Working more hours to get more done is the downfall of most failed leaders.
This problem is due to a lack of capacity. Capacity is the amount that something or someone can produce.
When someone moves into leadership, they typically have more responsibility. If they don’t increase their capacity per hour, they will by necessity have to work longer hours.
If over time a leader can increase his or her capacity—produce more results in a given period of time—they will not only succeed but potentially free up time to pursue new projects and revenue streams.
Education
Think of education as what you know that can be translated into skill. Knowledge is information understood. Education is information applied.Not only does learning new things increase your capacity, it can also decrease stress and anxiety. In 2020 financial researchers found that even pre-pandemic, a low level of financial literacy was a top contributor to financial stress and anxiety. Learning how to understand and manage their finances made people less anxious.
Delegation
Good delegators pick the best people to do the right jobs. Doing it yourself isn’t a luxury leaders can afford.Collaboration
In this insightful article, collaboration is defined as working together to create something new.Done right, collaboration increases results. Done poorly, it wastes time and resources. Of all the ways to increase capacity, this is the most challenging.
Cooperation
The article referenced above defines cooperation as working together for mutual benefit.Innovation
Whether done alone or with others, innovation is figuring out new ways to do old things or new ways to do new things. Innovation can be as simple as improvements in processes and as radical as a paradigm-changing discovery.One key is to ask “how has it always been done?” and challenge the answer. Many years ago Seth Godin coined the term “stuck winning model.” We do what works, and sometimes keep doing it even after it stops working as well. Innovators are perpetual challengers of the status quo.
1) What do I need to learn or learn better?
2) To whom on my team can I delegate and what are their greatest strengths and abilities?
3) Who is a potential collaborator?
4) Who are the people whose cooperation would most increase my capacity?
5) What might I do better or differently in my efforts going forward?
Republished from marksanborn.com