The start of summer when I was growing up meant endless time playing baseball in an empty lot. Yet I still remember that dayâand the crack of the bat when one of my friends pulverized the ball with a towering shot in the air. Then suddenly there was a reverberating crash of a window being shattered. Some scattered, not wanting to get caughtâothers were just too scared to move! But when the adults asked us what happened, thatâs when the fingers started to point. It wasnât me⦠For most of us, these are some of our earliest life experiencesâwhen we were totally dependent on everyone and accountable to no one, David Dotlich, a senior leader in Korn Ferryâs Consulting business, told me this week. âBack then, it was so easy to blame others when things went wrongâbecause our world was all about us.â The fact is, we all want love, approval, and acceptance. âAnd thatâs why we are hard wired early on to blame others and deflect our own faults,â Dotlich added. Consequently, we spend the rest of our lives trying our [Black Korn Ferry logo JPG 400.png]() The start of summer when I was growing up meant endless time playing baseball in an empty lot. Yet I still remember that dayâand the crack of the bat when one of my friends pulverized the ball with a towering shot in the air. Then suddenly there was a reverberating crash of a window being shattered. Some scattered, not wanting to get caughtâothers were just too scared to move! But when the adults asked us what happened, thatâs when the fingers started to point. It wasnât me⦠For most of us, these are some of our earliest life experiencesâwhen we were totally dependent on everyone and accountable to no one, David Dotlich, a senior leader in Korn Ferryâs Consulting business, told me this week. âBack then, it was so easy to blame others when things went wrongâbecause our world was all about us.â The fact is, we all want love, approval, and acceptance. âAnd thatâs why we are hard wired early on to blame others and deflect our own faults,â Dotlich added. Consequently, we spend the rest of our lives trying our best to overcome that instinct. Itâs quite the paradoxâknowing weâre naturally one thing and fighting to be another. Today, itâs so easy to point the finger at others for disappointing outcomes while overlooking our own faults. âItâs not me ⦠itâs everybody else.â Sometimes the moment clouds context. Our firmâs nearly 100 million assessments bear this out. No one is infallible. Nearly 80% of leaders have blind spots about their own skillsâand that carries a cost to those around us and our organizations. Our research also reveals that people who greatly overstate their abilities are 6.2 times more likely to derail than those who are self-aware. We are all works in progress. So, instead of deflectingâwe need to be reflecting. Here are some thoughts: Moving self-interest and selfishness to shared interest and selflessness. Rather than trying to hide our self-interest, we need to recognize it for what it is. Then it becomes the leaderâs job to transform self-interest into shared interest. When our personalities meet performance. Our firmâs research reveals five key factors for achieving superior organizational outcomes. Three are intuitive: purpose, leadership, and strategy. The other two probably donât come to mind automatically: accountability and capabilityâbut together, they contribute about 50% of performance. The same holds true for individuals and our personalitiesâaccountability is the all-important foundation. Accountability is a good look in the mirror. When most people think about accountability, they immediately look through the lens of how accountable others are to them. But first, we need to look in the mirror and see how accountable we are to ourselvesâfor who we are and how we act. A personâs word is only as good as the last promise kept. And, if we want to know how weâre doing, we only need to count the number of times we say, âIâm sorryââin all its forms including, âThatâs on me,â âThat was the wrong call," and âYou were right.â Responsibility is in the present, accountability is forever. Itâs not âwhatâs in it for meââitâs about shifting our focus to what we can create for others. This is the maturation process of becoming a leader ⦠not to deflect, but to reflect. Weâre pleased to launch a new book from Korn Ferry, [Take Control]() â and itâs all about getting ahead and advancing careers. This latest book follows [The Five Graces of Life and Leadership](), offering imagery, emotions, and insights that capture the human side of leadership. Both books are now available. Regards, Gary Burnison
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