Project Management

The Supreme Quality of Leadership

From the Strategic Project Management Blog
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As an "accidental" project manager, it's very satisfying to contribute to the project management community online with anecdotes and stories I've picked up from my own experience. I hope you enjoy our daily conversation.

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I have been fortunate throughout my career to have had several great leaders (although I have also experienced my share of poor leaders). Dwight Eisenhower, the 34th President of the United States and supreme commander of the Allied forces during World War II, said, "The supreme quality of leadership is unquestionable integrity. Without it, no real success is possible."

I have to agree. Those leaders I have responded to the best over the last thirty or so years have been those that I felt I could trust. I could trust what they said. I could trust the motives of what they did. And, I never had to second guess them.

Some time ago I wrote about honest project communication and was surprised that the reaction wasn't a unanimous, "Yeah, honesty is the best policy." I have to admit, I've probably spent more time thinking about those who suggested that it was OK to lie to colleagues, co-workers and team members than I should have. I have even recalled some of the poor leaders I've experienced over my career and recognized that many of them were liars. They lied to me. They lied to the rest of the team. They even lied to our boss.

It was Mahatma Gandhi who said, "A man is but the product of his thoughts. What he thinks, he becomes." I have observed that the great leaders I have worked with, regardless of their position, were men of unquestionable integrity.

I recognize that for many this isn't as black and white as I have just portrayed it, but maybe it should be.


Posted on: November 09, 2011 01:38 PM | Permalink

Comments (2)

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Wai Mun Koo PMO Director| Intergraph PP&M Singapore, Singapore
Ty, you are right. Ideally, there should be only either black or white. Unfortunately, there are many grey zones in life. There are many perceived 'good' reasons that people lie. I guess it is the question between objectivism vs. utilitarianism.

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Sam Motes Manager II Business Sys, Operational Excellence| BA Systems Inc. Ellenton, Fl, United States
Agree fully on the importance of trust and integrity being critical. Trust was at the top of Kouzes and Posner''s “Leadership Challenge” traits we look for in leaders as well as many other lists by thought leaders over the years. Without trust you are leading through traits like charisma, refererential power, or worse possibly coercion. The key point is that none of those alone motivate over the long haul. Earning trust takes time, results, the right attitude, and consistency by the leader and can be next to impossible to regain if you ever loose it in the eyes of your followers.

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