Can you be a true leader without possessing a command presence? In my experience, very rarely…I’m not referencing the wannabe leaders oozing bravado, false confidence, arrogance, or self-delusion spun as confidence. Nor am I referring to the weak, innocuous or timid, who while viewing themselves as leaders, are perhaps the farthest thing from a leader. Rather I’m addressing those true leaders who inspire and motivate those around them to achieve things well beyond that which they thought themselves capable of. In today’s post I’ll address the value of developing a command presence
Command presence is a military term which describes someone who presents an authoritative persona – someone who is to be respected and followed. How much will your peers and subordinates sacrifice to follow you? Command presence while certainly having very tangible ties to leadership style or approach, is equally tied to how you are perceived by those around you.
When you walk into a room does anyone notice? When you speak does anyone listen? When you give direction is it trusted, respected and followed? Do you inspire confidence and engender credibility with those whom you come into contact with? Are people not only willing to be led by you, but proud to be led by you? Command presence is far more than just the attitude you bring to the game, it’s about the combination of trust, charisma, character, integrity, knowledge and experience that separates true leaders from the masses.
I have either been in leadership positions and/or advising leaders for as long as I can remember. During the course of my career I’ve observed all kinds of leaders good and bad…however I’ve never been around a great leader who doesn’t possess strong command presence. Great leaders display an air of calm about them regardless of the situation at hand. Great leaders show co-workers that they will always maintain control, even when they don’t have an immediate solution. Great leaders don’t lose focus, they don’t cower, and they never waffle. The best leaders can inspire hope when needed, and the willingness to accept a lack thereof when necessary.
Today’s business leaders have literally hundreds of interpersonal interactions each and everyday. Any leader who fails to instill confidence amongst peers and subordinates will lose their loyalty, harm their morale, and cripple their ability to execute. The impact of command presence is not only limited to your co-workers, but to everyone with whom you come in contact with. Your command presence or lack thereof will also impact the success of your relationships with investors, lenders, partners, suppliers, vendors and other constituencies.
Leadership, good or bad, is a contagion. One of the primary benefits of strong, sound leadership is the ability to spread it. There is a lot of talk about the importance of culture, and rightly so. An intentional focus on creating culture by design produces the glue that holds communities and organizations together and allows them to thrive. Most people won’t debate the importance of culture, but they vehemently argue over how culture should be built. My premise about what the major construct of a cultural ecosystem should look like is more than hypothetical – it’s undeniable by anyone who studies successful organizations with an open mind. My advice here is simple: create a culture based upon an ethos that empowers, attracts, differentiates, and sustains. The ONLY culture that flourishes over the long haul is a culture of leadership.
Some leaders come by command presence naturally, while others have to work very hard to develop it. While there are many things that lead to developing a strong command presence, a focus on developing the following three areas will have an immediate impact enhancing your command presence:
1. Be Trustworthy and Show You Care: When you closely examine the core characteristics of what really makes for great leadership, it’s not power, title, authority or even technical competency that distinguishes truly great leaders. Rather it’s the ability to both earn and keep the loyalty and trust of those whom they lead that sets them apart. Leadership is about trust, stewardship, care, concern, service, humility and understanding. If you build into those you lead, if you make them better, if you add value to their lives then you will have earned their trust and loyalty. This is the type of bond that will span positional and philosophical gaps, survive mistakes, challenges, downturns and other obstacles that will inevitably occur.
2. Develop Excellent Verbal Skills: As odd as it may sound, this begins with developing excellent listening skills. You must seek to understand before you’ll be understood. When it is time to speak, say what you mean and mean what you say. What you say, when you say it, and how you say it will either instill confidence and serve to motivate and inspire, or it will take the wind right out of your sails. You don’t have to be an overly verbose person, but you must be measured and articulate. Don’t speak just to hear yourself talk and don’t ramble. If your verbal communication skills are not up to par get help and correct the problem. You cannot lead if you cannot communicate.
3. Make Excellent Decisions: Nothing is more difficult to overcome for a leader than a poor track record. Solid decision layered upon solid decision is the key to creating loyalty. When I was serving in the military I once had a soldier under my command tell me that if I told him to attack a tank with a butter knife he would do it, because he would just assume based upon my track record that I knew something he didn’t (Luckily we never had to test that theory).
Bottom line…If you develop strong command presence, leadership while never easy, will in fact become easier.
Thoughts?