Great Motivation Secrets of Great Leaders
By John Baldoni
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About this ebook
How the world's most successful leaders inspire their people to get things done
Great Motivation Secrets of Great Leaders explores the leadership styles of many of the world's most influential leaders in business, the military, sports, and politics and extracts powerful lessons that managers can put to work in their organizations. Drawing upon his years of experience as a leadership consultant, visionary, and coach, John Baldoni, author of the highly successful Great Communication Secrets of Great Leaders:
- Reveals the motivational techniques of Sam Walton, Mary Kay Ash, Ronald Reagan, Colleen Barrett, Col. David Hackworth, Earvin “Magic” Johnson, and other influential leaders
- Distills the proven motivational techniques of great leaders into core strategies and step-by-step solutions
- Explains ways for managers to use these techniques in everyday situations
John Baldoni
John Baldoni, presidente de Baldoni Consulting LLC, es un coach ejecutivo reconocido internacionalmente, conferencista y autor. En 2011, Leadership Gurus International lo clasificó nº 11 en la lista de los mejores 30 expertos de liderazgo del mundo. Es colaborador regular en línea para CBS MoneyWatch, Inc y Harvard Business Review.
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Great Motivation Secrets of Great Leaders - John Baldoni
PRAISE FOR GREAT MOTIVATION SECRETS OF GREAT LEADERS
"The essence of effective leadership is persuading others to follow your lead. We call it motivation. Great Motivation Secrets gets to the heart of how leaders create conditions for motivation to occur by energizing their minds, encouraging their hearts, and exhorting their spirits."
—John Maxwell, America’s preeminent author
on leadership and founder of Maximum Impact
"When John Baldoni writes on leadership, I pay close attention. Great Motivation Secrets is his best book yet. After you read it, I know you’ll agree with me."
—Pat Williams, Senior Vice President, Orlando Magic
"Rousing others for common cause is essential but elusive. For fresh insight into what makes the difference, John Baldoni offers compelling portraits of leading figures who have done it, ranging from Colleen Barrett of Southwest Airlines to Magic Johnson and Ernest Shackleton. Great Motivation Secrets of Great Leaders reveals what we all must do if we are to be great at inspiring others to a cause."
—Michael Useem, Professor and Director of the
Wharton School’s Leadership Center and author of
Leading Up and The Leadership Moment
"Leaders accomplish very little by themselves. In fact the job of leadership is to bring others along with you. That requires motivation. You can learn a great deal about how leaders motivate through example, communication, and coaching in Great Motivation Secrets. Baldoni reveals insights you can put into practice to achieve the right results, the right way, right now!"
—James G. O’Connor, Group Vice President,
North America Marketing Sales and Service,
Ford Motor Company
John Baldoni has written a very readable and useful book on motivation. He mixes sound advice on motivational techniques with entertaining and relevant examples from leaders past and present to bring the subject alive. A great read.
—Personal comments of Dr. A. Peter Green,
Vice President, Pfizer Global Research & Development
"This book is a timely reminder that our success as leaders depends on our ability to successfully motivate and inspire people! John Baldoni provides us with insight into the successful motivational techniques and abilities of some of our great leaders. Great Motivation Secrets of Great Leaders will be required reading for everyone in our leadership development program."
—Michael L. Bivens, V.P. Kellogg’s Morning Foods
Learning & Development
ALSO BY JOHN BALDONI
Great Communication Secrets of Great Leaders (2003)
180 Ways to Walk the Motivation Talk (coauthored with Eric Harvey) (2002)
Personal Leadership, Taking Control of Your Work Life (2001)
180 Ways to Walk the Leadership Talk (2000)
Copyright © 2005 by John Baldoni. All rights reserved. Printed in America. Except as permitted under the United States Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced or distributed in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
ISBN: 978-0-07-146616-5
MHID: 0-07-146616-9
The material in this eBook also appears in the print version of this title: ISBN: 978-0-07-144774-4, MHID: 0-07-144774-1.
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To Gail Campanella with love
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: What Is Motivation?
COO and President—Colleen Barrett
Energize
Chapter 2: Exemplify
Warrior—Colonel David H. Hackworth
Chapter 3: Communicate
CEO and Author—Frances Hesselbein
Author and Peace Activist—Thich Nhat Hanh
Chapter 4: Challenge
Entrepreneurs—Zingerman’s (Ari Weinzweig and Paul Saginaw)
Encourage
Chapter 5: Empower
Entrepreneur—Sam Walton
Entrepreneur and Philanthropist—Earvin Magic
Johnson
Chapter 6: Coach
Coach—Pat Summitt
Chapter 7: Recognize
Entrepreneur—Mary Kay Ash
Exhort
Chapter 8: Sacrifice
Warrior—Crazy Horse
Chapter 9: Inspire
Explorer—Sir Ernest Shackleton
Epilogue
Motivation Handbook
Notes
Index
Acknowledgments
The start of this book came with an e-mail from my former editor at McGraw-Hill, Barry Neville, who suggested that for my next book I consider the topic of motivation. But the origins of this book really stretch back much further, as I was reminded when I received an e-mail from another friend and author, David Cichelli. It was Dave who many years ago had introduced me to the work of Abraham Maslow for a talk I was to give. While I cannot remember anything about the talk, the connection with the ideas of Dr. Maslow stuck.
As I am a consultant focusing on leadership communication, specifically on helping men and women use their communications to achieve their goals, motivation is a natural topic for me to explore. Communication is the operative driver of the entire motivational process; it is the means by which leaders create conditions, and reinforce them, in which people can feel motivated to achieve.
My explorations have been helped by many colleagues. It was Kathy Macdonald who provided key suggestions in the development and writing stages that gave the ideas their shape and proper weight. Kevin Small of Injoy and his able colleague Colleen Johnston deserve special mention for opening doors for me. I also want to extend a special thank-you to Frances Hesselbein, who generously gave her time, and to David Hackworth, who did likewise. I also appreciate the kind introduction to Colonel Hackworth by Don Vandergriff, army officer, fellow author, and military affairs expert. Ari Weinzweig and Paul Saginaw of Zingerman’s put up with my barrage of questions, and their colleague, Maggie Bayless of Zing Train, was very helpful in providing access and insight. I also want to thank Eric Harvey, with whom I cowrote an earlier book on motivation; its lessons have influenced me in this endeavor.
I also owe a big thanks to my current editor at McGraw-Hill, Donya Dickerson, for her enthusiasm in getting this project completed. The editing supervisor, Janice Race, and copy editor, Alice Manning, deserve credit for helping the manuscript read as well as it was intended to. And, of course, no book of mine would be complete without a thank-you to my wife, friend, and life partner, Gail Campanella, who helped make the entire book creation process possible and bearable.
INTRODUCTION
If… worst comes to worst,
I want each one of you to do his utmost to destroy our enemies.
If there is only one plane left to make a final run-in,
I want that man to go in and get a hit.
May God be with us all.
Good luck, and give ’em hell.
READING THOSE WORDS SENDS a chill down the spine, particu-larly when you realize that the man who wrote them died the next morning doing exactly what he had urged his men to do. He was Lt. Comdr. Jack Waldron of Torpedo Squadron 8 of the USS Hornet. Leading his squadron of Devastator torpedo bombers, an underpowered and dangerously slow plane, right into the heart of the Japanese carrier force, Waldron and his men were mercilessly shot down by the faster and more maneuverable Zeroes and the ships’ antiaircraft power. An hour and a half later, a subsequent wave of Dauntless dive bombers, led by Lt. Comdr. Wade McCluskey, struck the carrier force when it was at its most vulnerable—with some Zeroes returning from an attack low on fuel, others on the carrier deck awaiting refueling, and fuel lines looping across the deck. Within six minutes, three of the carriers were on fire and would ultimately sink. A fourth was hit later that afternoon and would also sink, but not before launching an attack on the USS Yorktown. This was the Battle of Midway, and it was won in part by what historian Victor Davis Hanson calls pilot initiative.
Inherent in this initiative was courage and bravery in the cause of something greater than themselves.¹
Six decades later, a young competitive bicyclist was given the worst news of his young life: He had cancer, and it had spread from his testicles to his lungs and into his brain. He was in his mid-twenties, with an ego as big as the world and a competitive urge that was perhaps as big. His name was Lance Armstrong, and he refused to give up. He ultimately beat back the cancer into remission and relaunched his bicycling career. In 1999, he won his first Tour de France title. The Tour de France is to bicycling what the Super Bowl is to pee-wee football—infinitely more competitive, grueling, and daunting. It has been called the most demanding event in all of sports. It lasts for three weeks in the middle of the French summer and covers 2,100 miles, up and down mountains, through lowlands, and along the coast. In 2004, Armstrong became the first cyclist to win six Tours; he also won them consecutively. Only four other men have ever won five Tours, and only one, Miguel Indurain, had won five consecutively. It is a testament to Armstrong’s relentless training, iron will, and commitment to succeed.
These two scenarios, while dramatically different in key respects, illustrate one compelling factor: that motivation, the will to go, comes from within. No one forced Waldron and McCluskey and their fellow pilots into the guns of the Japanese ships; no one forced Armstrong to race, especially after a near-death experience. It was their inner drive, their will to persevere. The pilots were fighting against a foe that had sneak-attacked them six months previously and that until that moment had seemed almost invincible. Armstrong was fighting the legacy of a disease as well as competing against scores of other cyclists. Certainly the men of Midway were heroes, and you can consider Armstrong one as well. But it is equally certain that all of them would disclaim such a title. They did what they did because it was the right thing for them to do. And that is what motivation is all about: leading oneself from within and creating those same conditions so that others can follow suit. Motivation is a genuine leadership behavior. It is essential to the leadership process because it is through the efforts of others that leaders accomplish their goals. And leaders can achieve their goals only when those goals have the support of others, when those who will be involved in achieving them want to do so.
Writing about motivation is challenging, even daunting. For one thing, a great deal has been written about it already. But the greater challenge is that some of what has been written about motivation is wrongheaded. It is rooted in a type of thinking that says that motivation can be imposed on someone. This is not correct. You can compel someone to do something, even against her will, if you use enough force or threaten her with punishment or deprivation or injuries to her loved ones. Tyrants and dictators are prime executors of coercion. But this is short-lived; it will not yield lasting or fulfilling results. Things will get done, but only halfheartedly. Motivation, by contrast, must be internalized by the individual.
It is therefore the leader’s responsibility to create conditions that will enable individuals and teams to get things done in ways that they find enriching and fulfilling. If the leader does this, motivation can occur. This does not mean that leaders become namby-pamby and softhearted; it demands that they strike a balance between individuals’ need for self-enrichment, literally and figuratively, and the organization’s need for results. When motivation occurs, individuals become transformed; they want to achieve, they want to do well. Why? Because their work matters—to their boss, to their teams, and to themselves. The purpose of this book, then, is to demonstrate ways in which leaders can create an environment that allows people to succeed and organizations to thrive.
The leader’s most powerful tool in the motivation process is communication. Communication drives the action forward, keeping leader and follower and leader and organization aligned and focused on joint goals that are meaningful and worth achieving. Communication, by nature, is a two-way process; it ensures that leader and follower understand each other, and understanding is essential to building trust. Motivation can occur only in situations in which followers trust their leaders and leaders trust their followers.
STORY AND PRACTICE
Great Motivation Secrets of Great Leaders blends management principles and leadership stories. In the principles section, we will explore how managers can communicate, exemplify, coach, recognize, and sacrifice in order to create optimal conditions for motivation to occur. Each chapter will also feature a profile or two of a leader-motivator who articulates these principles through his or her personal example. While not all of the people profiled are motivators in a conventional sense, all of them motivate through their leadership actions. As a result, their stories radiate value and truth.
Among the leaders profiled in this book are the following:
• Colleen Barrett, a former legal secretary turned president of Southwest Airlines, the most people-friendly carrier in the air and on the ground because of its culture, which she helped create and foster
• Colonel David Hackworth, a highly decorated colonel whose tough actions in Vietnam transformed a group of perceived losers into a hard-core fighting team
• Frances Hesselbein, former CEO of the Girl Scouts of the USA and president of the Leader to Leader Institute, who has been recognized by academics and government leaders, including the president of the United States, as an accomplished leader
• Earvin Magic
Johnson, a collegiate and NBA Hall of Fame basketball player who has built a very successful business by reaching out to people in the urban community, and has also established an educational foundation for disadvantaged youth.
• Mary Kay Ash, an entrepreneur who opened the door to financial freedom for thousands of women
• Sam Walton, the legendary businessman who built the largest retail chain in the world from scratch
• Pat Summitt, head coach of the University of Tennessee Lady Volunteers, the winningest women’s basketball team in the nation and an example of how to model and develop self-directed teams
• Thich Nhat Hanh, a Vietnamese Buddhist author and spiritual leader who has dedicated his life to peace
• Zingerman’s, a community of food-related businesses founded and operated by Paul Saginaw and Ari Weinzweig that has flourished by empowering people and recognizing their needs for growth and development
• Crazy Horse, the Sioux warrior who sacrificed his way of life and his life for the good of his people and thereby serves an example of heroism
• Ernest Shackleton, the legendary polar explorer, whose leadership legacy is that he did not lose a man, even though he lost his ship
These leaders are an eclectic mix. They come from different walks of life, and a few come from different periods in history. There is a unifying theme, however: Each of them knew, or knows, how to create conditions in which people can motivate themselves. Some, like Ernest Shackleton and Earvin Magic
Johnson, are gregarious and outgoing; others, like Crazy Horse, are more soft-spoken, letting their example do the talking. Thich Nhat Hanh, Frances Hesselbein, and David Hackworth are eloquent communicators as well as outstanding manager-leaders. Pat Summitt and Colleen Barrett are coaches, one of young women, the other of an entire organization. Mary Kay Ash and Sam Walton were entrepreneurs, as are Paul Saginaw and Ari Weinzweig. Each has or had a unique style that drew people in; people wanted to participate in whatever the leader was doing, whether it was playing a sport, running a business, or defending his or her people.
There is a perception that leaders who motivate are cheer-leading, rah-rah types. Again, some are and some are not, but all of them lead more by example than by oratory. All of them are incredibly hardworking and committed. Leading an enterprise, whether it be a community or a business, requires tremendous effort; and that effort is particularly demanding when you have pledged to create a culture in which people matter as contributors and individuals. That effort is mentally, emotionally, and even physically taxing. It requires discipline and will.
There is no one model for how a leader must behave as a motivator, and for that reason I have included many different individuals in the hope that readers can learn from their unique approaches and find something that they can apply to their own lives or their own leadership opportunities.
In truth, there are many thousands, even millions, of effective motivators. These are the men and women who make our organizations go; their refusal to accept the status quo, coupled with a genuine affinity for people, prods them and their organizations forward. Their example, as well as their interaction with others, creates a state of raised expectations. They make people around them better. All of the leaders profiled in this book do or have done this. But I fully realize that motivation occurs every moment of every day throughout the world. It occurs when the light goes on in someone’s heart or mind or spirit, and she says, Yes, I can do that.
The reason for the yes comes from within, but more often than not, it was someone close to her, either personally or through the media, who nudged her forward. That is motivation in its fullest form.
Additionally, each of these leaders has an inspirational story to tell. All of them have faced moments of truth that might have humbled a lesser individual. Each rose nobly to the occasion, and in the process became a stronger, more effective leader. And while the lessons that these leaders learned from these occasions have helped them to create the conditions in which motivation can flourish, you can apply many of these same lessons to yourself as a means of stimulating your own internal motivators.
PRACTICAL AND PROVEN
Great Motivation Secrets of Great Leaders concludes with a handbook that distills key messages and leadership lessons that leaders can apply to foster a culture in which motivation can flourish for their people, their organizations, and themselves. The combination of leadership principles and stories gives this book a framework upon which managers can build as they learn how to link their individual actions to organizational results. It is my sincere hope that readers will find within these pages practical and proven techniques for bringing people together, getting them excited about the endeavor, and releasing their energies toward mutual goals.²
Good luck, and enjoy the process!
CHAPTER 1
WHAT IS MOTIVATION?
Don’t ever take a job for the money or a title.… I would go for a cause anytime versus a job.
Colleen Barrett
President & COO, Southwest Airlines
BY ALL RIGHTS, THEY WERE DONE IN. Deep inside enemy territory, their putative leader dead, they should all have been slaughtered. But it didn’t work out that way because their nominal leader, Cyrus the Younger, a Persian prince, was not their real leader. Their genuine leader, Xenophon, was one of their own, respected, trusted, and elected. Xenophon, a Greek general, had hired himself and his troops to help an on again—off again enemy regain his throne. In other words, Xenophon and his troops, called the Ten Thousand, were mercenaries. But however flawed their cause, their honor came to the fore in their darkest hour when they found themselves surrounded by many more thousands of enemies and thousands of miles from home.
The Greeks were superior fighters, both tactically and technologically. They knew how to fight as a team, and their swords and shields were uniquely adapted for their phalanx warfare. They also possessed the most salient edge of all: leadership. Xenophon, like all Greek commanders, led from the front; he was seen in the thick of combat, never flinching, always