Roselinde Torres describes 25 years observing truly great leaders at work, and shares the three simple but crucial questions would-be company chiefs need to ask to thrive in the future.
2. ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Roselinde Torres is a senior
partner and managing director
at the consulting firm, BCG. A
senior leader in the firm’s
people and organization
practice area, she is also the
company's resident expert on
leadership, a topic she has
studied her entire career.
Questions she likes to ask
include, what innovative
methods can help prepare the
next generation of leaders?
and how do we enable leaders
to unlearn past modes and
habits of success?”
3. 21st century world
more global
digitally enabled and transparent
with faster speeds of information flow and
innovation
nothing big gets done without some kind of a
complex matrix
Relying on traditional development
practices will stunt your growth as a
leader.
6. The answer to this question is on your calendar:
• Who are you spending time with?
• On what topics?
• Where are you traveling?
• What are you reading?
How are you distilling this into understanding potential
discontinuities, and then making a decision to do
something right now so that you're prepared and ready?
There's a leadership team that does a practice where they
bring together each member collecting, here are trends that
impact me, here are trends that impact another team
member, and they share these, and then make decisions, to
course-correct a strategy or to anticipate a new move.
7. Great leaders are not
head-down. They see
around corners, shaping
their future, not just
reacting to it.
8. What is the
diversity measure of
your personal and
professional
stakeholder
network? 2
9. And those differences can
be biological, physical,
functional, political,
cultural, socioeconomic.
And yet, despite all these
differences, they connect
with you and they trust
you enough to cooperate
with you in achieving a
shared goal.
We all have a network of
people that we're
comfortable with.
So this question is about
your capacity to develop
relationships with
people that are very
different than.
10. Great leaders
understand that having
a more diverse
network is a source of
pattern identification at
greater levels and also
of solutions, because
you have people that
are thinking differently
than you are.
12. The most impactful development
comes when you are able to build
the emotional stamina to
withstand people telling you that
your new idea is naïve or reckless
or just plain stupid.
The people who will join you are
not your usual suspects in your
network. They're often people
that think differently and
therefore are willing to join you in
taking a courageous leap. And it's
a leap, not a step.
13. Great leaders dare to
be different. They
don't just talk about
risk-taking, they
actually do it.
14. So what makes a great leader in the 21st
century?
They are women and men who are
preparing themselves not for the
comfortable predictability of
yesterday but also for the realities of
today and all of those unknown
possibilities of tomorrow.