The 4 Character Assets of A Self-Confident Leader

by | Happy Hour Blog: Leadership For Women | 0 comments

Self-Confident Leadership

Leadership must reflect a self-confident air … and that gets tested in the most common of daily decisions.

Picture a leader in a position of authority, wavering slightly amid a tough decision.

Could be a big issue, could be an everyday one, like those that crop up daily where self-confidence is needed.

Lead an employee through a problem, or let him struggle on his own? Trust someone, or look over her shoulder? Err on the side of the customer, or back up your customer service rep? Take a risk on an investment, or play it safe and lay low?
For those big decisions, the ones that may have bigger reverberations, the tendency is to retreat to one of two extremes. Either buckle under the situation by exposing your nervousness, or master the situation by exuding a self-confident posture, whether you have it or not.

Leadership Scenario (from the movie U-571, and cute actors are involved)

As a young Naval officer, Lt. Andrew Tyler finds himself in a dilemma while on a secret mission to take over a German U-boat. Faced with a vital decision, Lt. Tyler (Matthew McConaughey) is being stared down by his crew. His distress takes over and he states “I don’t know what to do” Although he may say it coolly, it unnerves some of the crew, including his CPO (Harvey Keitel) who pulls him aside and dresses him down about leadership:

“You’re the skipper now. And the skipper always knows what to do – whether he does or not”

Real life reflects the same. The burden of an authoritative position is figuring out the path to productivity without all parties scattering under the pressure. You are the one to keep the pieces in place despite the situation.

Four key leadership characteristics must be in play to survive these moments of truth.

One: Know Yourself

High self-awareness is an indispensable feature of an effective leader and a self-confident one. What does that mean? If I were talking about you to others, how would I describe your style, preferences, hot buttons, code of ethics, and strong suits? If you were to do the same about yourself, how wide would that gap be between your perspective and mine? The narrower the better.
For you grey-hairs, sit back and enjoy the wrinkles. Self-understanding improves with age and experience.

Two: Control Yourself

If you know your tendencies, you can deploy the best ones at the appropriate time. For example, do you tend to speak indirectly? That is a tendency that many of us have. Words like “maybe”, “I think”, “possibly”, or “might” may leave the gate open for possibilities but they all suggest conditional. And conditional implies doubtfulness. There you go – by being too careful in your language you have sent a message of irresoluteness.

Use succinct, unswerving language when the case calls for leadership. Hear the difference between

“I think we might want to go ahead with the plan”
“Let’s go forward with this plan”

Controlling your tendencies is an everyday effort. Know and control yours.

Three: Know your assets.

Not just those within you, but those within the people that with whom you work. The best leaders have the quality of resourcefulness and know how to use the abilities of those surrounding you as a tool for results. Deploy them like a chef integrating the key ingredients of a complicated recipe.

Four: Control the Situation

You may not be able to control the outcome, but you can control how you are reacting to it as well as who you put into a self-confident play. Clearly distinguish between what you know and what you do not know about the circumstances. In some cases, it may be useful to initiate a discussion with that as a template.

Admitting the grimness of the situation is not a bad idea. It puts the severity of the issue on the table and calls the parties into the battle against a common cause. But there is a slight difference between looking unsure and cleverly drawing out the unknowns into a plan as a call to arms for your people. Make sure yours shows confidence.
When fear or self-doubt enter the picture, the last thing you want to do is reveal it. Even Inspector Clouseau had a penchant for looking confident in his convictions. You can too, Cato.