If productive influence doesn’t arise from being liked (“I’m your friend!”) or from fear (“I’m the boss!”), where does it come from? From people’s trust in you as a manager. That trust has two components: belief in your competence (you know what to do and how to do it) and belief in your character (your motives are good and you want your people to do well).
Trust is the foundation of all forms of influence other than coercion, and you need to conduct yourself with others in ways that foster it. Management really does begin with who you are as a person.
Content: Quotation
Authors: Kent L. Lineback, Linda A. Hill
Source: Harvard Business Review
Subjects: Management, Trust
Authors: Kent L. Lineback, Linda A. Hill
Source: Harvard Business Review
Subjects: Management, Trust
There Are No Comments
Click to Add the First »
Click to Add the First »
