Updated from January 3, 2012 post
With less than two months to go until the 2015 Global Leadership Summit, the level of energy in the hallways of the Willow Creek Association is on the rise.
At this week’s executive team meeting we reviewed some of what must take place within this relatively short period of time in order to ensure a successful event. With some 110,000 people expected to take in the event in the United States, and later another 140,000 around the world, the stakes are high.
These are the seasons when leaders must up their game, calling the most out of themselves and those they lead.
As I wrote in this earlier post, sometimes leaders must simply know when to punch their amp up to 11.
Fans of the classic comedy film This is Spinal Tap know exactly what I’m talking about.
This “mock-umentary” about an aging British rock band features a hilarious scene in which the lead guitarist (Nigel, played by Christopher Guest) tries vainly to explain the extra power contained in his guitar’s amplifier.
“You see, most blokes will be playing on 10…where can you go from there? Nowhere! Exactly…But what we do, if we need that extra push over the cliff, what we do is we go up to 11. One louder.”
As silly as that scene plays, leaders need to know when it’s time to go one louder; when it’s time to go up to “11”. In other words, leaders need to know how and when to call for the very best out of their team; even beyond the level of their normal level of performance.
It’s time to turn the performance level of your team up to 11 when:
1. The size or complexity of an approaching challenge requires extraordinary team effort to overcome,
2. A long season of “business as usual” has allowed the team to drift into cruise-control,
3. You want to provide an opportunity for new leaders to emerge,
4. The team hasn’t experienced a “win” in a long time,
5. A window of opportunity presents itself, requiring “all hands on deck” to seize the opportunity.
Effective leaders know that from time to time it is necessary to unleash the team’s full potential and to lead them to operate at a higher than usual level of energy.
You can’t over do it, or you’ll risk burning out the team. But if you want to get the most out of your team, you need to know when to call the very best out of them.
In the situations described here, it means cranking them up to 11.
How do you know when it’s time to go up to 11?