Canadian Lawyer InHouse

February/March 2020

Legal news and trends for Canadian in-house counsel and c-suite executives

Issue link: https://digital.canadianlawyermag.com/i/1210425

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 53 of 59

52 www.canadianlawyermag.com/inhouse FEATURES Brian de Haaff explains why effective leadership is all about finding a balance between idealism and practicality Why optimistic realists make the best leaders I ONCE worked for a guy who always had a smile on this face. He was a friend to everyone and always thought it was a beautiful day. But he wasn't fully respected by his peers because he never prioritized work that had the best chance of being successful. Instead, he wasted a lot of time and money by blindly assuming everything would work out. A lot of times he was wrong. He only looked ahead at sunshine. I also once worked for a woman who was so mired in the dysfunction of the organiza- tional reality that she never pressed for what was ambitious and right. What was new and exciting could never be pursued because it had never been done before. The weight of the organization and its plodding pace crushed her. She had no hope. So she only looked behind at clouds. Both leaders had meaningful skills and were well intentioned, but both were limited in their success by their single-focus worldview. The most successful leaders function with a healthy dose of forward-thinking optimism and down-to-earth realism. They look forward and behind. In fact, one study found that people with an optimistic realist personality type are often happier and more successful. That's because these pragmatic minds know how to combine the positive outlook of an optimist with the sharp-eyed view of a realist. Although the two leaders I worked with were uniquely single-minded, most of us are capable of seeing both sides of a situation and finding a way forward. In fact, I believe being an optimistic realist will do more than help you move forward – it will make you a great leader. Here are four reasons why. You know the power of a plan Leaders are the ones setting the course and adjusting the sails. When your team hits rough waters, you don't expect that they'll magically turn things around. And you don't waste time grumbling about what they did wrong. Instead, you identify clear Optimistic realists know that you can be transparent about the issues at hand while also being the encouraging force that gets your team back on track

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Canadian Lawyer InHouse - February/March 2020