Monday, December 7, 2009

Visions, boundaries and the leader

The word "vision" is used in the Bible several visions. Many of the visions were dreams where an individual receiving some form of a message, some of which needed to interpretation by a wise individual. The Bible also describes another kind of vision in Proverbs 29:18. Where there is no vision, the people perish: but he that keepeth the law, happy is he. (KJV) How interesting are the apparently contrasting statements of not having a vision and that a law-abiding citizen is happy? After noodling on this for a while, it jumped out at me. Perhaps the vision spoken of in Proverbs is a clear set of boundaries? I checked this verse again in the NASV and it reads: Where there is no vision, the people are unrestrained, But happy is he who keeps the law.

Without laws, a society is without boundaries and given enough individual wills, chaos will surely result. Similarly in sports, business, families, or volunteer work, a team without direction performs as a bunch of individuals and success may be elusive. Given a clear vision of what success looks like, a bunch of individuals can more efficiently work together as a team. It is the team leaders responsibility to "cast" a vision that the team can buy into. Let's assume that you are a leader and you have a vision for the success that your team requires. Do they support the vision? Do they understand the vision? Did they help you formulate the vision? Hopefully, you can answer "YES" to each of these questions.

A group of individuals can achieve much more working as a team than the sum of their individual parts. The team-leader that does not foster this kind of teamwork is more a manager of individuals and less a leader of a team. How will you motivate your team to rally toward your vision? It certainly helps if the team members feel like they helped create the vision and they are empowered to do their part toward achieving it. Great leaders inspire their teams to accomplishment by seeking the team's input during the formulation of the vision, clearly stating the vision, empowering the team to produce great results, and supporting the team members to overcome challenges. Go be a great leader!

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