Skills, talent, and experience are important, but the generosity gene creates the foundation for great leadership.
There are many things you can say about Jack Welch, and this is one of them: Jack definitely knows how to develop great leaders.
That was true when he was the CEO of General Electric, and it remains true today. For example, the Jack Welch Management Institute online MBA program has been named the most influential education brand on LinkedIn and was named a 2016 business school to watch by Poets and Quants.
Since the JWMI recently held its commencement service in Washington, D.C. for approximately 200 graduates, it seemed like the perfect time to talk to Jack about the education, leadership, and the one quality every leader needs most.
With all the different avenues for learning, why is an MBA still relevant?
In the right school you'll learn how to motivate, how to manage, how to fire... you won't do a lot of theory. If you want to teach, theory is fine. In the real world skills are everything.
In our school, we have working adults. To be accepted they have to have a job. Our premise is they they learn on Monday, practice on Tuesday, and put what they learn to work right away.
Say I'm already an entrepreneur. How would an MBA be useful to me?
You see so many startups where the founder doesn't carry the company all the way through its growth. In fact that's one of the most common phenomena; they don't enjoy managing or they simply can't manage.
Of course if I'm stating a venture I'm not going to take two years off to get an MBA. I'll go to work every day and get my MBA. That's where we come in. We take people who have a handle on their career or their aspirations -- they know where they want to go.
Our last graduation was the most beautiful thing in the world to see. There were all these working adults from all over the U.S. and the world lined up for the processional. It was breathtaking. It was one of the greatest moments of my life.
The mission of the school is to change the trajectory of your life, and that holds true whether you run your own business or work for someone else. We teach people how to get out of the trenches by building great teams.
You talk about teams a lot.
Success is based on people first and strategy second. Build a great team and you will accomplish things beyond your wildest dreams. You grow from the reflected glory of your people.
When your team delivers, you enjoy the fruit.
What do you know now that you wish you had known when you were 20 years old?
I wish I had then had a better definition of what I now call the "generosity gene." For a long time I never quite identified that ingredient.
If a leader didn't desperately want to give his or her employer raises, to promote people, if they didn't get as much satisfaction from other people's success as they did from their own... I didn't see that as well as I should have.
I have never seen a great leader that didn't have the generosity gene. Take care of your people, let them know where they stand, cheer them, never take credit for what they do... and they'll go to the moon for you.
I wish I'd identified the generosity gene as a clear requirement. I never would have made as many mistakes picking people as I did.
Once you're in charge of people, it's no longer about you -- it's about your team. Any leader who still thinks it's about him is destined to fail.
Thank you to: Jeff Haden for this article
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