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Leading with Style
by Merrick Rosenberg, MBA |
While
there are many factors that drive a leader’s success, style plays a key
role in effectiveness. In the 1920’s William Marston created the DISC
behavioral model in which he described four styles of behavior. Each
style embodied a specific set of behaviors, as follows:
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Dominance – Direct,
results-oriented, bottom-line, risk-taker
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Influencing –
Enthusiastic, motivational, optimistic, social
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Steadiness –
Harmonious, listeners, loyal, patient
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Conscientious –
Detail-oriented, logical, questioning, systematic
No matter what style a leader
embodies, they all provide value to the organization.
D Leaders are comfortable playing a leadership role. They are
quick decision-makers and people know where they stand. They accept
challenges and thriving during change and crisis.
I Leaders maintain an open door policy and are willingly giving
time to their staff. They inspire and motivate others and provide lots
of positive feedback, as well as respectful constructive feedback.
S Leaders are good listeners and are empathetic and sensitive to
the needs of others. They appreciate the people around them and tell
them so. They are consensus decision-makers and communicating processes
in a step-by-step manner.
C Leaders are objective and fair to everyone. They develop
logical processes and apply a consistent application of standards. They
provide many details when assigning projects to others.

While each of the styles offers
benefits to the team and the organization, not all styles are appropriate in
all situations. Effective managers do what their staff needs them to do.
Effective leaders do what their staff needs them to do, how they need them
to do it. Therefore, flexibility is the key to Leading with Style.
If a leader lacks
flexibility, they may be perceived as follows:
D Leaders may be perceived as intimidating, insensitive,
impatient and concerned more with results than the people.
I Leaders may be perceived as disorganized, unreliable in
following through on commitments and concerned more about keeping people
happy than reaching the goal.
S Leaders may be perceived as indecisive, indirect in providing
directions, unwilling to address difficult issues, and hesitant to
implement change.
C Leaders may be perceived as micromanaging, overly
perfectionistic, having unreasonably high standards, and hampering of
creativity because of the desire to stick to established rules and
processes.
Leaders that use their
behavioral style to their advantage are flexible enough to adapt their style
to the needs of the person or the given situation. They also tap their
strengths and do not overuse their style. - Alexandre Dumas said, “Any
virtue carried to extreme can become a crime.” This is true about leadership
behaviors as well. When overused, a D’s directness becomes blunt and
insensitive. An I’s optimism becomes unrealistic. An S’s need for harmony
becomes a fear of conflict. And a C’s analytical nature becomes analysis
paralysis.
Leaders who demonstrate flexibility and maximize their strengths are truly
Leading with Style.
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