342: Shane Snow - The #1 Skill Of An Effective Leader (Intellectual Humility)
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The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk
#342: Shane Snow - The #1 Skill Of An Effective Leader (Intellectual Humility)
Text LEARNERS to 44222
For full show notes go to www.LearningLeader.com
Notes:
- Commonalities of leaders who sustain excellence: - Pattern recognition - The ability to connect ideas and people
- Systems thinking - Connect dots, zoom out
- The ability to continue to question yourself, a hunger to improve, a "voracious learner" (Liv Boeree)
- Must relearn how to humble yourself
- The #1 skill is intellectual humility -- The ability to sit between gullibility and stubbornness
 
- Why are people so unwilling to change their mind? - "So much of our ideas are attached to our identities."
- "You must separate your ego from intellect."
 
- What is a solution (as a leader)? - If you're the one in power, invite people with a different perspective to the table.
- Don't invoke identity. Just ask for perspective.
- Leave space to change your mind... "I could be wrong but..."
 
- Strength and flexibility should not be in conflict
- Ben Franklin idea: - Use idea, leave space for change, set opinion, but use phrases less defensive, only change your mind based on evidence.  Say things like: - "I could be wrong but..."
- "The research suggests..."
- "The evidence suggests..."
 
 
- Use idea, leave space for change, set opinion, but use phrases less defensive, only change your mind based on evidence.  Say things like: 
- Elon Musk -- His pattern to persuade people... - It's purpose based leadership ("to make life multi-planetary")
- The strength is in his vision and his purpose. He's seen as strong by being willing to change his mind.
 
- Compliance versus Committed = Cult vs Culture - Difference between a cult and culture: - Cult - Must act and think in a certain way
- Culture - Asked to contribute your ideas in your way
 
 
- Difference between a cult and culture: 
- Key part of leadership: "Understand what matters to your people."
- Intellectual humility: - Respect for others' viewpoints
- Lack of intellectual overconfidence
- Separating your ego from your intellect
- Being open to revising your viewpoints
- Openness to new experiences
 
- Separate feelings/thoughts from facts
- Trying something new creates new opportunities
- Advice: - Learn about intellectual humility - take Shane's assessment
- Frame changing your mind as a strength -- reward others for doing this
- Habits: Instead of saying "I feel" say "I think." Words matter.
 
- Separate facts from stories
- Why joining The Learning Leader Circle is a good idea
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