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The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk

319: Jim Clifton - How To Become A World-Class Manager (CEO of Gallup)

The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk

Ryan Hawk

Careers, Management, Business

4.81.3K Ratings

🗓️ 14 July 2019

⏱️ 64 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk

#319: Jim Clifton

Full show notes can be found at www.LearningLeader.com

Personal Excellence 2.0 workshop: www.RyanHawk.me

Jim Clifton has served as CEO of Gallup, a global leader in consulting and public opinion research and analytics, since 1988. Under his leadership, Gallup has expanded from a predominantly U.S.-based company to a worldwide organization with 30 offices in 20 countries and regions.

  • Leaders who sustain excellence =
    • They don't set out to get rich, they have a purpose that drives them
    • The mission overpowers everything else
    • They build advantages for themselves through compound learning -- Stack your learning
    • Teach the "story of the day"
  • Be part of really hard projects -- the front line war battles
  • Advice to someone earlier in their career?
    • Focus and double down on your strengths
  • CEO of Gallup -- The beginning...
    • Won a big account (Cargill) -- It was huge to create momentum for his new business
    • Don Clifton (Jim's dad) built the StrengthsFinder -- And then bought Gallup in 1988
  • The StrengthsFinder was built from 34 themes
    • Don was a scientist. He went on bombing raids and was a war hero as a lead bomber. A navigator.
  • It's The Manager is the biggest discovery they've made
    • When studying the truly great companies, the commonality is the management
  • How to create a high development culture?
    • People want to be developed -- And then find the role that fits their unique strengths to maximize their potential
  • What Jim looks for when making hiring decisions:
    • Drive
    • They love to practice... They like to work
  • Where have your most talented people come from?
    • "Stars were recruited by the managers themselves." Great managers know great people.
  • "Presentations matter. A manager must get good at it."
  • Managers must be great coaches:
    • "Coaching is sitting down and sharing purpose..."
  • Shock and Awe visitors that meet at your office:
    • "The entrance to your building show wow them." Small details are very important. Landscaping matters. Pay attention to the feeling you get when you drive up to the building. It helps with your internal employees as well.
  • "People join because of the company and leave because of their boss."
    • Currently, only 34% of works are engaged (according to Gallup poll)
    • India/China are at 6%
  • The issue with promoting the top performer at a role (Example: The #1 sales rep becomes the manager)
    • The top individual contributor doesn't always make the best coach. In fact, often times, they don't.
    • Give superstar individual contributors bigger titles and more money as a way to promote them. Don't force them to management when they don't show the desire or ability to lead others.
    • "There must be two paths."
    • "Leaders need to see the future well, and excite others. The good ones have an unusual relationship with risk."
  • The Gender Gap
    • Statistically, women run more engaged teams than men
  • How to manage and nurture creativity?
    • Need ideas from teams close to the action (have a front line obsession)
    • You want intrapreneurship and foster an environment for that to pull out the great ideas
  • The difference in two teams:
    • The best negotiators are the ones who do their homework
    • Present in a neutral way, calm, collected, ask questions, try to learn, better understand the other person's position
  • When you work for a bad boss, you get cognitive contraction: You lose levels of intelligence
  • When you work for a great boss, you get cognitive expansion: You become smarter, innovate more, and do better work
    • A boss has incredible power. And that power needs to be used for good.

Transcript

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0:00.0

There's a really famous CEO and they ask him how much time he spends recruiting and developing people and he was what 80% the person interviewing him said well then how do you have any time for leadership and he

0:14.1

looked at him and he said that is leadership. Real quick before we get to this

0:20.2

episode I want to let you know that we have opened up tickets for our once a year

0:24.4

personal excellence workshop we did this last year and received incredible reviews so we

0:29.4

wanted to do it again this year but but make it even better.

0:33.3

In addition to the topics that I personally teach on,

0:36.3

I have reached out to the subject domain experts

0:39.2

within my network to be with us in the room

0:42.1

and share their expertise.

0:44.0

Things like how to harness your personal and professional flywheel

0:48.0

to build an incredible career.

0:51.0

Secrets from a professional keynote speaking coach.

0:55.0

How to become a learning machine.

0:59.0

How to utilize the mindset of a professional athlete in the business world and so much more.

1:05.2

This workshop is ideal for you if you want to interact with intellectually curious and interesting

1:10.5

people.

1:11.5

If you want to accelerate your personal and

1:13.3

professional growth, if you have an open mind and are not afraid to be challenged, and if

1:19.1

you are currently leading a team or have a desire to at some point in your future.

1:24.0

For more details go to Ryanhawk.me.

1:27.7

This event is intentionally kept small so the experience is intimate, engaging, and interactive.

1:34.0

For more details and to get your ticket, go to Ryan Hawk.

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