
It was an economic downturn period with the attendant business concerns. In a management strategy meeting, team members were called upon to offer suggestions about how they would wish to ring fence one’s customer accounts, sustain revenues and margins, bring down expenses and so on. I got the sense that the participants were merely sticking to the safety of what we had been doing in the past; no creative suggestions were forthcoming. It seemed to me that in a perceived environment of insecurity, no one was willing to stick his / her neck out. All were hesitating, waiting to do what they would be told.
This set me thinking. Could it be that my seeking suggestions of what each team member plans to do in an adverse situation was being viewed as appraising and judgmental? Could it be that my stance smacked of arrogance, that I was putting others in a spot but was not willing to commit myself?
In a follow-up meeting, I decided to orient the conversation differently. Prior to the meeting, I sent a note to all participants inviting them to come into the meeting with an answer to a simple statement and a question:
- You would like to ask me about _______________
- What suggestion do you have about what I need to do?
The response was surprisingly overwhelming this time. Everyone chipped in with their frank assessment and the feedback I received were ‘I needed to be more of a team player, needed to be more accountable for team efforts’ and so on. Moreover, one could sense a renewed level of energy and vigour in the team’s declarations.
I thanked all for their frank inputs and avoided giving any explanations.
When later I thought about what had happened, I sensed that it all came down to my practicing humility in the meeting with vulnerability and the willingness to listen and learn. Without knowing it, I had shown up as a ‘Servant Leader’.
In ‘What Is Servant Leadership? A Philosophy for People-First Leadership’, author Sarah K. White, CIO says, ‘Servant leadership is a leadership style that prioritizes the growth, well-being, and empowerment of employees. It aims to foster an inclusive environment that enables everyone in the organization to thrive as their authentic self. it helps create a “psychological ethical climate” that allows employees to be authentic and not fear judgment from leadership for being themselves.’

Humility begins with authenticity. And the pathway to the practice of authenticity begins with ‘being authentic to your own self about your own inauthenticities’. This pathway has no end, it is the journey that we need to enjoy.
If we are not careful, a leadership role has this nasty tendency of making us arrogant. “I am a leader because I am better. I know what is good for the team, so it needs to be my way or highway” is the kind of thought that can sometimes circle inside us. And such thoughts manifest in our conversations and actions.

Arrogance blocks growth, humility drives growth. Humble leaders always strive to develop themselves.
What humble practices might you adopt to develop your team?
In Learning……. Shakti Ghosal
Acknowledgement: ‘What Is Servant Leadership? A Philosophy for People-First Leadership’ by Sarah K. White, SHRM Labs, Feb. 28th 2022

Humility gets me. Every time.
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Could not agree with you more Dash. Humility is soft power with huge potrential to shift the world.
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Learnt a new concept – “Servant Leadership”👍 Indeed best decisions can be made when one gets the free and frank inputs from the team. Humility is one of the most undervalued, but most important trait of a leader! People often, and wrongly, associate humility with weaknes. Very well written👍
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Thank you NK for your kind acknowledgement.
In the hurry burry of a fast shifting world, we get increasingly committed to get stuff done in a clinical ( perceived as efficient) manner. As you have so correctly put it, Humility gets undervalued and put on the back seat by most of us. Humility is indeed perceived as weakness. But as we adopt humility in our day to day interactions. we create an environment of trust which has huge long term positive spin-offs.
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Excellent written work here. Thank you. I enjoy thinking about this question, but right now I don’t have an answer.
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