The Leader’s Greatest Return

Before I stepped into my first Executive leadership role at NASA, I read that you should start preparing successors day one on the job.  So, when I became HR Director, I developed a plan to have a pool of people ready to succeed me.  My leadership team balked at the idea, saying, “You’re not going anywhere any time soon.”

Fortunately, I didn’t listen to the resistance, and I’m pleased to say that today—less than five years after my first Executive promotion—three of my former leadership team members fill HR Executive roles at NASA (along with me, we comprise more than 25% of our Executive Leadership Team)!

As a leader, I can truly attest—a focus on succession is, as John Maxwell wrote earlier this year, The Leader’s Greatest Return!

I’ve summarized other books on succession in the past:

In his book The Succession Principle, David McKenna helps us recognize that “our greatest legacy is to leave a place better than we found it: better resourced, better focused, and better aligned to guarantee momentum that can launch the leadership of those who follow us.”

In What Makes a Leader Great, Russ Crosson points out, “If we don’t pass the leadership baton well, the mission of whatever we’re leading could be lost.  It’s all about passing on something of greater value to the next generation.  We lead in order to replace ourselves.  At the end of the day, we’re not successful leaders unless we have successors.”

And, of course, John Maxwell’s 21st Law in The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership is The Law of Legacy, which says, “We will be judged by how well the people we invested in carry on after we are gone.”

Click here to learn more from John Maxwell on Attracting, Developing, and Multiplying Leaders

How Will You Celebrate National Love People Day?

On September 30, National Love People Day asks us to lift others up through the profound power of unconditional love.

Bob Goff’s Love Does:  Discover a Secretly Incredible Life in an Ordinary World provides invaluable advice and perspective, as we celebrate this special day! 

Donald Miller, who wrote the Foreword to the book, observed, “Where you and I may want love and feel love and say love, Bob reminds us that love does things.  What a privilege to introduce you to my friend Bob Goff.” 

Goff starts his book by saying, “Living a life fully engaged and full of whimsy and the kind of things that love does is something most people plan to do, but along the way they just kind of forget. Their dreams become one of those ‘we’ll go there next time’ deferrals.  The greatest lie of all time can be bound up in two words: someone else.  God didn’t choose someone else to express His creative presence to the world, and He didn’t tap the rock star or the popular kid to get things done. He chose you and me. We are the means, the method, the object, and the delivery vehicles. God can use anyone, for sure.”

Click here to learn more from Love Does