And, finally, asking for help is another way to give your team affirmation and demonstrate to them that you honor and respect them as people and as business people.
When you start asking for help, start confiding and revealing too. Sharing delicate information in confidence demonstrates that you have absolute faith in your team.
And, an essential part of confiding is revealing: tell a direct report about a business struggle you’re working through and how you’re handling it. Combine this with asking for help and you’ve got a recipe for building rewarding, authentic relationships with your team.
8. Coach Along the Way
As you go about your day-to-day, week-to-week business, look for opportunities to pause and coach your team through the task at hand. These quick little investments in your team can help them grow dramatically, both as individuals and as leaders within your company.
To be clear, you don’t have to coach constantly. You shouldn’t be doing a dozen coaching sessions a week. But taking time for three or four of these development moments in a week – maybe one or two that are in depth and two or three that are quicker – can make a huge difference.
And don’t just coach for immediate results here; coach for development. Talk to your team members about their decisions, challenges, and plans. Help them sharpen those ideas and improve the ways that they model their thinking.
By following these eight principles of effective leadership, you can grow beyond simply instructing your team about how they should handle specific tasks. You can help them become more autonomous and more effective, and give them a model for how they can groom more leaders within their departments or divisions of the company. Because good leadership perpetuates good leadership. In time, you’ll find yourself running an owner-independent business.