Learning to delegate is a very important leadership skill. Trusting that our team has the skill, the creativity and the commitment to produce outstanding results is a big leap of faith for many leaders. Even the slightest error is likely to send us back to “just let me do it myself.” Providing opportunities for teamwork, learning, coaching, mentoring and accountability are important if we are to build powerful teams that tap into the talent pool we had in mind when we hired them.
Leaders who delegate take a huge step forward away from fear and toward trust and growth. Leaders who participate take an even bigger step forward. Participation is very different from taking over the job. In participation we assess where our talents are uniquely suited and we let others step into the other areas. We engage, we strategize, we give and receive feedback, we are accountable, we become one with the team. Leaders who participate foster higher levels of trust, creativity, engagement, satisfaction, productivity and synergy than those who simply delegate because they get down in the trenches with the team and experience what the team experiences.
Participating does not always mean having a specific role in a team task. It can mean simply being there for the team in an active, undefined, hands-on way. There is a subtle difference between this style of participation and delegation, and that difference is engagement. If we hand off the task and then let it go, we delegate. If we hand it off and offer whatever is needed to support the team member to succeed, we participate.
What style do you currently use most often: do it myself, delegation or participation? Regardless of your current preferred style, how can include more participation in your style this week?
participation, perfectionism, delegation, teamwork, leadership, skills