Of Courage And Self-Confidence
April 18, 2007 by Jonathan Farrington
This week, I have been uncovering the essential skills of successful leadership; My views and opinions are of course subjective, however they are also based on thirty years leading from the front.
It was always my intention to bed myself in quietly, without contention!
Courage:
Leadership takes “guts”. The true leader has the ability to “take it” when the going gets rough. Often the leader has to “take it” for the whole organisation to keep its morale high. The leader has to face up to a new problem all the time. Indeed, many successful leaders invite difficulties just for the sheer joy of coping with them. The genuine leader approaches each day with a sort of “joy of battle”.
Courage in leadership sometimes takes unexpected forms; it may mean standing up to a principle. (Has anyone ever known a real leader who was a “yes person”?) It means having the character to stand up for what you believe in without comprising or cutting corners.
It may mean taking a bold approach to a new idea – sticking your neck out in support of something, which you think is worth trying. It means loyalty to your conviction.
Self Confidence:
An important requirement for the leader of today is self confidence. However, in making decisions about people, their motivations and the way they act or react, the leader can never feel completely sure they are right. The best they can do is to make a sort of “educated guess” based on the facts they can assemble and then depend upon their past experience and knowledge to interpret them.
However, a leader can be self-confident. A great help is to know and work within their personal assets and limitations. They know what they can personally do and what they are unable to do. They are willing to listen to other opinions, assess them and be big enough to adopt the meritorious ones even if they do not square with their original thinking. They can take small reverses in stride.
A self-confident leader is never satisfied with their present accomplishments, does not spend their time in useless longing for things they cannot have. Rather, they set about realising their immediate and realistic goals.



We just have seen a sample of courage during
the sad events of Virginia Tech. Liviu Librescu Had the guts to stop the shooter losing his life and saving many of his students. If you read his bio, you will see that he was a notable person.