LeaderTip #9: How to Develop a Person While You Delegate a Project by Tim Elmore

At Growing Leaders, we’ve decided to share one LeaderTip each month with The Teen Mentor readers who plan to become student leaders. LeaderTips will contain practical tips for leading meetings, communicating a vision, choosing priorities, dealing with difficult peers, bossing your calendar, effective planning and more. Enjoy!

How to Develop a Person While You Delegate a Project

Creating future “owners.”

That’s the job of a leader. Cultivating team members who “own” the vision like they do, not merely directing a group of people who “rent” the vision. If leaders fail to delegate responsibilities, they will never fully develop “owners.”

When I am unable to both delegate projects and develop people:

  1. Only I will feel the weight of responsibility for the future of the organization
  1. I’ll never develop the skills in potential leaders they’ll need for their future
  1. I’ll eventually frustrate myself and any good team members on campus
  1. I won’t see the results that could occur by developing other “owners”
  1. Students will not learn the lessons that only failure and “ownership” can teach
  1. The vision is diminished since I’ve failed to lead the organization beyond me.

Leaders know “the buck stops here.” But, if the buck stops with the one in charge alone, the most we can hope for is the best organization one person can build.

Four Stages Leaders Usually Experience…

I’ve noticed four stages in my own leadership journey…

STAGE #1: DOING (I believe if it is going to be done right, I must do it myself.)

STAGE #2: DUMPING (Soon, I burn out, so I begin dumping work on others.)

STAGE #3: DELEGATING (I realize people leave if I dump, so I prepare and delegate.)

STAGE #4: DEVELOPING (I ultimately see delegating is a means to develop people.)

As leaders experience the sequence above, they expand their vision. The scope of the work, the perspective of the leader and the recognition of what really matters deepens. The leader progresses from being the central figure doing the tasks to being the catalyst, helping others become central figures in the process. Their fulfillment moves from doing the work to empowering others to do the work. It’s almost the same feeling a parent receives from watching their own kids become self-sufficient. The primary reward is not merely that the project is completed, but the people are completed. This often happens only when the vision of the project is so big, it requires more than one person to pull it off.

Developing People While You’re Delegating Work

All healthy leaders want their team members to grow and flourish. Their job isn’t just about getting rid of some of the workload—it’s about growing the people around them, as those people learn to take on more responsibility. It’s a double win. So, if this is true, how does a leader develop a person while delegating a project? Consider the following steps on the journey. 

1. Know yourself.  (Be familiar with the strengths you pass on to them in the work).

2. Know the person you’re developing. (Be familiar with their strengths, weaknesses)

3. Clearly define the assignments.  (Don’t leave anything to question; write it down).

4. Teach the “why” behind the assignment.  (Let them know why it is important).

5. Discuss their growth process, as you go.  (Talk about how they will grow from it).

6. Spend relational time with them. (Invest time when you’re not discussing work).

7. Allow them to watch you perform.  (Let them observe and get feedback from you).

8. Give them the resources they need.  (Provide the tools to do the job).

9. Encourage them to journal during the process. (Help them interpret their growth).

10. Hold them accountable for the project. (Get permission to keep them in line)

11. Give them the freedom to fail.  (Communicate that they can learn as they go).

12. Debrief and affirm regularly.  (Encourage them along the way as they succeed).

 Questions for Reflection

1. Do you tend to be a “doer”, a “dumper”, a “delegator” or a “developer”?

2. What prevents you from delegating more efficiently?

3. From the list above, what should you add to your present practices?

4. Do you have team members that you could delegate almost anything to right now?

View original article here.

CHECK OUT TIM’S PREVIOUS LEADERTIPS:

LEADERTIP #1: HOW TO BREAK FREE FROM A PERFORMANCE TRAP

LEADERTIP #2: HOW TO LEAD A PRODUCTIVE TEAM MEETING

LEADERTIP #3: HOW TO BOSS YOUR CALENDAR EACH WEEK

LEADERTIP #4: HOW TO ESTABLISH YOUR PRIORITIES

LEADERTIP #5: HOW TO READ A BOOK

LEADERTIP #6: HOW TO OVERCOME INEFFECTIVE MEETINGS

LEADERTIP #7: HOW TO CAPTURE A VISION

LEADERTIP #8: HOW TO COMMUNICATE YOUR VISION

Tim ElmoreAbout the Author: Tim ELMORE, Monthly Mentor and Parent Mentor, is the founder of Growing Leaders. He is passionate about understanding the emerging generation and helping adults teach them how to become leaders in their schools, their communities and their careers. He educates adults to help them understand the challenges and experiences today’s generation faces and connect with them in a way that resonates. Tim believes, by cultivating leadership abilities in young adults and encouraging the adults who guide them, Growing Leaders can be the catalyst for emerging generations that will truly change the world. Read More…

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