#1 The Lone Nut
In 2010, a video phenomenon made the social media rounds. It showed a shirtless man, gleefully dancing with abandon to some live music. He’s on a grassy slope surrounded by other concert-goers who largely ignore his eccentricities. Let’s face it. He looks a little quirky. Then it happens. Another person, with more conventional attire, joins his dancing antics. Then another. And another. Soon there is dancing movement, people rushing to join the crowd along with others who appear to not want to be left out of what has become the in-crowd. The momentum and energy started by the lone dancing man sweeps across the entire audience.
All this happens in 190 seconds.
Incidentally, if you’re curious about Siver’s credentials, he sold his company in CD Baby in 2008. At one point CD Baby was the largest seller of independent music with over 150,000 musician clients and $100M in sales. Needless to say, Sivers knows about the dynamics of leaders, followers, and creating a movement.
Siver’s main point is this: leadership is over-glorified. He says, “The first follower what transforms a lone nut into a leader.” The first follower is an under appreciated form of leadership. But in a way, it’s the most powerful one.
A good leader should embrace the first follower as an equal but (and this is important) it’s the first follower who shows everyone how to follow. When a third person joins, you have a crowd. As more join, as Sivers points out, the new followers emulate the followers, not the leader. Check out the video. Is everyone ripping off their shirt and grooving like the movement’s leader? Not at all. They are following the lead of the first follower.
#2 Your Fingerprints Are on the Knife
How come every time I get stabbed in the back my fingerprints are on the knife? This is both a question and a title of a collection of essays by Dr Jerry B. Harvey, who was a Professor Emeritus of Management Science at George Washington University.
The title comes from a paradox that is more common than we’d like to believe. There is a dynamic that occurs when groups make decisions that are contrary to their beliefs or goals. Perhaps the followers, even a majority of them, have reservations but yet they continue to support the group’s momentum. This is a situation where we abdicate responsibility for the decisions we make to the leader. Peer pressure, anyone?
In the business world, we get the organizations we deserve as a result of the choices we make. If you don’t like the leader, why are you following? How does your followership support what you have identified as important to you?
Let’s bring this down to a personal level. In what capacity are you an exemplary follower? Who do you lead in your choices in who you follow? Do you follow with purpose? What can you do to be a better follower? Or empower yourself to become the first follower?
Giving thought and accountability to your actions as a follower is a responsibility given to each and every one of us. We are all leaders. And we are all followers. Choose wisely.
Next up: The Failure of Followership
Bruce Peters has spent the last 15 years living his own “Third Act.” Based on his personal experience and in working as a guide for hundreds of leaders, he has designed a unique process for getting beyond where you are and into the creation of your own Third Act for you or your organization. It starts with the question of what is the difference you want to make? Learn more at www.beyondteal.com.