Leading With Intention, Not Pressure: How to Set the Tone for the Year Ahead

January often brings urgency and high expectations for leaders.  There is a sense that you should be back on: motivated, clear-headed and ready to make decisive moves from day 1.  Your teams are looking to you for direction, stakeholders want to see results right away and your inbox and calendar fill up before you can say “whelp!”

Before you’ve had a moment to breathe, the year feels likes it’s already running you.  The pressure to do before having a chance to think becomes overwhelming.

The Cost of “Hitting the Ground Running”

“Hit the ground running” sounds productive, right?  But when you rush into the year without reflection you end up:

-          carrying unresolved fatigue from the previous year into the new year;

-          defaulting to reactive decision-making rather than thoughtful leadership;

-          setting priorities based on urgency rather than importance; and

-          not having time to provide clarity for your teams

Before you do hit the ground running, reflect on the following:

What has actually changed since last year?

What still matters?

What no longer matters?

These will help you identify what you need to focus on.

Setting Intentions Is Not the Same as Goal-Setting

When you set goals, you ask What do we want to achieve?

When you set intentions, you ask How do I want to lead while achieving it?

To help you set your intentions ask yourself:

How do I want to lead this year?

What do I want to be known for as a leader?

What am I no longer willing to carry into this year?

Where do I need to be more deliberate, not just more productive?

By setting your intentions you can avoid chasing your goals in unhealthy ways by defaulting to over-working, micro-managing, or driving results at the expense of trust and sustainability.

The Tone You Set Also Impacts Your Teams

Whether you realise it or not, your team takes emotional cues from you.  If you are frantic, over-loaded and immediately pushing for results, your team absorbs your energy and that could potentially impact their performance and their sense of psychological safety.

On the other hand, when you lead with intention you can create a sense of steadiness for your team, you can show that thoughtfulness is important and valued, and you can build trust through consistency rather than urgency.

Simple Practices to Lead With Intention

Leading with intention starts with small consistent practice.  After identifying your intentions:

Create decision filters so that you can check whether an ask aligns to your intentions before you say yes.

Set and stick to your boundaries.

Slow the first few weeks down and create time for thinking and reflection.

Communicate your intentions to your team by telling them what you will be focusing on and give them permission to hold you accountable.

A Different Kind of Start

January doesn’t have to be loud or frantic to be effective.  Strong leadership at the start of the year can be quiet where you listen, reflect and choose carefully instead of reacting.  As you step into the new year consider that you don’t have to prove anything right away and that you can take the time to first set the tone for everything that you and your team will accomplish this year.

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