“Leadership is a stewardship and you’re accountable” – Andy Stanley
Former Home Depot CEO, Bob Nardelli, created a nine car personal parking area underneath the Home Depot corporate office in Atlanta—space for just a few from his collection of classic cars. A private elevator rose from his parking area straight to his personal office on the top floor of the building without stopping on any other floors. This elevator became a gleaming symbol of Nardelli’s arrogance and dismissiveness of others, which ultimately led to his downfall. Sadly, Nardelli’s story is not unique. We see them every day. Headline after headline of extremely talented, highly competent leaders experiencing catastrophic failures in leadership.
We might understandably ask, “What does this have to do with me? I have one old car and take the stairs to my office.” In reality, the main difference between Nardelli and us is that when we fail, our story is unlikely to be a streaming banner on Fox News. We are also likely to get less than his two hundred million dollar severance package if we get fired!
In my new book, Derailed: Five Lessons Learned from Catastrophic Failures of Leadership, I share the stories of six high profile leaders who failed and distil what we can learn about how to be better leaders. These insights are drawn from over twenty years of studying top leaders who succeeded as well as those who failed at their jobs.
Derailed is ultimately not about six high profile CEOs—its’ about us. Whether church head, ministry director, committee chairperson, or corporate leader, the lessons of why these leaders cataclysmically failed apply to all of us. We possess the very same potential to derail in our own jobs.
What are the five big lessons we can learn from studying those who derailed?
Effective leaders must set direction, gain alignment among diverse constituencies, risk change, build high-performing teams, achieve results, go the extra mile and endure ungodly stress. However, to be enthusiastically followed, leaders must also be guided by an inner compass that fosters trust on the part of their followers. That compass is character. When character is seriously compromised, derailment often follows.
Praise for Derailed:
“Tim Irwin takes ancient wisdom about character and brings it to bear on the most up-to-date challenges facing leaders today. We all ignore these lessons at our peril. I highly recommend this book.”
-Dr. Tim Keller, Senior Pastor, Redeemer Presbyterian Church, New York City
I find accountability to be a wonderful “tool” in preventing leadership derailment. There is a natural fear in being accountable to someone else as we do not always know how far the other person can be trusted. Therefore to find someone to whom one can be accountable should not be taken lightly. What I find to be helpful is that whenever one does find someone who cares deeply, the bond of intimacy is made stronger when the two of them pray together on a regular basis. Once people lay themselves prostrate before the Almighty God, they realize that they are no better than their fellow men. In this kind of atmosphere, accountability becomes easier and the correct road to take becomes clear.
Comment by Mart Griesel - Dec 15, 2009 @ 11:49 AM
This is so right on . Good info
Comment by don - Jan 05, 2010 @ 08:14 AM