Positive Leadership Leads to Positive Behaviors

Positive Leadership Leads to Positive Behaviors

Positive leadership is of vital importance in any organization.   However, we often focus more on the negative than the positive behaviors of others. Have you ever noticed that giving a child negative reinforcement usually results in continued negative behavior? You may get the desired result in that moment, but inevitably the child returns to the same negative behavior. Interestingly, adults are much like children when it comes to reinforcement. We tend to behave according to the feedback we get, whether it’s negative or positive. And that’s why it’s so important to exude positive leadership in the workplace. No matter your organization, if you want positive behaviors occurring in your organization, you need to practice positive leadership.

Focus on the Positive Outcomes You Desire

If you focus on what makes you unproductive or unhappy, then you’ll likely continue to get those same outcomes. But if you focus on what makes you happy and what improves productivity, you’ll ultimately see regular and consistently positive outcomes. So, it stands to reason, if you want to improve organizational behavior, its vital to improve your positive leadership.

Positive Leaders Facilitate Change

Positive leaders make positive changes; they are the key factor in achieving the best performance and results, in individuals, groups and organizations. So, what does positive leadership look like and how is it different from normal leadership? Positive leaders exude confidence in everything, and always look for the good in things, even with negative outcomes. For example: positive leaders

  • Focus on people’s abilities and strengths, reaffirming their potential
  • Emphasize results and facilitate better individual and organizational performance
  • Concentrate on the most essential virtues of the human condition

Types of Positive Leadership

There are five types of positive leadership and each one shares the common theme of maintaining and encouraging the highest level of behavior. They are:

  1. Servant Leadership – just like it sounds, this type of leadership promotes putting one’s followers’ needs over his or her own. This leader’s primary concern is the success of his or her followers. Servant leaders understand that when their followers are successful, so are they, and more importantly, so is the organization.
  2. Transformational Leadership – Transformational leaders have the ability to motivate their followers to look beyond their own interests. They’re able to guide and direct their behavior in order to achieve common goals.
  3. Authentic Leadership – authentic leaders are very confident, optimistic, resilient, and hopeful, and have an abundance of moral strength. When followers model their behaviors after authentic leaders, they tend to develop self-regulation, self-awareness and personal success.
  4. Spiritual Leadership – this form of leadership focuses on the abilities, interests and needs of both the leader and the follower. Spiritual leaders possess strong morals and values and they help to develop those values in others.
  5. Ethical Leadership – this form of leadership tries to promote the right behaviors through interpersonal relationships between the leader and the follower. It uses transparent communication and a positive reward system.

Your Organization is a Team

Thinking of your organization as a team where everyone is respected and all are important, and a culture imbued with the attitude that everyone works together for the benefit of all, creates an attitude of positivity and a natural desire to help each other and the organization as a whole to succeed and thrive. For more information about positive leadership, check out one of Kim Cameron‘s books on the subject.

We hope you found this article about how positive leadership leads to positive behavior helpful.  If you have questions or need expert tax or family office advice that’s refreshingly objective (we never sell investments), please contact us or visit our Family office page  or our website at www.GROCO.com.  Unfortunately, we no longer give advice to other tax professionals gratis.

To receive our free newsletter, contact us here.

Subscribe to our YouTube Channel for more updates.

Considerately yours,

GROCO, GROCO Tax, GROCO Technology, GROCO Advisory Services, GROCO Consulting Services, GROCO Relationship Services, GROCO Consulting/Advisory Services, GROCO Family Office Wealth, and GROCO Family Office Services.

Posted in

Does Your Company Need a Fairness Opinion?

Does Your Company Need a Fairness Opinion? Although not required by statute or regulation, fairness opinions have become an important component of the board of directors and executives deliberation process as they seek to satisfy their fiduciary duties to shareholders and act with due care in an informed manner. Fairness opinions are prepared for and…

Tax Record Retention Guide

Storing tax records: How long is long enough? Tax Record Retention April 15 has come and gone and another year of tax forms and shoeboxes full of receipts is behind us. But what should be done with those documents after your check or refund request is in the mail? Federal law requires you to maintain…

OWNING A-COMMERCIAL-PROPERTY-MAKE-YOU-MORE-MONEY-IN-REAL-ESTATE-INVESTMENT-groco-cpa-firm

3 Reasons Why Owning a Commercial Property May Make You More Money in Real Estate Investment

Making a Commercial Property Investment If you ever have been a landlord for residential property, I am sure that you get complaints from tenants about leaking roofs in the middle of the night. But what keeps most people back from investing in commercial real estate is the fear of the unknown since not many of…

section 1045 rollover; business

Sec 1045: Small Business Stock Rollover of Gain

The Beauty of Section 1045 Enacted as part of the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 (effective for sales after August 5, 1997), a taxpayer other than a corporation may elect to roll over capital gains from the sale of qualified small business stock held for more than six months if another small business stock is…