Leading with Character. James E. Loehr

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Leading with Character - James E. Loehr


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      COVER ART AND DESIGN: PAUL MCCARTHY

      Character is destiny.

      – Heraclitus

      Leadership has never been more important than it is right now. As I write this, the world is dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic and the subsequent economic fallout. Unemployment in the United States is reaching levels not seen since the Great Depression, and economies around the globe are reporting negative GDP growth. Businesses up and down Main Street are closed, many forever. On top of this, the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis has fueled pent-up social and racial unrest across the country and around the world. Twenty cities in the United States are under curfew, and the military has been deployed. Trust in institutions and “the system” is falling, as uncertainty and fear grow.

      Leadership in moments like this really matters. I'm talking about leaders everywhere, at all levels of society: heads of state and CEOs, leaders in our communities and in our schools, leaders in the arts, in academia, in the world of sports. Even in our own family. We all have a role to play in making the world better, and the crises we are experiencing today underscore that point.

      These overlapping crises we are facing will, I believe, be the ultimate test of leadership in our lifetime. What leaders do now, and just as importantly, how they lead, will likely shape their legacy.

      That means finding ways to be the leader you want to be and that our neighbors, our employees, our people, and our planet need you to be. As Jim Loehr points out in this urgent, eye-opening, and actionable book, that means leading with purpose.

      Jim's is a voice that we need to hear right now, especially, as he puts it, “those of us who are fortunate enough to be in a position of leadership.” His perspective on leadership – what it entails, what it requires day after day – could not be more timely.

      The book is called Leading with Character, and one's purpose in life is the through line, the fuel, and the catalyst for it all. In the pages that follow, you'll get what I've gotten out of my experience working with Jim over the years. It is a necessary examination of the relationship between character and leadership and what leading with character means. It is an eminently practical guide to defining one's own personal credo and to training the leadership muscles that will help you live up to it. And it is a stirring meditation on the elements of one's legacy – how it's much more about how we treat others than what we do for ourselves, and why we must work at it every single day with intent and discipline.

      What you walk away with is both a framework and a toolkit for becoming a better, more thoughtful leader. It's a guide to training and strengthening your leadership muscles, much as you would train a muscle group in the gym: with focus, commitment, and determination. And it is a roadmap that, when followed with intent, will better prepare leaders to treat people as they should and to confront the challenges they will inevitably face – and that we are all facing now.

      The common thread between these organizations is that all three are values-led and purpose-driven, with cultures that emphasize character and a strong moral compass. That is why, I firmly believe, they have all endured for generations – through wars and economic crises, through natural disasters and pandemics, through astounding technological advancements and tumultuous social upheaval, and even through their own occasional missteps.

      As a leader, I am the product of my experiences, assignments, and the leaders that I've worked for. I've also been fortunate to have wonderful mentors and coaches along the way, including, Jim Loehr.

      Over the past two decades, Jim has been a coach and friend who has helped me to define who I am and the kind of leader I am today. I've worked with him on several occasions – often, I can see now, at what turned out to be critical points in my life and career. Soon after I took the helm at LS&Co., for example, he pushed me to think very intentionally about the kind of leader I wanted to be – what my legacy would be. He forced deep and occasionally uncomfortable self-reflection that involves facing brutal truths about yourself and working consistently to reach for that next level. From Jim, I learned the importance of journaling as a way to force thoughtful introspection on a daily basis. While I may miss a day or two here or there, journaling (almost) every day – and the thoughtful interrogation and self-reflection it elicits – is something that I know has contributed to my success.

      It is not easy, but that's why it's so invaluable. Jim challenged me to become a purpose-driven, compassionate leader, born of character and nurtured by intentionality and hard work. And ever since, he's challenged me to keep working on it. Every day.

      Second, the company's values. This was a company that commits to “Profits through Principles” and has a long legacy, going all the way back to Levi Strauss himself, of giving back and making a difference in society. We desegregated our factories in the south 10 years before it became the law of the land. We were one of the first companies to offer healthcare benefits to same-sex partners in the United States. We pulled all funding of the Boy Scouts when they banned Gay Troop Leaders in the early 1990s, and then didn't waver despite getting more than 130,000 letters and emails, almost all of which announced an intention to boycott Levi's. Making a difference and not being afraid to take a stand, even if unpopular, is what the company is made of. That resonated with me and made me want to be a part of it. And, history has proven the company's stands to be right with the benefit of hindsight.

      Third, the company was in trouble. It had not created any shareholder value in over a decade. Sales had plummeted, the company was highly levered with over $2 billion of debt, and the Levi's brand had become irrelevant. My own two boys never wore Levi's as teenagers. A far cry from my generation! Back in my day, if you went to Woodstock (I was still a few years too young), you were either wearing Levi's or you were naked.

      So I took the job, wanting to turn the company and the brand around, and wanting to leave a legacy, to make a difference. This was one of America's greatest brands, and one of America's oldest companies. The chance


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