best known for
his role in building Google’s driverless cars has some amazing predictions
about the future of education. He believes that learning will be free and
available to everyone who wants it while operating like a whimsical playground:
No one is late for class, failure is not an option, and a lesson looks
something like Angry Birds, the physics-based puzzle game.
While it is
hard to imagine what life will be like in 30 years these predictions made for
compelling reading and speculation. It also caused me to give consideration as
to the future of leadership and what it too will look like. We can get a
glimpse of what leadership will look like in 30 years by looking to the top
companies for leadership development today.
Earlier this
year, the Hay Group, the global management consulting firm, released its
seventh annual Best Companies for Leadership Study and Top 20 list (http://bit.ly/gTOaLU). The study ranks the best companies
for leadership around the world and examples of how those companies nurture
talent and foster innovation. This year, General Electric topped the list,
followed by Proctor & Gamble, IBM, Microsoft and Coca-Cola.
Key findings from the Hay Group include: 100% of the Best Companies let all employees behave like leaders. Only
54% of peers do likewise; leadership boosts the bottom line. Best companies
outperform the S&P 500 almost 2x over 10 years; 90% of Best Companies let
employees bypass the chain of command with an excellent idea; in Best
Companies, 95% of senior leaders take time to actively develop others. Only 45%
of leaders at peer companies do this.
Shaping the
future of leadership is not as complicated as space travel nor does it require
futuristic technology. Leadership in 2042 is being determined by our actions
and beliefs today. Here are three reminders worth review as you consider the
future of leadership.
Build a strong foundation. Your core values and principles are
what define you, sustain you, and cause you to endure. The foundations of
leadership are built on time-tested principles that include trust, loyalty,
relationships, and servanthood to name a few. Re-package and market it any way
you choose, but these will always be the underlying principles of whatever
“new” leadership trend that emerges.
Invest in others. The succession of leadership and what
it will look like in 2042 is being determined by the relationships and
investments you make in others today. When you build the leadership potential
in others (family, colleagues, students, etc.) you are securing the leadership
of the next generation. As the Hay Group points out, those who are committed to
building strong leadership in others are the leaders in their industry now and
in the future.
Commitment to a personal growth plan.
The shape and future
of leadership depends on your personal growth plan. Charlie “Tremendous” Jones summed it up best
when he said, “You’re the same today as you’ll be in five years except for two
things: the people you meet and the books you read.” Personal growth does not
happen by accident. It happens when you have a plan and execute it.
Shaping the
future of leadership begins one leader at a time and it begins with you. Are
you ready?
© 2012 Doug Dickerson
* What are your thoughts on shaping the future of leadership? Share them in the comment box below!
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