Leadership Hacks - Scott Stein - E-Book

Leadership Hacks E-Book

Scott Stein

0,0
13,99 €

-100%
Sammeln Sie Punkte in unserem Gutscheinprogramm und kaufen Sie E-Books und Hörbücher mit bis zu 100% Rabatt.

Mehr erfahren.
Beschreibung

FINALIST in the award for LEADERSHIP: The Australian Business Book Awards Hack your leadership and improve your approach With rapid change and hybrid workplaces becoming the new way of working, leaders are struggling to achieve their outcomes. How do you stay ahead in the face of constantly shifting priorities, competitors, and deadlines? With this fully revised and updated edition of Leadership Hacks, you'll discover how to cut through the madness and get back to achieving results. Author Scott Stein helps leaders--from CEOs to frontline managers to small business owners--identify ways to make a difference to the people they manage and the tasks they undertake. Here, he details proven hacks at every level: personal, one-on-one, team, hybrid and remote. With his tips, shortcuts and advice, you can rise above the daily deluge and make real progress. This is a book for leaders looking for the life, work, and business hacks that will help you manage and inspire others. Whether you're feeling burned out or thriving but still looking for better strategies to get things done and stay on top, this book will open your mind to new possibilities. If you're leading a hybrid workforce, you'll especially love the hacks for keeping your people productive and reducing costs. * identify what distractions slow you down * fast-track your productivity to do more in less time * streamline delegation so your people perform faster * learn the communication and technology shortcuts that get faster results * create and lead a hybrid workforce that increases performance. Leadership Hacks shows you how to hack your day, shift your approach and boost your communication so you can lead in a more effective and efficient way, no matter where your team is.

Sie lesen das E-Book in den Legimi-Apps auf:

Android
iOS
von Legimi
zertifizierten E-Readern

Seitenzahl: 431

Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2022

Bewertungen
0,0
0
0
0
0
0
Mehr Informationen
Mehr Informationen
Legimi prüft nicht, ob Rezensionen von Nutzern stammen, die den betreffenden Titel tatsächlich gekauft oder gelesen/gehört haben. Wir entfernen aber gefälschte Rezensionen.



Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page

Copyright

About the author

Acknowledgements

Introduction: The leadership dilemma — too much to do in too little time

Leadership hacks: a faster approach for a faster world

So what is a leadership hack?

Critical keys to hacking your leadership

PART I: PERSONAL HACKS

Chapter 1: Distractions and productivity

Internal distractions

External distractions

Productivity hacks

Improving your productivity

Chapter 2: Technology and email

The five types of technology programs

Email

PART II: ONE‐ON‐ONE HACKS

Chapter 3: Communication

The problem with ineffective communication

The Tell‐Show‐Ask strategy

Hacking your communication sequence

Chapter 4: Delegation

Why leaders don't delegate

The delegation model

The four delegation levels

More delegation hacks

Chapter 5: Coaching

How coaching differs from delegation

Why does coaching work?

Reasons for coaching staff

Critical coaching components

The coaching hack model: keep it REAL

When should you coach?

Where to coach: face to face or remote?

PART III: TEAM HACKS

Chapter 6: Team meetings

Why most meetings are a waste of time

Meeting requirements: purpose and agenda

Types of meeting

Virtual team meetings

Chapter 7: Team mobilisation

Why leaders fail to mobilise their staff

Creating your mobilisation code

The five steps of the mobilisation hack model

PART IV: HYBRID AND REMOTE HACKS

Chapter 8: Understanding hybrid

Five global trends that will accelerate hybrid workforces

Hybrid: should we or shouldn't we?

Traditional, all remote or hybrid?

Chapter 9: Designing hybrid

Selecting your hybrid model

Adapting hybrid office design and layout

Ensuring remote staff have the right set‐up

Chapter 10: Hybrid Success

Building a culture that supports hybrid

People: Setting up staff success

How to lead remote staff

Final words

Join the Leadership Hacks community

References

Index

End User License Agreement

List of Tables

Chapter 1

Table 1.1: transition strategy table

Chapter 2

Table 2.1: five types of software programs

Chapter 5

Table 5.1: coaching an individual

Chapter 7

Table 7.1: the critical components of a vision

Chapter 8

Table 8.1: pros and cons of remote work

Table 8.2: workplace models

Chapter 9

Table 9.1: advantages and disadvantages of fixed vs flexible hybrid model

List of Illustrations

Introduction

Figure 1: the keys to hacking leadership

Chapter 1

Figure 1.1: a sample activity mind map

Figure 1.2: activity mind map with times shown in percentages

Figure 1.3: activity mind map showing time and business focus

Figure 1.4: an ideal activity mind map showing time and focus

Chapter 2

Figure 2.1: four‐step email inbox hack model

Chapter 3

Figure 3.1: the Tell‐Show‐Ask model

Chapter 4

Figure 4.1: the delegation model

Figure 4.2: a level 2 mind map

Figure 4.3: a level 2 mind map with numbered sequence

Figure 4.4: a level 2 mind map with sequence, time frame and check‐in...

Figure 4.5: starting an activity mind map

Figure 4.6: an activity mind map showing activities

Figure 4.7: an activity mind map with number sequence

Figure 4.8: an activity mind map with number sequence, time frames and check...

Figure 4.9: virtual tablet screenshot

Chapter 5

Figure 5.1: critical coaching components

Figure 5.2: the REAL model

Chapter 6

Figure 6.1: the four types of team meeting

Figure 6.2: the three‐step reporting meeting hack

Figure 6.3: the five‐step problem‐solving meeting hack

Figure 6.4: the five compression planning steps

Figure 6.5: compression planning topic cards with votes

Chapter 7

Figure 7.1: the mobilisation hack model

Chapter 8

Figure 8.1: what people want when it comes to remote work

Chapter 9

Figure 9.1: expectations of remote work days

Figure 9.2: sample common office floor plan

Figure 9.3: sample updated floor plan with hybrid space and examples of hybr...

Figure 9.4: visuals of hybrid spaces

Figure 9.5: different home workspace configurations

Chapter 10

Figure 10.1: Hybrid Success model

Figure 10.2: five key pillars of culture in remote settings

Figure 10.3: hybrid success model for remote staff

Figure 10.4: above the line mindset

Figure 10.5: the 3 R's of remote leadership

Guide

Cover

Table of Contents

Title Page

Copyright

About the author

Acknowledgements

Introduction: The leadership dilemma — too much to do in too little time

Begin Reading

Final words

Join the Leadership Hacks community

References

Index

End User License Agreement

Pages

i

ii

iii

iv

vii

viii

xi

xii

xiii

xiv

xv

xvi

xvii

xviii

xix

xx

xxi

xxii

xxiii

xxiv

xxv

xxvi

xxvii

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25

26

27

28

29

31

32

33

34

35

36

37

38

39

40

41

42

43

44

45

46

47

48

49

50

51

52

53

54

55

56

57

58

59

60

61

62

63

64

65

66

67

68

69

70

71

72

73

74

75

76

77

78

79

80

81

82

83

84

85

86

87

88

89

90

91

92

93

94

95

96

97

98

99

100

101

102

103

105

106

107

108

109

110

111

112

113

114

115

116

117

118

119

120

121

122

123

124

125

126

127

129

130

131

132

133

134

135

136

137

138

139

140

141

142

143

144

145

146

147

148

149

150

151

152

153

154

155

156

157

158

159

160

161

162

163

164

165

166

167

168

169

170

171

172

173

174

175

176

177

178

179

181

182

183

184

185

186

187

188

189

190

191

192

193

194

195

196

197

198

199

200

201

202

203

204

205

206

207

208

209

210

211

212

213

214

215

216

217

218

219

220

221

222

223

224

225

226

227

228

229

230

231

232

233

234

235

236

237

238

239

240

241

242

243

244

245

247

248

249

250

251

252

253

254

255

256

257

258

259

260

261

262

263

264

265

266

267

268

269

270

271

272

273

274

275

276

277

278

279

280

281

282

283

284

285

286

287

288

289

290

291

293

294

295

296

297

298

299

300

301

302

303

305

306

307

308

309

310

311

312

313

314

315

A major ‘silver lining’ to the terrible ‘pandemic period’ is that we have unexpectedly learned how to successfully operate far more flexibly — remotely, from ‘home’ wherever that may be learning new skills along the way. Scott has delivered again with valuable practical advice in the additional chapters on leading a hybrid workforce in this updated edition.

Ian Macoun, founder and Managing Director, Pinnacle Investment Management

The 2020 world pandemic was one of the largest shake‐ups for businesses our generation has ever seen. In this second edition, Scott lays out ways leaders can make the best decisions going forward, for themselves, their businesses and their staff. I know I am a better leader from listening to Scott and our team are more connected and committed to the business

Jane Crowley, CEO, Dirty Janes

A brilliant book, that sets the scene of an increasingly fast‐paced and complex work environment then gives relatable and applicable real‐world hacks. It's a thought‐provoking read that will leave you energised and tooled up to face into your leadership challenges with hybrid and remote teams.

Stephen Exinger, Group Head of Science & Technology, Asahi Beverages

Just like in the first edition Leadership Hacks, Scott has presented some thought provoking, inspirational ideas for the ‘office of today'. The writing is concise, stimulating and practical in its content and tone; a perfect fit in considering all factors and options in making the ‘hybrid' model work for all parties. A well researched easy to read format with an ‘easy to apply', no fuss approach to business. Highly recommended!

Robynne Hall, Head of Sales Training, Hyundai Motor Company Australia

Leading in the decade of disruption requires agility. A speed born by shortcuts and measured by its effectiveness. Leadership Hacks is practical in its style and impactful in its message

Matt Church, founder and Chairman, Thought Leaders Global, author of Rise Up

Scott is an exceptional motivational speaker and leadership coach. This updated book will provide a wider audience with the opportunities to share Scott's clever insights and ambition for leaders to be the best they can be in these fast‐changing times.

Simon Karlik, founder, Cheeki

The strategies ‘Hacks' outlines for understanding, designing and successfully leading through a hybrid and remote world is certainly a key takeaway. Scott's ability to connect to the real life challenges that us leaders face day to day really aids for leading through a new era.

Susan Mardini, Managing Director, Steelcase Australia

Being the managing director of a fast‐paced advertising agency, I found Leadership Hacks the most practical and easy‐read book I've read in years. If you are a CEO, manager or team leader, the updated edition is a must read, and an investment in your business's future providing hacks to lead remote teams

James Fitzgerald, Managing Director, Media Merchants

Leadership Hacks, second edition offers new insights into the essence of successful leadership, essential in navigating a pathway through COVID. Scott demonstrated his deep wisdom on how business leaders and their workforce can embrace this new frontier to enhance future performance. His practical strategies for working in a hybrid world offer an opportunity for increased flexibility, efficiency and collaboration to become cornerstones in a productive and resilient work environment.

Jan Metcalfe, founder and Executive Director Advocacy, former Assistant Director General, QLD Statewide Services, Department of Communities

I have known Scott Stein for over 15 years. From his keynotes to books, Scott delivers insights with a passion and energy that challenge you to lead and motivate and build winning teams. This updated edition provides ideas, concepts and the tools to help you lead hybrid and remote teams. I encourage any leader to read Scott's book to boost the way you lead your people

Michael Jackson, CEO, NARTA

Scott has been an exceptional coach who has provided great insights into helping us ‘hack' our leadership, both within our company and within the brewing industry. This updated edition provides practical solutions to improve effectiveness that allow you to make things happen faster in hybrid and remote teams

Jaideep Chandrasekharan, Group Chief Brewer, Asahi Beverages

Moving into a remote approach to my leadership, in such a turbulent time, this book has help me work through and create some hybrid strategies (especially in dealing with a public facing face‐to‐face team). The 3 R's were a very effective reminder for me as a leader to be relatable and responsive and not just reliable—have definitely enjoyed the ride! Great hacks that any leader can and should use!

Dan Gay, Academy Training Manager, Australian Lifesaving Academy NSW

What I love about Scott is his ‘street wisdom’—he's low on jargon and BS and high on experience and practical strategy. In other words, his stuff just works. I can think of fewer people better qualified to hack your leadership approach with hybrid and remote hacks in this new edition.

Dan Gregory, co‐founder, The Behavioural Report, author of Selfish Scared & Stupid and Forever Skills

In a fast paced context where traditional approaches to performance and productivity manager are being challenged, Scott Stein's updated edition provides insights to a refreshed leadership approach empowering to any contemporary business or community leader—including remote teams.

John Percudani, founder and Managing Director, Realmark

Scott Stein provides a practical guide to leadership that allows you to pick the ‘Hacks’ that fit your style, yet allows you to be effective with different audiences. I have chosen several techniques that I am able to use every day making me a better leader. Thank you Scott!

Randy Wells, Director of Human Resources, Habitat for Humanity Tucson

Scott delivers a series of practical hacks for founders, CEOs and team leaders to put into practice today. I've already put some of Scott's practical hacks into practice with quick returns. As a founder of several tech businesses, I'm always looking for ways to do more with less and this book provides a series of shortcuts to increase the impact I'm having on my businesses.

Ben Webster, founder, Insured by Us

Life and leadership has changed. I love Scott's practical approach. His wisdom is wonderful and this book is the perfect resource for leaders who want to achieve more in less time. This book is a gem!

Lisa O'Neill, CEO, Thought Leaders Business School

LEADERSHIP HACKS

Clever Shortcuts to Boost Your Impact and Results

 

SCOTT STEIN

 

 

 

EXPANDED AND UPDATED SECOND EDITION

 

 

 

 

 

First published in 2022 by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd42 McDougall St, Milton Qld 4064

Office also in Melbourne

© John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd 2022

The moral rights of the author have been asserted.

ISBN: 978‐1‐119‐89289‐2

All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the Australian Copyright Act 1968 (for example, a fair dealing for the purposes of study, research, criticism or review), no part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, communicated or transmitted in any form or by any means without prior written permission. All inquiries should be made to the publisher at the address above.

Cover design: Paul McCarthy/WileyCover image: © miragec / Getty Images

DisclaimerThe material in this publication is of the nature of general comment only, and does not represent professional advice. It is not intended to provide specific guidance for particular circumstances and it should not be relied on as the basis for any decision to take action or not take action on any matter which it covers. Readers should obtain professional advice where appropriate, before making any such decision. To the maximum extent permitted by law, the author and publisher disclaim all responsibility and liability to any person, arising directly or indirectly from any person taking or not taking action based on the information in this publication.

About the author

Scott Stein has worked with thousands of leaders from around the world, helping them to become better leaders by fast‐tracking their thinking and their approach with their people, in person and virtually. Scott is a highly sought after international speaker and mentor who has worked with a range of global and Australian businesses including American Express, Carlton & United Breweries, McDonald's, REA Group, City of Sydney, Westpac, Link Group, Toyota and Habitat for Humanity, to name a few.

He is based in Sydney, Australia, and travels the globe to help leaders identify and implement strategies that inspire their people to do the things that matter in less time to achieve greater success. This includes face‐to‐face events as well as delivering online across the globe. (During the pandemic he delivered over 100 virtual presentations!) As the CEO of an international learning and development company, Scott understands the challenges that leaders face when trying to juggle multiple projects and multiple people across multiple time zones. In addition he is a Thought Leaders Global Mentor, assisting the community to help clever people become commercially smart by improving the capturing and communication of their ideas.

His previous roles included National Operations Manager for a leadership development company based out of Atlanta, Georgia, that used the outdoors to accelerate learning. He was also the Learning & Development Manager for five manufacturing plants in Detroit, Michigan. Both of these roles gave him an opportunity to hone his practical business skills as he assisted in turning leaders and businesses around by improving communication and lifting performance.

Scott has a Master's Degree in Communication and taught Communication and Public Speaking at Central Michigan University. He has also received the Certified Speaking Professional (CSP) designation from the Professional Speakers Association, which recognises him as one of the top speakers across the globe.

He is an author of four books including The Order: Doing the right things at the right time, in the right way, which blends his Native American training with how leaders can learn from ancient wisdom.

Scott believes successful leaders need to build community and give back. He is a founding board member of Hands Across the Water, an Australian charity established after the 2004 Boxing Day Tsunami that has raised over $25 million and cares for more than 600 children across seven homes in Thailand. Supporting Scott's philosophy of hacking ways to boost impact, donations the charity receives go directly to the Thai projects without funds being spent on administration staff or marketing in Australia.

Acknowledgements

When writing a second edition of a book it gets a bit tricky on who to acknowledge from the initial manuscript to the new and improved version. Over the years before and during the global pandemic I have been fortunate enough to work with amazing clients and colleagues, who have inspired me and allowed me to see firsthand how leadership hacks can boost results for leaders and their people. Thank you.

To my wonderful wife, Natalie: I want to thank you for all your support and encouragement. You continue to be the amazing person I met many years ago — full of life and energy that you unselfishly give to so many people and the community.

To my incredible children: Jazzy, your wonderful smile always lights up a room and your quiet determination continues to impress me; Bella, your passion and commitment to push yourself to new heights inspire me; Luca, your cheeky laughter and can‐do approach remind me to appreciate the important things in life. I would also like to thank my parents, Larry and Lorene, for inspiring me and telling me that I could do or be anything.

To Helen Macdonald for being a wonderful business partner and friend and to The Learning Difference team for helping us lift performance for so many people and organisations for over 20 years.

To Matt Church, thanks for being a true friend and mentor and helping me stick to my path. To the TL Mentors, Black Belts and the rest of the Thought Leaders Global tribe, thank you for your support and brilliance.

I would also like to thank each of the case study leaders: Leanne Coddington, Tricia Velthuizen, Matt Church, Kay Spencer, Paul Sadler, Mike Azbell, Peter Baines, Ben Day‐Roche, Greg Barnett and Amit Chanan. It is incredible to have such wonderful leaders willing to share their updated insights and hacks with others.

In addition, I would like to thank the team at Wiley, including Lucy Raymond for her belief in this book, Chris Shorten, Leigh McLennon and Ali Hiew for her incredible editing skills, which improved the overall flow of the book in this new edition.

Once again, my awesome business manager, Katrina Welch, also needs to be recognised. Year after year you keep me organised, make incredible things happen behind the scenes (through lots of hacks pre and post pandemic!) and can switch directions at a moment's notice. Thank you for your patience, friendship and commitment.

I would also like to thank you, the reader, for following your intuition and picking up this second edition of my book. My wish for you is that you can use these leadership hacks to boost your impact and results, working in person or remotely.

IntroductionThe leadership dilemma — too much to do in too little time

When I wrote the first edition of this book, the key question I started with was ‘Are leaders born or are they made?’ This is an age‐old question many academics and researchers have struggled with. It's a question that has wasted millions of dollars — not to mention the millions of days lost sending sceptical employees to old‐school leadership‐development programs. CEOs, managing directors, divisional directors, vice‐presidents and frontline managers can all repeat the theories that have been crammed down their throats by their HR departments. Many leaders I have worked with shared with me their frustration over the latest complex leadership competency model created to show them how they and their leadership teams are screwing things up — regardless of how their business is performing or how challenging the competitive environment is.

When the global pandemic hit the world, leaders had no choice but to change the way their people operated. With lockdowns being used to reduce the impact of COVID‐19 many people had to quickly shift to working remotely. This created an entirely new way of working, with kitchen tables becoming the new desk and back‐to‐back Zoom meetings becoming the new norm. Leaders had to deal with isolation, staff mental health challenges and a massive amount of uncertainty that stretched them beyond typical business practices, and most had to make it up along the way.

Leaders do not want to be perfect; they want to motivate their staff to do the best job possible in the shortest time possible. They're looking for practical approaches or techniques that they can use to improve their performance. They don't have time to attend intensive leadership programs that regurgitate leadership theory from the 1980s or 1990s and don't address the challenges of some people working remotely and some in the office. Much of what has been written about leadership tends to be overly complicated and so confusing that you need a PhD to understand it. Many people — particularly university lecturers — are good at theory.

Yet when I was working as an instructor at a university, I was amazed at how few of the professors had real‐life experiences in what they were teaching. Many of them had never been in the ‘real world’ because they had spent their time collecting degrees and completing reviews of other researchers’ articles.

Leadership has changed. In the past, the pace of life and business was very different from today. Leaders used to have time. They had the luxury of spending their evenings and weekends thinking, and recharging their batteries, knowing that the rest of the business world was also on hold until the next business day. They didn't have competitors leveraging new forms of technology to disrupt traditional markets. They had the security of knowing that they could work face to face with their people in the office. Now they are leading remote teams with their workforce spread out. Leaders are now playing a different game and some of them aren't even aware of it, instead thinking things will return to normal overnight! Gone are the days of five to 10‐year strategic plans, predictable operations and long‐term employee loyalty. These are being replaced by short‐horizon strategies, flexible operations that adapt based on the changing competitive landscape, and fighting to attract and keep the top talent. Some leaders are winning, while others are not.

Over the past 25 years, I have observed and worked with a range of business leaders in the United States, Asia–Pacific and Europe across corporate industries, the government and the military, as well as frontline managers and small‐business owners looking for strategies for improving their performance. Some have created incredible cultures and attained amazing results; others have stumbled. I've watched as businesses and governments wasted millions and millions of dollars trying to get their leaders and staff to lift their performance using engagement surveys, statistical analyses, competency metrics and complex models.

I'm constantly looking for leadership approaches that work and can be used in multiple environments and businesses. So what is the secret formula — the silver bullet — to achieving more as a leader? I don't think there's one simple answer to this question. In fact, I often think this is the wrong question to be asking. We should be asking, ‘What are the leaders who are achieving more doing?’ and, more, importantly, ‘How do they do it?’ That is the purpose of this book. My goal is to share with you the strategies and pathways that actual leaders are using to achieve increased results in less time, whether they are in the office or leading remotely.

The leadership dilemma is having too much to do in too little time. This challenge is not new to leaders. What is new is the speed with which they have to accomplish things — they need to get many more things done in much less time in an environment that includes more remote workers. They need to ‘hack’ their approach: to find methods and processes they can use to fast‐track their approach to thinking, communicating and delegating.

Leadership hacks: a faster approach for a faster world

The amount of information available nowadays for planning, executing and tracking tasks is mind‐boggling. It's difficult to keep up with the speed at which information and business are moving in our technology‐driven world. Let's have a look at just some of the changes that have affected businesses, employees and traditional players. As you read through these scenarios, consider the difficulties CEOs face when trying to create and execute a traditional business plan in these fast‐paced environments.

The business environment has changed …

In 1910, the 10 largest businesses in the world were involved in constructing and selling products large enough for human beings to stand on (cars, airplanes and the like). In 2020, the largest businesses were predominantly associated with the creation and sale of invisible, intangible and handheld products.

Prior to the pandemic, technology allowed many people to work from home, but few actually did. According to the Productivity Commission, in 2019 around 8 per cent of employees had a formal work‐from‐home arrangement and worked a median of one day per week from home. This has increased to around 40 per cent of the workforce working remotely, and, during the height of the pandemic, many organisations had 90 per cent of their workforce working from home.

Hybrid work is inevitable with leaders having to make major changes to accommodate what employees want. The Microsoft 2021 Work Trend Index shows that 73 per cent of employees want flexible remote work options to stay. At the same time, 67 per cent of employees want more in‐person work or collaboration post‐pandemic!

Organisations are struggling to keep their people skilled and effective for the future. The 2020 Deloitte Insights Global Human Capital Trends survey shows that 53 per cent of businesses say that between half and all of their workforce will need to change their skills and capabilities in the next three years.

Employee dynamics have shifted …

Employees are looking at their next employment options; The Microsoft 2021 World Trend Index shows that 41 per cent of the global workforce is likely to consider leaving their current employer within the next year.

Employees continue to be disillusioned at work, with 80 per cent of employees worldwide either not engaged or actively disengaged at work according to Gallup's 2021 State of the Global Workforce Report. To keep this in perspective, this trend has continued since Gallup started its engagement surveys in 1997, showing that leaders continue to struggle with how to motivate and retain their workforce.

Because of employees’ desire to have more control over where they work, a 2021 Steelcase Global Report found 87 per cent of leaders agree they will have to offer more choice for employees to work from home or elsewhere.

In 2013,

Forbes

magazine published the results of a survey about who wastes the most time at work. It found that 64 per cent of employees visit non–work related websites each day. It also reported that more than 60 per cent of these employees admitted to wasting at least one hour per day on these websites — with Facebook contributing to over 50 per cent of this time loss. Even more surprising was the feedback received about the reasons for wasting time, which ranged from not being challenged enough to being unsatisfied or bored at work.

Younger generation employees continue to struggle, with 60 per cent of those 18–25 saying they are merely surviving or struggling from the pandemic. This follows on from the 2015 Future Leaders Index telling us that the next generation entering the workforce is already showing early signs of burnout, with 82 per cent reporting they suffer from one or more physical health issues when they get busy and 76 per cent reporting one or more mental or emotional health issues when they feel overworked. This is leading to increased amounts of employee stress leave, resulting in millions of dollars in medical support being spent, as well as lost productivity and fewer people available to complete departmental tasks.

Technological advances are disrupting traditional players …

When Google was started in 1998 it could search 10 000 queries per day. At the time of Google's 2004 IPO announcement, it was registering over 200 million queries per day. Now Google processes over 5.6 billion searches every day — or more than 63 000 searches per second. This has massively disrupted traditional print publishers, as well as anyone else who used to sell information. (When was the last time you saw an encyclopedia? An entire industry gone.)

Although ride‐sharing company Uber was only started in 2010, it's estimated that today it's worth US$91 billion — and it has very few employees and doesn't own the vehicles that the drivers use. More importantly, the owners and leaders of traditional taxi companies didn't see them coming until it was too late. During the pandemic, UberEATS created a massive income stream delivering takeaway food to people's homes.

Airbnb uses a technology platform that offers accommodation at over 5.6 million locations in 100 000 cities in 200 countries — all managed through its user‐friendly website, and all without owning a single property, hotel room or any of the overheads that come with them. Not bad for a company started in 2007 and now worth US$86 billion! This has changed the marketplace, with a 2017 Morgan Stanley report estimating that Airbnb will take 191 million hotel stays away from traditional hotels. This has changed the game for leaders in the hotel and leisure industries.

According to the November 2021 Ericsson Mobility Report, 69 per cent of all traffic on mobile devices is in video format. They estimate that this will increase to 79 per cent by 2027 as a result of increased consumer demand. How many businesses are ready to move their content and communications to mobile video format in a quick time frame at low cost?

Morgan Stanley's recent 2017 Rise of the Machines report analysed the automation of tasks across industries. The results led them to estimate that 45 per cent of workforce positions have at least a 70 per cent chance of being automated using robotics. This means shifts in business processes, technology platforms and the way staff operate. The report also estimates a cost savings of as much as 30–50 per cent once these computer programs or robots develop more cognitive abilities and perform more complex tasks. Which industries or tasks could this affect? Almost every industry, including data entry, customer service interaction, process improvement and back office tasks in industries such as manufacturing, IT, finance, insurance, legal, health care, government and utilities/energy. The better question is which industries will it not affect?

This is just a small glimpse at how things have changed. The tsunami of information and new technology is flowing in 24 hours a day, seven days a week. And, as research shows, it's getting faster and faster. Leaders need to re‐wire and hack their approach to leading their teams in order to keep up with this new world.

Gone are the days when leaders had the time to analyse a year's worth of data and spend six months preparing a five‐year strategic plan. The days of slow thinking and slow execution are gone.

So what is a leadership hack?

The word ‘hack’ has changed meaning over time. Initially, the Oxford Dictionary defined the verb ‘hack’ as ‘to cut with rough or heavy blows’. According to Ben Yagoda of The New Yorker magazine, the noun ‘hack’ was first used at MIT in the 1950s to describe the act of adjusting machines (primarily electrical systems) in ways that were not common. This morphed into a sense of working on a tech problem in a unique or creative way. In the 1980s the word ‘hacker’ had a negative connotation, describing computer programmers who illegally gained access to early computer systems. Steven Levy's book Hackers described the positive and negative activity of these innovators in the field of technology. This promoted the term ‘hacker’ and brought it into more common language.

It wasn't long before the meaning of ‘hacker’ started to gain more positive connotations. Before the launch of Facebook's 2012 IPO, Mark Zuckerberg published a manifesto titled ‘The Hacker Way’, which provided a unique insight into the meaning of hacking. In this document he says, ‘In reality, hacking just means building something quickly or testing the boundaries of what can be done’. He added more around his belief that The Hacker Way is about continuous improvement and finding ways to get things done better and faster — often by moving projects around people who are too comfortable with the status quo and unwilling to change.

More recently, the word ‘hack’ morphed even further when technology writer Danny O'Brien coined the term ‘life hack’ to describe how computer programmers were creating shortcuts to make their lives easier. This, combined with the explosion of videos on YouTube, enabled anyone with a smartphone to share their hacks or shortcuts with others who could benefit from them. This has led to the sharing of a plethora of hacks, including life hacks, parent hacks, game hacks, political hacks, happiness hacks and — my personal favourite — a potato hack (which is actually based on a diet from 1849 that focuses on eating mostly potatoes to lose weight!).

Dictionary.com defines a hack as ‘a tip, trick or efficient method for doing or managing something’. It adds the expanded definition ‘to handle or cope with a situation or an assignment adequately and calmly’.

A leadership hack is anything that helps you accomplish more in less time. This can include:

shortcuts that may not be commonly known

simplified steps that make a task easier to do

fast‐tracked processes that speed things up

any approach that simplifies and speeds up a task.

Simply put, leadership hacks are about identifying ways leaders can make a difference to the people around them and the tasks they're confronted with. They are about being a leader who is admired by other leaders because of their ability to work smarter and more efficiently and to inspire and empower others.

Critical keys to hacking your leadership

So what does it take to be a leader admired by other leaders? What do incredible leaders do that inspires and motivates others to take action? And by ‘inspire’ I don't mean getting people to do things because they have to because of the organisational chart, but making them want to follow you because of who you are and your leadership approach.

As you can see in figure 1, to become the leader of leaders, the ultimate hack involves three main keys: mindset, approach and impact.

Figure 1:the keys to hacking leadership

Mindset

Your mindset is how you view yourself and the world around you. It's also about your beliefs and the values that guide you on a daily basis. This is your internal monologue and the moral compass that guides you as a leader and will influence your ability to hack your current leadership.

Now more than ever, leaders need to be very clear and intentional about their mindset. In the past, leaders had plenty of time to think through different approaches to ensure they had a clear mindset on what needed to happen and how it should or shouldn't be done. Today this process has become more challenging.

In Mindset: The new psychology of success, Carol Dweck provides a brilliant insight into the importance of mindset. Her research has found that the views people adopt for themselves profoundly affect the way they lead their life. She identified two distinct mindsets that determine whether or not people are successful in adapting to the world around them. The first is the fixed mindset: the belief that your traits are set for life. This includes the idea that people are born with a certain amount of intellect, personality and character that doesn't change. Dweck found these people felt the need to constantly prove their ability. The alternative is the growth mindset, which is based on the belief that your basic qualities are things you can cultivate through your efforts. This is all about learning from your mistakes and using those insights to grow to the next level. Dweck's research shows that people (especially leaders) who have a growth mindset are generally more fulfilled than those who don't because they are able to learn to fulfil their potential.

By examining your mindset (and sometimes challenging it) you can start to identify what may be limiting your ability to complete things that you want to achieve. In essence, you may need to hack your mindset to enable you to move forward and improve your effectiveness as a leader.

Approach

Approach is about what you actually do. It's about the steps you take as a leader to make things happen. This may include the action you take to improve your own productivity and save yourself time, or it may include the approach you take with your team to achieve business objectives.

As a leader you need to be proactive in your approach and the methods you use to achieve an objective. Imagine if we filmed you for a full week at work. The filming only focused on you: what you said, what you did and the tasks you completed. This would clearly show us the approaches you're taking — both positive and negative.

Leaders need to hack their approach. They need to identify the shortcuts and strategies they can use to do more things in less time.

Impact

A leader's impact on the people around them is what separates the typical leader from the great leader. Anyone in a position of authority and power can boss around employees in an attempt to achieve results. However, incredible leaders have the ability to motivate and inspire their staff in a way that truly mobilises them.

The trick is to identify ways to hack your impact on people. It's about adapting your leadership to create a culture where your staff want to make things happen — not for money, but because they believe they're making a difference and that their contribution matters. Regardless of the organisation, a good culture creates this feeling of unification. In looking at the research, it's clear that it's the leaders who set the tone of an organisation or office and the impact that this has on the staff. By hacking your impact on others you can become a leader others admire and will follow.

I have yet to work with the perfect leader. Nobody is perfect. However, from years and years of working with leaders, I have observed that when they get their mindset, approach and impact in perfect alignment, amazing things start to happen. The purpose of this book is to help you hack your leadership so you can achieve greater things in less time. This book is full of ideas and practical tasks that you can use to make things happen more quickly and easily. On reading this book, some leaders will realise they need to hack their mindset. Others will realise that it's about hacking their approach or their impact on others. Regardless of where you as a leader find yourself, there will be a number of practical strategies or hacks you can take to improve your impact and your results.

To keep things simple, I've divided the book into four types of leadership hacks.

Part I reveals personal hacks that you can use to boost your leadership as an individual. This includes hacking your productivity, use of technology and communication platforms.

Part II discusses one‐on‐one hacks that you can use to increase your leadership performance when working with individual staff members. These include communication, delegation and coaching hacks.

Part III identifies a number of team hacks that you can use to increase your leadership performance with others, most commonly in an organisation, department or team. These include hacking team meetings and a range of team mobilisation shortcuts.

Part IV is the update in this edition of Leadership Hacks and identifies a number of critical hacks that you can use when leading a remote or hybrid workforce. These include how to set up hybrid working and hacks for leaders to motivate and connect in a virtual world.

Spread throughout these four parts I have included a range of case studies on various incredible leaders. I have worked with many of these leaders and had the pleasure of seeing firsthand the brilliance in their approach and how they deal with their people.

I have also included SELF-HACK exercises that you can use to help integrate the concepts and hacks described in the chapters.

The way you adapt your leadership will open up new realms of opportunity. Use this book as a fast‐track guide to help you identify smarter ways to improve your impact and your results by hacking your leadership.

PART IPERSONAL HACKS

Part I is filled with strategies you can use to improve your individual performance as a leader. The information is designed to assist you in hacking your leadership and the personal approach you adopt to get things done in less time, whether you are working in an office or remotely.

But first, in chapter 1 we're going to explore some of the distractions that could prevent leaders from using hacks to become more efficient.

Chapter 1Distractions and productivity

Before jumping into examining leadership hacks, it's important to talk about the distractions that slow leaders down or stop them from looking for ways to hack their leadership approach. Over the 25 years I've been working with leaders, I've noticed a number of emerging patterns and trends that stop leaders from being more efficient.

By understanding these trends and patterns you can make a conscious choice to start changing the traditional way you operate in relation to your mindset, approach or impact. This will enable you to be more effective and to have a more positive impact on your work and the people you work with in an office or remote environment.

There are five common distractions, or obstacles, you need to overcome to ensure you don't get sidetracked from using shortcuts and hacks that can benefit you. Three of these are internal — that is, they're within your control — and two are external — that is, they're environmental and harder to control.

Internal distractions

Internal distractions are fully within your control to manage. If you have self‐awareness, you have the ability to do something to reduce or eliminate these internal distractions. If you don't have this higher level of operating you may lose traction and not have enough energy or time to achieve as much as you could if you removed or controlled these distractions.

Lack of energy

With business moving as fast as it does today, most leaders have a very busy schedule. Many of my CEO and director clients spend their days on tasks that fit into a number of critical categories. I worked with the CEO of a large multinational who was so busy that he had to have two full‐time personal assistants just to keep up with all of the activities, events and communications he was required to stay across in his role. This also meant that most of the time his calendar was filled with activities as varied as role tasks, organisational activities, board and stakeholder events, government and industry events, innovation and R&D events. In addition, he was travelling all the time and spending nights in hotels after dinners or other events to continue positioning himself as an accessible leader. I worked with another CEO who hadn't slept in his own bed for 55 days in a row due to global travel commitments and activities. When I checked in with him on how he was feeling, the only word that came to his mind was ‘exhausted’.

Before the pandemic I can remember spending over 100 nights in hotels myself in a very busy year of work. I was in the top per cent of flyers for Qantas (earning almost 400 000 frequent flyer miles in a year) and achieved top loyalty status at a number of hotels. As a road warrior I had reached a new level of rhythm — travelling quickly and being very focused with my time in the air and on the ground. The challenge was, of course, maintaining this pace. After so much time in the air and on the road, and being exposed to many different people in closed conditions, my immune system crashed. I ended up getting a terrible cough that went into my chest and turned into walking pneumonia, forcing me to stay in bed. It took me almost a week to get back on my feet and a couple of weeks to get my energy back to where it needed to be. The only way to maintain a faster pace is by finding a way to sustain your energy and health.

The flurry of constant activity and the need to be switched on all the time takes a lot of energy — and this is what limits many leaders from achieving as much as they could. When you're constantly physically and mentally taxed, your energy drains and your effectiveness diminishes.

The Huffington Post's Anne Loehr reported in 2014 that the Johnson & Johnson Human Performance Institute (HPI) had been researching what leaders can do to gain an edge. Over the past 30 years HPI has identified strategies for improving the performance of leaders based on how they manage their energy. They viewed and compared today's leaders to elite professional athletes. A professional athlete may have a career span of seven to 10 years, work four to six hours a day and spend 90 per cent of their time training before a game. In contrast, the HPI views a ‘corporate athlete’ as having a career span of 30 years, typically working eight to 12 hours a day and spending 10 per cent of their time training, which means they have very little time to recover and revitalise their energy. The HPI looked at a framework for developing the physical, emotional, mental and spiritual dimensions of leaders in order to maintain optimum performance. Without having a method for maintaining their energy, they believed many leaders were starting to lose their edge.

There is no set way to maintain or recharge your energy because it's a personal thing. I know of one CEO who schedules fortnightly massages to help her relax and recharge. When I asked her how she makes this happen she said that she has her executive assistant block out the time as if it were any other meeting. She finds taking this time for herself allows her to recharge and maintain her energy.

Former Apple CEO Steve Jobs was almost obsessive with walking. He used this as a form of stress management and he often held meetings while going for a long walk. Personally, I enjoy going to the cinema to help me recharge. I started using this as a hack when I spent a lot of time travelling. After a full day of work with a client and then continuing to work at my hotel for two or three hours afterwards, I needed a break — and going to watch a movie really helps me. When the lights are turned down and mobile phones switched off, I can escape the pressures and constant communication. When I emerge two hours later, my energy is often much more positive than it was when I went in.

You have to reclaim energy and time to ensure you don't burn out because without energy, everything else begins to falter. So any hacks that give you more time to recharge your batteries will assist you in maintaining higher performance levels.

Wrong mindset and self‐doubt

As we've seen in the introduction, it's essential to be aware of your mindset (and it's something that continually needs to be hacked). Being in a growth mindset is important because it ensures you recognise the need to be flexible and to keep learning even when you make mistakes.

Too often, self‐doubt gets in the way and starts to stall your progress. This can show up as an inner dialogue guiding you when you're in your leadership role. If these voices start creating doubt, it's easy to start second‐guessing what needs to be done. This in itself creates a distraction that can take you off track. Rather than making decisions that are the best for the business, you may allow fear to get in the way, and this can delay important actions that should be taken.

There's a famous quote commonly attributed to Henry Ford that helps me be more aware of the thoughts that are going through my mind — both positive and negative: ‘Whether you believe you can do a thing or not, you are right.’ This quote succinctly defines what can happen internally when you get distracted by the opposing voices in your head.