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Leadership is Tricky; Engineering Leadership is Really Tricky

Susan de la Vergne

 

The tricky thing about great leadership is how unpredictable it is. Think of two or three people whom you consider to be leaders. How alike are they in how they lead? Probably not very.

That’s because leadership—unlike carpentry, gymnastics, or gourmet food preparation—is not a precise skillset requiring expertise in proven, repeatable techniques. There’s no leadership formula that works every time, no standard list of competencies to guarantee success.

You can often spot great leadership when you see it, but you know as soon as you do that the leader you admire isn’t using formulas for successful leadership and wouldn’t be able to tell you what it was he or she was doing to be successful. Instead of a set of skills we can pin down neatly on a list, great leaders embody a range of characteristics. Among them are: a vision for the future; commitment to goals; having an inner rudder that tells you what’s “right” to do; empathy; being able to make and carry out decisions; being circumspect; taking chances; and challenging the status quo.

You can’t be an expert at any of those. You can’t be an expert at being circumspect, taking chances, or having a vision. In fact, a characteristic of leadership is the inability to be expert at it. There are, therefore, no “expert leaders.” The people who tell us what it takes to be a great leader are people who study them, not people who are them.

Great leaders are the least likely people to tell you what it takes to be a great leader. Imagine asking Abraham Lincoln, “What leadership techniques did you use to preserve the union and end slavery?”! Leaders can tell us what drives them to lead, but not what should drive others, nor how they should do it.

What does all that mean to you, if you aspire to be a better leader?

It means there’s no add-water-and-stir approach to becoming a better leader. And it means that, if you’re an engineering professional and you prefer determinism over ambiguity, certainty over uncertainty, you may find yourself uncomfortable and maybe even impatient with some aspects of leadership development.

What makes engineers great at what they do (precision, process, repeatability of results) is different from what it takes to be a great leader. So leadership development for successful engineers may mean stepping into unfamiliar territory, being willing to do things like put up with ambiguity, size up the political landscape or be content with not knowing exactly how to solve someone else’s problem.

Leadership development starts with understanding what leadership is and assessing (honestly) which aspects of leadership you’re already doing fairly well, already pretty comfortable with, and which you’re not. Do you take initiative? Listen openly? Gauge other people’s reactions pretty well? Can you speak to groups of people? Do you watch the horizon and the bottom line with equal interest? Can you drag a project over the finish line? Do people trust you? Those are some of the elements of leadership ability you’ll examine. It’s not easy to look at oneself in these ways. We all like to think we’re trustworthy, motivated, initiative-takers. But are we really? And if we’re not, then what?

That’s where leadership development comes in. Once you have a sense of your profile as a leader and the areas in which you’d like to improve, that’s when the fun starts. Or the hard work.

Engineers and tech professionals are known, for the most part, as hard workers, people who focus on a problem until it’s solved, beat the competition, and break new ground. They rarely shy away from something that’s hard to do, something that requires brain power, fortitude, and a good work ethic. That’s part of the industry’s culture.

And it’s why engineers have leadership potential—because leadership development requires strength of character, a willingness to work hard and to take chances.
 

© 2011 Susan de la Vergne. All other marks are the property of their respective owners. All rights reserved.