How to Resolve Obstacles to Leadership Career Development.........Any job in the hospitality industry can lead to a better career. There are very few 'dead end' jobs. Everyone is a job seeker at any given time, at any stage of the learning curve. We all have the opportunity to develop leadership skills. Each problem is an opportunity to learn our problem solving and opportunity development skills.
Leadership development is vital, but many people who are just starting fail in their first attempts because they lack the skills and knowledge needed to succeed. Both success, and failure are behaviour habits. When a leader fails, they learn, study more, seek help, and try again. Often, people who are just learning to become managers become discouraged. The myth that some people are born leaders, or have a knack for leadership has kept many talented leaders from developing careers as restaurant mangers.
Controlling the elements of failure + Cause and Effect = Success
Many leaders fail because their plan is not congruent, realistic, and effective. The effective leader is willing to watch the day to day aspects of a business and measure their effectiveness based on results. The distant leader makes assumptions and tracks their success and failures - after it is too late.
Successful leaders share some common behaviours.
1. Listening
They have developed the art of listening. You can learn more about a person, problem, or situation by listening to people. Understanding what a person wants, or needs, can often reveal the solution to a seemingly unrelated problem.
2. Identifying Needs
One of the easiest ways to gain control of a situation is by learning to identify what someone needs, then creating a solution that meets the needs. There are always multiple solutions to a problem. Finding the solution that meets your boss' needs is a vital aspect of career development.
3. Finding Opportunities
The opportunities a successful person looks for are those that will meet the needs of their managers. Selling your ideas doesn't depend on identifying an opportunity. It is more important to 'sell the idea' by identifying how it will solve your boss' needs. For example, more training is necessary to reducing the time between ordering a meal and placing it on a table. This causes a problem for most restaurant mangers because it affects the bottom line, reducing revenue, and making it look like they are a failure.
However, your general manager is only focused on the bottom line and only sees career development as another expense. Selling the idea of training requires outlining the long term cost savings, return on investment (ROI), and how the general manger will be able to present this ROI as his/her personal success.
Robert Krzak is author and CEO of http://www.geckohospitality.com a respected hotel and restaurant recruitment and recruiting firm. Google G+ geckohospitality@gmail.com
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