Leadership For Deep Results: Without Them Are You Wasting Your
Leadership And Your Life? (Part One)
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Summary: The author asserts there are two kinds of results
leaders achieve, standard results and deep results. All leaders
know what standard results are, but few leaders know what deep
results are. In the long run, standard results, though
necessary, are far less important than deep results.
Leadership For Deep Results: Without Them Are You Wasting Your
Leadership And Your Life? (Part One) by Brent Filson
I've challenged all leaders I have worked with during the past
two decades to achieve "more results faster continually."
They can get on track to start achieving such results not by
working harder and longer but by slowing down and using
Leadership Talks on a daily basis.
However, I also tell them that getting on the
more-results-faster-continually track is not an end but a
beginning. They must then begin focusing not just on the
quantity and speed of results but the kind of results they aim
to achieve.
There are roughly two kinds of results, standard results and
deep results. Most leaders understand standard results but fail
to come to grips with deep results. In fact, these leaders go
through their entire careers getting the former, but they don't
have a clue about the latter. Of course, standard results are
necessary. But in the long run, they are far less important than
deep results.
We know what standard results are. They are the results we must
get in our jobs, such as: speed, productivity, operations
efficiencies, sales closes, sales leads, sales to new customers,
failure prevention, health and safety advancements, quality,
training, quality control, logistics efficiencies, marketing
targets, new revenue streams, sales erosion, price calibrations,
cost reductions, demand flow activities and technologies,
inventory turns, cycle time reductions, materials and parts
management, etc.
Whereas achieving standard results enables us to do a better job
and have a better career, deep results are different. Deep
results are about being better leaders. Of course, being a
better leader will have a positive impact on your job and your
career. But there is something else involved: Being a better
leader means being a better person. Who we are as a leader and
who we are as a person should be the same thing. If they're not,
we diminish both our leadership and the person we are.
Look at it this way: Standard results are about "doing"; deep
results are about "being". Our most important achievements as
leaders are not just what we achieve but who we become in that
achieving.
For instance, if we don't get standard results in our job, we
fail in that job or at least in that particular aspect of the
job.
But in the realm of deep results, such failure might lead to
success if in that failure, we find a better way to lead, a
better way to be better.
Here are some ways deep results differ from standard results.
--Deep results emerge over longer periods of time.
--Deep results encompass wider circles outside your job, usually
impacting your family, friends, and relatives.
--Deep results are often not conventionally successful results.
They can come in the guise of failure.
--Deep results can't be quantified. They're usually a quality of
living or being.
--Deep results are often not immediately apparent. Usually, you
become aware of them after they appear and sometimes long after
they appear.
--Deep results are formed in your inner life and the choices you
make over the things you control, your opinions, aspirations,
and desires.
--Deep results shape, and are shaped by, character. How does one
go about getting deep results? There are many paths up this
mountain. But one path is straight and steep and clear. In Part
Two, I'll show you that path and provide examples of deep
results in action.
2005