Leadership: the art of inspiring your followers
Published: 2011-01-17 There are 12 comments ... please add yours below
CEOs and leaders talk a lot about stakeholders. We all strive to engage them. In general, customers and staff are the categories that get most attention. But, most us are much more structured in our marketing to and engagement with customers i.e. the people, who buy our products or services. Relatively, we are often less thoughtful in how we engage our staff i.e. the people, who must “buy” our leadership, if they’re to become our committed followers. How would people rate you on each of the six engagement factors below? Particularly the last two?
I’m going to use marketing (rather than HR) terms to draw attention to the relative casualness in how many CEOs and leaders deal with their staff and team members.
- Market Research: most companies analyse customer data and interview groups to find out how to improve their offerings. Often retaining consultants to ensure objectivity. Most also take care in studying staff morale, job satisfaction, etc. However, is there room for improvement in your personal knowledge of the people you’re leading? Would they say you really know them – as individuals: what’s important to them and what they want?
- Client Relationship Management: this is a core marketing tool. HR departments similarly keep tabs on staff details, development needs, performance data and so on. But, do you personally engage as much with this – or do you mostly leave it to HR?
- Product and service ratings: this is key to your company’s market positioning. But, how well is your company rated as an employer and in its offerings to staff? Most importantly, how well do you position yourself in what you, as a leader, offer your team?
- Point of Sale: companies invest in packaging, counter displays and websites to attract new customers and re-engage old ones. How good are you at attracting and continuing to engage staff? Are your daily interactions good experiences for them?
- Buying Decision: companies worry endlessly about their customers’ criteria and how to meet them. But, as a leader, do you know the two or three key issues keeping your people from fully committing? Are these about goal ambiguity, absence of decisions, contradictory values, low technical standards, lack of consultation – or what?
- After Sales Service: the best companies look to a customer’s lifetime value and treat them accordingly. Many leaders though are great at recruitment but lose interest once the employee joins. And often for them, if that person leaves, then they might as well be dead. How does that make other team members feel?
Stakeholders are not all equal. But, for the best leaders, staff are just as important as customers. They’re the customers for your leadership. They can buy or not; and, go elsewhere if you don’t measure up. They can also badmouth you, as they would a failed product. So, they deserve the same care and attention customers expect – and get. Delivering that is your core business. (As it is ours to help you do it!) Please share your views below.
Would you like to reproduce this Potshot? See License Terms

Dr. Timothy Pascoe AM
PhD (Cambridge), MBA (Harvard), BE & BEc (Adelaide)
Creator, V|E|C|T|O|R Leadership®