What can the Olympics teach us about leadership?

Paris Olympic Games Leader

What can the Olympics teach us about leadership?

By Craig Johns

With the Olympics on the horizon, and many athletes gearing up for the performance of their careers, what can this teach us about leadership? 

I believe that what leadership and athletes have in common is high performance, but what most people describe as high-performance habits is in fact just strong performance consistently achieved. 

But high performance isn’t just finishing the race by applying the basics well. It’s also about improving the precision, performance and focus required to increase efficiency, improve success and keep things error free. And we can learn the same lessons in leadership.

As a former 10 x national champion endurance athlete and national level field hockey player, these are the four areas I know high performance athletes excel at and review constantly. 

Energy management

Energy management is an athlete’s number one currency.

And just like athletes, CEOs and leadership teams need stamina, precision and focus and to manage  high performing teams.

It starts with applying the four fundamentals required for high performance: exercise daily; fuel your body with the right food; free your mind; and recover with purpose. 

In sport, high performance athletes are meticulous in their approach to energy management. They schedule their energy and recovery on a daily, weekly, monthly, yearly and career basis to sustain high performance and inner drive. 

Good leaders must also schedule recovery time from the daily demands of their roles, and that includes being an example to your team in how you take your leave.

Mindset

High performers are known for their productivity, precision, drive and focus. 

It starts with a clarity of vision. When Michael Phelps was 12 years old, he visualised standing on the Olympic podium with a gold medal around his neck. As a 19-year-old, at Athens in 2004, Phelps won six gold and two bronze. 

When you have clarity of your vision you say no instead of yes. 

You say no to everyone that will prevent you from achieving your goal. No to chocolate, alcohol, late nights. You naturally form a disciplined mind. We know that complacency and lack of drive leads to errors and mistakes. So… what’s your vision? 

A high performing leader or CEO also needs to be adaptable to changing conditions. 

It’s like a Tour de France rider dealing with changing terrain, road surfaces and weather conditions. A disciplined mind needs both focus and adaptability.  

What can you control? How can you provide a safe and error-free environment? As a triathlete and cyclist, I always ensured that my equipment was maintained because a tyre blowout, faulty brake, loose pedal or a dry chain could be catastrophic. 

Teamwork

Teamwork in sport can be a matter of life or death and teamwork in business is vital to your success.

Like a Formula 1 pit‐stop crew, how can you work as a single unit to perform a complex task under pressure with minimal error? Meticulous planning, checklists, tight feedback loops, practice and communication are required to deliver.  

I was fortunate to be part of one of New Zealand’s best sports team in the 1990s, the Stratford Premiere Men’s Field Hockey Team who went unbeaten for 272 games. That’s right… 16 years without a loss. It might be a world record unbeaten sports streak. What’s even more impressive is the team only lost once in 21 years.

To deliver sustainable high performance over a long period of time this team had to 1. Share their vision – they collectively wanted to excel and win. 2. Focus on seamless teamwork – with a collaborative and competitive mindset. 3. Be disciplined – each member of the team knew when to lead and when to follow. 4. Discipline – they understood that harmony was the handbrake to high performance. To remain united, they needed courage when it mattered.

Performance monitoring

The biggest difference between sport and business is the level of performance monitoring. 

High Performance athletes have a tight feedback loop they apply to their performance. They are always focused on how they can receive high quality feedback in real time. They know that constant growth minimises success or failure.

No successful athlete does it on their own. They surround themselves with people and technology who can monitor, tweak and enhance their performance. 

And just like Olympic athletes’ good leaders and CEOs need good support teams who understand their vision and can help them achieve it.

Craig Johns High Performance Leadership Expert

Craig is a 10x National Champion, International coach and CEO turned high performance leadership expert, international speaker and and Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast host.

He is the CEO & Managing Partner of Speakers Institute Corporate, a high performance leadership expert, and a leadership, high performance and workplace culture keynote speaker.

Learn more about how Craig is working with a diverse team of exceptional human beings to inspire great leaders at www.speakersinstitutecorporate.com.

Book Craig as a Keynote Speaker and learn how to become a high performing leader by going to www.craigjohns.com.au for more on the Gravity of Leadership, PRIDE, Break The CEO Code and Atomic Pressure.

Harmony Is The Handbrake To High Performing Teams Link
Courageous Conversations Link
What Is High Performance Link
Relentless Without Being Ruthless Or Reckless Link
How Gravity of Leadership Effects Your Impact Link
Beyond The Comfort Zone Link
Are Leaders Born? Link

LEARN MORE

High Performance Leadership COACHING
Speakers Institute CORPORATE
Inspiring Great Leaders PODCAST
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Contact CRAIG JOHNS
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Carry The Torch

How Can CEO’s Carry The Torch?

How Can CEO’s Carry The Torch?

By Craig Johns

On Friday the 26th July, the Olympic torch will wind its way through the lively streets of Paris and the heart of the Olympic Village before arriving at the Olympic Ceremony.

The Olympic flame, a symbol of continuity between ancient and modern games, started out as a ritual every four years to honour the Greek god Zeus. 

It has become a signal for the start of the Olympic Games, and to transmit a message of peace and friendship along its route. 

What can CEO’s and organisations learn from the Olympics? 

The Olympic Torch relay is responsible for respecting the past, protecting the present and leaving the world in a better place. 

To Carry The Torch is about continuing a legacy and building succession.

You have the responsibility to receive the torch, Carry The Torch and pass the torch.

Like Jongka, a tradition in Korea where the eldest son’s role is to keep their family lineage alive, or debuting as the next All Black rugby player you have a responsibility to leave the jersey in a better place, a CEO has a responsibility to Carry The Torch and leave the company in a better place. 

A responsibility to be a custodian who is able to positively transition from the past to the present and into the future. 

CEO’s are handed more than one torch when accepting a new CEO role. 

They have a responsibility to look after an organisation or family legacy, the role of the CEO’s legacy, the team they lead’s legacy and an industry legacy.

To Carry The Torch has more responsibility than just enhancing the legacy, the torch you have been handed. 

Some torches we are excited about, some we may want and others we didn’t even know we had been gifted. 

Let’s put this all into perspective from a CEO lens. 

It is our responsibility to receive the torch with gratitude, respect the past and respond with grace. 

Be grateful, and say thank you, for the opportunity and responsibility you have been given to lead a team, organisation and an industry. 

Respect the previous CEO’s and organisations directions and decision’s, as you never walked in their shoes. 

Whether you agree or not, they paved the platform you now get to start from. 

Acknowledge the work that has been done to this point by being graceful in the way you respond to and speak about the history of your role, company and industry. 

We must Carry The Torch by protecting it with care, having the curiosity to learn and the courage to evolve the torch. 

It is not our right to destroy the legacy that has been built so far. 

It is our responsibility to protect what has been created so far with care.

Care doesn’t mean keeping everything that has been built so far. 

It means having the curiosity to learn what is the core of the company, what is working well, and what can be enhanced to remain relevant and viable in the future. 

How can you be brave and have the courage to create a better legacy and future?

The most challenging part of creating a legacy and to Carry The Torch is how we pass the torch when we hand it over to someone else. 

When we pass the torch onto someone else or the next generation can you live with character, presence of mind, and then trust and surrender?

There are times when we leave a role on terms that are not ours. 

Rather than pass the torch with bitterness and anger, will you pass it on in a positive way with integrity and humility?

Will you have the presence of mind to respect that the person you are passing the torch to will see the opportunity through a different lens than you do at that moment?

Stepping out of something we have been part of for a while can be very challenging. 

We want to let go, but there is something trying to keep one hand on it. 

Our ability to trust the person receiving the torch and surrender our connection to it is critical.

It provides the new CEO a freedom to be themselves without someone looking over their shoulder.

We also know that it is also healthy for you to let go, focus on what’s next and trust that the legacy is in safe hands. 

We are handed a torch as a CEO.

Our job is to never let the flame go out. 

Will the torch flame glow brighter when you hand it to the next person or generation?

Craig Johns High Performance Leadership Expert

Craig is a 10x National Champion, International coach and CEO turned high performance leadership expert, international speaker and and Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast host.

He is the CEO & Managing Partner of Speakers Institute Corporate, a high performance leadership expert, and a leadership, high performance and workplace culture keynote speaker.

Learn more about how Craig is working with a diverse team of exceptional human beings to inspire great leaders at www.speakersinstitutecorporate.com.

Book Craig as a Keynote Speaker and learn how to become a high performing leader by going to www.craigjohns.com.au for more on the Gravity of Leadership, PRIDE, Break The CEO Code and Atomic Pressure.

Harmony Is The Handbrake To High Performing Teams Link
Courageous Conversations Link
What Is High Performance Link
Relentless Without Being Ruthless Or Reckless Link
How Gravity of Leadership Effects Your Impact Link
Beyond The Comfort Zone Link
Are Leaders Born? Link

LEARN MORE

High Performance Leadership COACHING
Speakers Institute CORPORATE
Inspiring Great Leaders PODCAST
Craig Johns SPEAKER
Craig Johns BLOG
Contact CRAIG JOHNS
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HARMONY IS THE HANDBRAKE TO HIGH PERFORMING TEAMS

HARMONY IS THE HANDBRAKE TO HIGH PERFORMING TEAMS

Why are high performing teams as elusive and rare as finding a needle in a haystack? 

Many people experience poor to medium team performance, with some having the opportunity of being part of a good team. We can spot low performance in a heartbeat. On the contrary most people don’t really know what a high performing team looks like, as they haven’t experienced it. 

A lot of what we read on how to create a high performing team is characteristic of what is needed for a good performing team. Respect, trust, goals, communication, inclusion and psychological safety are likely some of the words that you will read. They are all important and the foundations of performance, but not likely to produce a high performing team. 

The characteristics that enable one team to be high performing may be totally different from another. There is no simple formula to developing a high performing team. If there was, everyone would be creating one.

What is it that creates high performing teams?

Is it harmony, accountability or even ownership? Before we dive into what does, let’s unpack a few things first. 

I was very fortunate to be a part of New Zealand’s most winningest sports team, where the Stratford Premiere Men’s Field Hockey Team went unbeaten for 272 games. Yes you read that correctly, 16 years without a loss. It may even be a world record unbeaten sports streak. What is even more impressive is that the team only lost once in 21 years. 

Coming from a town of 5,000 people we were up against teams with a population of more than 20x the size, teams that were younger and even teams that had more talent. There were some characteristics that remained consistent and other things that varied from game to game and season to season. 

Teams may experience short term exposure to what it’s like to be high performing, not many get to do it consistently, year after year. What we achieved was simply extraordinary. This experience led me to ask the question, what does it take to create high performing teams that last. 

THe foundation of high performing teams is talent

A diverse group of talented people who are aligned to the desired outcome and attitude. These people will not necessarily connect individually, but as a whole complement each other. They want to have the space to do what they do best and be supported in areas they are not so strong or energised by. 

They enjoy being united in achieving something together but not necessarily fueled by working in a harmonious environment. There will be some very small pockets of harmony, however it will not be the focus. 

WHY CAN HARMONY BE A HANDBRAKE TO HIGH PERFORMING TEAMS?

A desire to achieve team harmony requires compromise, keeping the peace and can stunt creativity and passion. In the short term harmony can work, but it is very difficult to maintain when striving for high performance. Over time harmony can create an environment of mediocrity, lead to outbursts of frustration and foster quiet quitting.

In the hope of happiness, building harmony and avoiding conflict, we run the risk of minimising each individual’s self worth and the power of diversity, creating unhealthy tension. 

We know diversity and inclusion are important for performance and can support achieving better outcomes. Approaching both from a perspective of achieving harmony is most likely to lead to a suppression of the diversity and an increasing exclusion over time. The more we try to create harmony, the greater the division. 

Why, because many people feel like a handbrake has been applied to their natural talents, what they do best and the speed to achieving an outcome. Their perceived level of importance drops, which can hinder their individual contribution to the team.

IF HARMONY ISN’T THE ANSWER THEN WHAT IS?

If harmony is the handbrake to high performing teams, over the long term, then what is it that is required? Unity. It’s a commonality in all high performing teams. Unity in both the desired outcome and the principles of behaviour to achieve it. If we want diversity of thought and true inclusion we require unity. A unified vision and way of working together.

Harmony is the handbrake to high performance. Focus on building a unified team.

Craig Johns High Performance Leadership Expert

Craig is a 10x National Champion, International coach and CEO turned high performance leadership expert, international speaker and and Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast host.

He is the CEO & Managing Partner of Speakers Institute Corporate, a high performance leadership expert, and a leadership, high performance and workplace culture keynote speaker.

Learn more about how Craig is working with a diverse team of exceptional human beings to inspire great leaders at www.speakersinstitutecorporate.com.

Book Craig as a Keynote Speaker and learn how to become a high performing leader by going to www.craigjohns.com.au for more on the Gravity of Leadership, LIONSHEART Mindset, Break The CEO Code and Atomic Pressure.

Having Courageous Conversations Link
What Is High Performance Link
Relentless Without Being Ruthless Or Reckless Link
How Gravity of Leadership Effects Your Impact Link
Beyond The Comfort Zone Link
People Are Our Greatest Assets Link
Are Leaders Born? Link

LEARN MORE

High Performance Leadership COACHING
Speakers Institute CORPORATE
Inspiring Great Leaders PODCAST
Craig Johns SPEAKER
Craig Johns BLOG
Contact CRAIG JOHNS
Return to HOME