NEURO-TIP:Successful communication has the ability to meld minds through the experience of neural coupling, which is experienced when the listener’s brain mirrors the activity of the speaker’ brain.*
As you step up into higher levels of leadership, the challenges undoubtedly multiply. One of the most significant challenges will be managing the increase in the number of interactions and new relationships that come with leading a larger team of say 100 to even 1,000.
Staying connected and sustaining relationships while driving for results across a growing employee base is a hurdle, but it must be jumped to successfully hit the ground running as an influential leader in any company. Taking the time for personal interactions with employees is how good leaders of the past became great leaders in history.
It is a leader’s thoughtful interactions with their team that will create an environment balanced with both personal communication and results driven communication; this is ultimately at the heart of being a “humanizing leader.”
It’s amazing how often I find leaders trapped into thinking the higher they go up the corporate ladder, the tougher they need to be. Ironically, the opposite is actually true.
As leadership titles get bigger – from director to VP to EVP to CEO – they increase in the weight they carry, which is also known as positional power (discussed further in this older post). As a result of this growth, the members of the leader’s team tend to refrain from healthy push back and from challenging his/her authority. To offset these sorts of problems associated with positional power, leaders need to thoughtfully connect with their employees at a more personal level and encourage open and honest conversation.
These are a few identifiers that may help you evaluate if your employees fear your positional power:
How can you build an environment where people feel safe to speak up, to challenge issues together, and to put difficult conversations on the table? How can you create an environment that thrives on the humanity?
Practices for yourself:
Practices with your staff:
*Biological Sciences - Neuroscience - Social Sciences - Psychological and Cognitive Sciences:
· Greg J. Stephens,
· Lauren J. Silbert,
· and Uri Hasson
Speaker–listener neural coupling underlies successful communication PNAS 2010 107 (32) 14425-14430; published ahead of print July 26, 2010, doi:10.1073/pnas.1008662107

People working in concert outperform individuals acting alone or operating as solo-contributors. Working in diverse teams offers the opportunity to learn from one another and gain new skills, perspectives and experiences that can catalyze new ways of thinking to achieve breakthrough results.
"To get to the next level of greatness depends on the quality of the culture, which depends on the quality of relationships, which depends on the quality of conversations. Everything happens through conversations."
Benchmark Communications, Inc.
116 Central Park South 9-D
New York, NY 10019
212.307.4386
212.307.0699 Fax
5 Shorehaven Road
Norwalk, CT 06855
203.838.6982
203.838.7166 Fax