LEADERSHIP BY THE DOZEN
No, this isn’t about donuts!
Here are a dozen leadership arenas:
- Corporate
- Military
- Political
- Industry
- Community
- Organizational
- Family
- Neighborhood
- Religious
- Sports
- Classroom
- Worksite
Where do entrepreneurial leaders fit? Everywhere! What about other leaders –those who are not entrepreneurs– are they locked into the individual arenas where they perform? Not to suggest this is a bad thing; it’s just limiting.
It’s part of the great appeal of entrepreneurial life that there are no limits. Yes, there are laws, but no: there are no rules.
Neither are there any theories to dictate performance because there are no theories of any value because (beyond some common character traits like poor school performances, engagement in childhood enterprises, rejection of authority, and childhood exposure to family business) entrepreneurs and entrepreneurial behaviors cannot be quantified or categorized.
Yes, entrepreneurs take reasonable risks, but –no– there’s no traditional action plan approach to follow.
Entrepreneurial leaders pop up in each of the arenas noted above (and many more as well) because in every arena on Earth there is always room for improvement. Entrepreneurs are the agents of change who step up to the plate, who bring improvements to the table, who have the foresight and resilience to attack a problem over and over to produce the answers they believe in.
Alexander the Great was an historic entrepreneurial leader who proved that innovative strategies and tactics can defeat even the most overwhelming of military odds.
“America’s Mayor” Rudy Giuliani was a great entrepreneurial political leader for his time and place, and the circumstances that changed our world.
Cal Ripkin, Jr. was a dedicated entrepreneurial leader with his never-say-die attitude that re-invented value systems in the world of baseball – and all of sports.
Mother Teresa, Frank Lloyd Wright, Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Ghandi, and so many more you could surely name . . . people whose entrepreneurial spirits have in some way made a difference to us all. Though each of the kinds of leaders we’re talking about here made their mark in one arena, none ever limited themselves in the lives they live or did live. Who would be on YOUR list?
What do those noted above (plus those you can think of) share? What qualities would you list? Here are a few for starters: Persuasiveness, Assertiveness, Communication, Self-Reliance, Self-Confidence, Insight, Recognition that behavior is a choice, a strong focus on the present, the ability to cultivate (cross-pollinate?) leadership in others. What would YOU add to this list? halalpiar
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