10 Ways to Develop Your Latent Leader
Learn the Top 10 ways to develop your latent leader.
Latent (adj.) – Not visible or apparent, but capable of
developing or being expressed; dormant.
Everyone has leadership qualities. The visible difference lies
in the degree those qualities are developed. Each individual
chooses their own path and determines to what degree skills are
developed and how those skills or qualities will be expressed.
There are born leaders, but even those people evolve their
approach to leadership over time.
Leadership skills are valuable in every crack and crevice of
life. You could be the most successful person in your field and
you will still face an endless stream of problems and situations
that require you to seek new and innovative strategies for
dealing with them.
A leader approaches problem-solving with an eye on the
future. Whether you’re leading yourself, your family, or a vast
enterprise, it is important to develop the skills necessary to
move forward with confidence.
I have included here what I consider to be the Top 10 Ways to
Develop Your Latent Leader.
1. Know your purpose
Everyone has a unique purpose in life. Too often, people settle
for what life brings them rather than creating the life of their
dreams. You can design your life around purpose if you have a
clear vision of what that purpose is and where you are headed by
pursuing it. No matter what your current situation, there is a
way to bring it purpose and meaning, building from there.
2. Commit to goals
With a clear vision and purpose, goals can be established that
provide the road map to be used when implementing plans. There
will be regular forks in the road presented to help you refine
your vision and goals. Unless you have your road map ready to
refer to, there is a good chance you will continually end up in
the weeds trying to find your way back to the path of choice.
3. Manage your reputation
Your reputation is one of your most valuable assets. Effectively
managing that reputation requires an understanding of how the
reputation was built and how it is best maintained or enhanced.
The effective leader sets an example to follow and that
contributes to their reputation. Your reputation can be parlayed
into tremendous success if it is managed and used wisely.
4. Open-minded
Leaders know that they don’t have all the answers. In the book
by Jim Collins “Good to Great”, the first quality demonstrated
by leaders of the most successful companies in the study was
humility. These leaders were open to suggestions and knew that
their success was dependent on a group effort. To have sustained
success, you have to be open to all possibilities.
5. Continuous improvement/innovation
Along the same lines, leaders are in a never-ending cycle of
improving themselves and whatever they touch. They read the
latest material in their field of study expanding their
territory in whatever ways they’re lead; provide a wealth of
information as a resource for others; are continually educating
themselves; and seek innovative ways to expand their horizons.
6. Demonstrate collaborative problem-solving
The master-mind experience can be very powerful. The process of
collaboration transcends the concept of “two heads are better
than one”. When a leader begins to employ the ideas of people
outside of their familiar decision-making track, innovation
becomes commonplace. Collaboration can be applied in every area
of life.
7. Grow other leaders
The best way to develop leadership skills is to teach others to
be leaders. It is easy to get bogged down in daily activities
and inhibit your own growth and the growth of those you lead.
When a person begins to develop their latent leader, there is a
change in their thought process. It is no longer enough to just
get the job done – it must be done right with awareness of
consequences.
8. Be decisive
As a leader, others will look to you for direction. You must
weigh your options using the resources you have to work with and
make the best decision. Sure you will make mistakes and, in
hindsight, see that a different decision might have produced
better results. Remember that there is tremendous value in those
errors in judgment as long as you take the time to learn from
them.
9. Learn from mistakes
The leader takes responsibility for mistakes made. Period!
Mistakes are an enormous investment of resources and should be
used for all of their value. If you take mistakes seriously,
spending the time necessary to determine the root cause that
created the opportunity for the mistake to be made, you have
turned a costly mistake into a potential gold mine. This is
where innovation lives.
10. Realize your full potential
In every individual there are untapped resources. The human
potential has only scratched the surface. Each of us has a
“sweet spot” where the lines between work and play merge. We
have bordered on genius. Our job is to design life so that we
spend increasing amounts of our time in excellence. The leader
accepts nothing less than the best from themselves and others.
Leadership styles are as varied as the leaders that employ them.
In order to begin to develop your latent leader, start anywhere
on this list. Determine how you might use a new or different
approach to a situation or problem you’re facing. Once you have
experienced a bit of success, it will get easier to use a more
innovative and creative approach to problem-solving. The leader
will no longer be latent!
About the Author
Gala is an executive coach focusing on creative
problem-solving. She is committed to assisting organizations of
every shape and size in developing their leadership with an
emphasis on socially responsible business practices and a keen
eye on productivity and profitability. Gala is a certified
public accountant, certified financial planner, published
author, and business consultant with over 25 years of
experience. She can be reached at (702) 386-4111, by e-mail at
Gala@MetaCommIntl.com, or by visiting
http://www.GalaGorman.com.

