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Hit any leadership ceilings lately?
You know that moment when you realize you need to grow but you just don't know how?
Welcome to the club.
We all feel that as leaders.
After 19 years of leading a church, I feel like I hit them quite regularly.
I was talking to a friend the other day who said like he felt he had stopped making progress as a leader. I was shocked, because I saw the progress he was making very clearly. He just couldn't see it.
He's been in his current position for a couple of years now and with the same church for 6 years. It's often in that window that you start to feel like you are hitting a ceiling you can't break through.
It got us into a great conversation about how you grow as a leader when you've been doing something for a while.
Here are three things I've learned about my personal leadership ceilings and how to break through them.
1. Don't run away.
When you keep hitting a ceiling, it's easy to think you need to leave to grow. After all, it feels like you've exhausted your potential where you are.
Sometimes that's true. And that may be your story.
But often, in my view, it isn't.
It's very easy to think,If I just had a new job/organization/position/start I would really grow" when, actually, the opposite is often true. That same kind of thinking leads people to jump out of their marriages or to move to new neighborhoods looking for a fresh start, only to discover that their issues have followed them.
Here's what I know: when you run away from your problems, you run away from growth.
In fact, when you leave to start a new job in a new place you often slow yourgrowth.
I realize that's counter-intuitive, but here's why.
When you start over again you often get to reach back into your skill set bag and trot out all the skills you previously developed.
Applying old skills in a new setting often feels like growth. But for the most part, it's not.
A deeper kind of growth happens when you stay in the same context and are forced to develop a new kind of skill set.
Which brings us to point #2.
2. Ask these questions to reveal your blindspots.
So if you're hitting a ceiling, how do you grow?
Often that question seems mysterious, but it doesn't need to be.
Simply identify your blindspots.
Usually when you hit a ceiling, it's because you've addressed everything youcansee that needs to be addressed.
The only thing left to address is what you can'tsee—the leadership issues to which you're blind. If you're trying to think of what you might be blind to (and that's the very issue with blindspots, isn't it?), this Forbes article outlines blindspots that affect many leaders in business (and in church to some extent).
But the best way to identify blindspots on an ongoing basis is to ask questions. More specifically, to ask the questions every leader is afraid to ask.
Here are three questions I've learned to ask my team regularly, as painful as the answers can be sometimes:
You need to ensure your team feels safe answering these.
Don't defend yourself. Don't come armed with reasons and excuses. Just listen. Thank them. And maybe even get them to help you figure out how you can make it better.
You let them know it's safe when you thank them for their answers, even when the answers are incredibly painful to hear.
When you ask these questions and are truly open to the answers, your blindspots get revealed.
And when you start asking questions as difficult as these, you grow.
3. Measure accurately.
Most of us driven types want to see progress instantly.
Which is why leadership ceilings are so frustrating. We hit our heads and can't understand why the ceiling didn't crumble.
In reality, when you've been in a role for a while, growth tends to happen this way.
You hit your head on the ceiling, and you think nothing moved.
You hit it a few times and ask questions like the ones above, and the ceiling moves a few inches.
Check in a few months later, and the ceiling has moved a foot or two. You've grown.
Keep stretching yourself, and a few years down the road you've moved up two storeys. You've grown significantly.
The key is to measure accurately over time.
If you keep working on your blindspots, when you look back a month, you'll see little change. But look back a year, and you'll realize you've changed a bit. Look back five years, and you might actually have grown significantly. You just didn't notice until you thought about it.
So learn to measure accurately. Be patient with yourself.
Over time, if you keep working on your blindspots, you'll grow far more than if you kept jumping around from place to place looking for the quick fix.
This article was first published atcareynieuwhof.com. Used with permission.
![]() | Carey Nieuwhof is a former lawyer and founding pastor of Connexus Church. He’s the author of several best-selling books, including, Didn’t See It Coming: Overcoming the Seven Greatest Challenges That No One Expects But Everyone Experiences. Carey speaks to leaders around the world about leadership, change and personal growth. Learn More » |
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