All week we’ve been discussing concepts of relational leadership with John Atkinson. Some of you are probably nuts by now, asking the question: “Okay, how do I do it?” Well, I wanted to finish this portion of our discussion by having John share some practical tips for you! You can read the other posts in this series here: introduction, Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, and Part 4.
Question #5: Can you give us some examples or practical ways a leader can invest relationally in their team leaders?
John’s Response:
· Positive verbal affirmation is critical to Relational Leadership. People need to know that what they are doing matters, and the best way to do that is to constantly reaffirm them. Tell people they are making a difference, tell them how honored you feel to have them on your team, tell them the team needs them, tell them you love them and appreciate their service, sacrifice and friendship. Tell the team often that you can’t believe God saw fit to bless you with this group of people. People need to know that what they are doing is making a difference and as the team leader you must be the person telling them.
· Take time to do the same exact thing I just talked about, except do it in writing. Thank you cards, a letter, an email, a gift of some kind with a thank you note. Buy someone a great book that you know may speak to something going on in their lives. The key to this, you have to know what’s going on in their lives, which is Relational Leadership 101!
· Appreciate your leaders! At least three or four times a year we have leadership dinners or events. Take that opportunity to speak into your leadership team lives. Go through each leader and speak to what they mean to you and how you couldn’t do what you do without them. My team actually turned that around on me one year and made me listen while they spoke into my life. It was a blessing beyond words. Buy a special gift for your team members. Something personal that speaks to how much you love and appreciate them. Take time for private dinners and lunch’s with your core team members because those private times build the relationship further.
· Make sure you’re there for your core team when they need you!!! When there’s sickness or death in their families, don’t send someone else, you go. When there’s a struggle in a marriage or family, you the leader, need to make sure they get the help they need. When someone on your core team needs you for something you really don’t want to do, do it anyway. When your leaders do something great, praise them big time, when they make a mistake that causes big time problems, love them and support them the same way you did when they were tearing it up. Nothing will do more to build this kind of team than them knowing you will stand by them no matter what.
· Do fun stuff with your team. The team shouldn’t always just meet for ministry stuff. Have parties with fun stuff where you don’t even talk about the ministry. Gather together for football games, go to a movie together, have a BBQ, or anything else that will have your team just hanging out building deeper friendships. For example; I do the Pay Per View Ultimate Fighting Championship fights at my house all the time, and part of my team always comes. The crazy like me part of course. It doesn’t matter what you do, just do something.
· Make sure you listen to your team. Your team needs to know you care what they have to say. Even though you won’t always do what they want, they need to know you always hearing what they have to say. Make sure everyone on your team feels like what they’re doing matters. There will be times when you use someone’s idea even though it’s not what you would have done, because you trust them enough to believe they may know something you don’t. Build a team that is that close, and you will have more amazing ideas heading you way than you will know what to do with. This works because when you build a team that has gotten that close; you’ll know God has placed them there for a reason.
