Lead With Impact, Not Ego: Ditching ‘Watch Me Swim’ Leadership

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Have you ever encountered a “watch me swim” leader?

This is the person who insists on letting you know about every accomplishment they’ve achieved, no matter how small or insignificant. The attitude is very similar to the child splashing around the swimming pool, desperate for the grown-ups to notice their aquatic abilities.

For children in the pool it’s cute. For leaders, it’s a problem that can undermine their effectiveness because:

  • It appears self-serving

  • It erodes trust in followers

  • It diminishes respect among other more secure leaders

Effective leaders avoid such desperate seeking of the spotlight. They move with a quiet confidence that focuses on results for the team or organization which instills trust and momentum.

As a leader, you can avoid the “Watch Me Swim” trap, by first recognizing these early warning signs…

1. Embellishing the significance of accomplishments

“Watch Me Swim” leaders are often quick to congratulate themselves. A leader I know was called on the mat for sending an email to his board celebrating the fact that “Fourth quarter results were up significantly over third quarter results.”

But fourth quarter results were always up significantly over third quarter results in that organization. It was merely part of an historical trend. And the board knew it.

Ouch.

2. Implying credit for achievements you had little to do with

I knew a senior pastor who announced to his board that, on his watch, “baptisms had increased 20 percent”. What he didn’t mention was that virtually all of those baptisms had come out of youth ministry, and he really had had no part of this whatsoever.

In effect he was caught saying, “Watch Me Swim”, and it hurt his credibility.

3. “Spinning” lack of results

“Watch Me Swim” leaders have a way of attributing poor results to any factor other than their own leadership.

Market conditions, a new competitor in town, a weakening economy, all of these can affect results. But to hear the “Watch Me Swim” leader tell it, you’d think these were the only reasons for poor performance.

4. Making news out of the un-newsworthy

A leader I know once trumpeted the news in an annual report that, under his leadership, there had been an increase in staff punctuality. I suppose that’s good, but hardly worthy of mention in an annual report. He was really simply saying, “Watch Me Swim”.

Each of these symptoms reflects lack of security in leadership. Watch for these warning signs; they could be telling you that insecurity is creeping into your leadership. When this happens it’s time to walk away from the need for the spotlight, and move into quiet, self-assured leadership.

Otherwise “Watch Me Swim” could soon turn into “Help- I’m Drowning”.

the author

Scott Cochrane

Lifelong learner, practitioner and coach of leadership, across more than 50 countries. Follower of Jesus, husband of Nora, grateful parent and grandparent.

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