3 Things Emerging Leaders Need to Hear

Knowing how to lead the next generation is not easy.

As a leader, you know that if you want to stay relevant to young people, you need them to have a seat at your table, which means you have to lead them.

The problem is, the young perspective also comes with a lack of experience. And helping them get that experience makes your job much more difficult.

For the last year, I have been the 20-year-old on Carey Nieuwhof’s team. It has been my first major career position, and Carey has invested a lot of time, money and energy into my development. I’m extremely grateful.

As a result of Carey’s investment, I am 10 times the leader I was before I became his assistant.

So what specifically did he do to help me grow so fast?

As I look back, I see three major things Carey repeatedly said to me that made a massive difference in my development.

I think they can have the same effect on the young leaders in your organization as they have had on me.

If you have led young people (or been a young leader), you probably know that one well-timed statement can change the trajectory of their leadership. For the better, or for the worse.

So, here are three things every young leader needs to hear from their boss, but almost never does:

1. “HOW CAN I HELP YOU WIN?”

When I started working for Carey, I had almost no clue what I was doing.

I had been at a ministry college for the previous two years. It was a bit more difficult than the average state college, but was still a walk in the park in comparison to my new role.

I thought I knew what working hard was. I had no clue.

Once I started to have actual responsibilities, like running Carey’s calendar or helping launch his products, I became overwhelmed. Fast.

None of the overwhelm I felt was Carey’s fault. He was just holding me accountable to the deadlines I had made a promise to hit.

But I didn’t see that.

There was a small part of me blaming Carey for the overwhelm I was feeling.

What I didn’t see was that I was feeling overwhelmed and dropping tasks because I was living a lifestyle that was damaging my productivity.

My overwhelm was my fault.

Carey could have just told me that, but I might have gotten defensive and said my personal life was none of his business.

But he didn’t.

Instead, he asked me, “Dillon, it’s okay that you are struggling, but it needs to get better. How can I help you win?”

I didn’t have a good answer for him.

I didn’t have a good answer because none of the reasons for my failures at work were work-related.

It took him asking that question and me trying to verbalize an answer for me to see that nothing that was going wrong could be fixed by him.

I finally saw that I was the only one who could fix my problems.

This hasn’t just happened to me; many of my peers have had to learn the same lesson.

So why don’t young leaders see, and take responsibility, for our own faults?

My theory: Growing up, we were rarely told that our success was up to us.

It was always the umpire’s fault we couldn’t pitch a strike, our teacher’s fault we didn’t have straight A’s, or our parents’ fault we didn’t have any friends—when the real cause was that we didn’t practice for nine months, we never did our homework correctly, and we were a jerk to everyone who came close to us.

We were promised, “If you go to college and get a degree, everything will work out,” “You don’t have to move out until you are ready,” or my least favorite, “As long as you try your best that will be good enough.”

Those messages are doing more harm than good to the next generation.

I wasn’t able to lead anything until I took responsibility for my own, and our organization’s, success.

The young people on your team won’t either.

You might be thinking: Okay Dillon, that’s great for you, but how do I apply this to my team?

I’m glad you asked.

I think we all can agree that every young leader needs to grow before they reach their full potential.

When you ask this question, that young leader on your team sees that their boss is doing everything they can to pour into their development.

When they see that, it inspires them to take responsibility and do everything they can to develop themselves.

In short, when young leaders know our bosses are bought-in to our growth, we buy-in to our growth.

For your team to thrive, they need to be growing. Just make sure to show them that you are doing your part, and they will gladly do theirs.

2. “I TRUST YOU.”

Want to know how to make a young leader dislike you for the rest of their life?

Make it obvious you don’t trust them.

Here is what I have noticed about myself and other driven young leaders. Driven young leaders rise to the level of the expectations set on them.

I have had highly capable, highly driven friends and classmates work for organizations that have small expectations for them. Do you know what happens?

They do nothing impressive because they aren’t expected to do anything impressive.

That same leader will then go to an organization with lofty expectations that I wasn’t even sure that leader could handle, and they crush it.

Here is the shocking part: They took a pay cut going to the new position, but they still produced 10 times the results.

The only thing that changed from one job to the next was the level of expectation and freedom given.

When I started working for Carey, he put some extremely high expectations on me and said, “I trust you.” Not only did he say “I trust you,” but he acted on it.

He let me work from wherever I wanted, trusted me to track my own work hours, and trusted me to manage my own tasks. That is a lot of trust, and that is a lot of responsibility.

One major way he placed higher expectations on me was trusting me to lead the launch for his most recent, bestselling book Didn’t See It Coming at 19 years old.

I was the opposite of qualified to do this. The most significant thing I had led before working for him was a parking lot team at my church, and I had never even met a publisher.

With Carey’s help, I successfully rose to the level of expectation.

So will the young leaders that work for you.

One Huge Caveat:

The level of trust you put in a leader should be based on their character, not on their competency. If the young leader on your team has given you reasons not to trust their character, this will not work.

Honestly, if you can’t trust their character, don’t keep them.

Obviously start with talking to them about their character, and ask for them to improve.

But if that doesn’t work, demote them, cut their residency or fire them. Tell them why, and get rid of them. If someone is morally corrupt, they don’t need a place at your table no matter how “qualified” they are.

In my experience, leaders with less than great character will only learn to change the hard way.

If you want help on how to handle this conversation, Henry Cloud has a great talk on dealing with the three types of leaders in your organization.

3. “I WANT YOU DOING WHAT YOU WERE MADE TO DO (EVENTUALLY).”

My bachelor’s degree is in pastoral ministry. I have never been described as organized, and I hate spreadsheets. I was not made to be an executive assistant, and yet, God put me into the role of executive assistant to Carey Nieuwhof. And I survived.

Sure, Sarah, Carey’s assistant of 10 years who went on maternity leave would have done a much better job than I did, but everything still turned out relatively well over the year I was his assistant.

There were two major reasons I survived being Carey’s assistant for a year:

1. Anyone Can Do Any Job for a Year if the “Why” Is Big Enough.

For me, the “why” behind working for Carey has always been helping the church reach more people on a massive scale.

That “why” outweighed the “what” of doing a job I’m not naturally wired for. I couldn’t do it forever, but I could do it for a year.

If you have someone in a role they aren’t a great fit in, make a note to positively remind them of the “why” often.

2. Carey Kept Saying, “I Want You Doing What You Are Made to Do.”

Carey would often say this when we were talking about the future roles I could play in the company after Sarah returned from maternity leave.

This mindset did lead him to change a few minor things about my role in the moment, like having a much more detail-oriented coworker book his flights, but the major thing it did was show me that he cared about what I am passionate about and made to do.

If Carey hadn’t shown me that he cared about my gifting, I might not have kept working for him.

Now that Sarah is back, I am in the much more content-based role of content manager. This role is a much closer fit with my natural gifting, and one I can see myself doing for a long time.

If you have young leaders in your organization, you need to be showing them you care about their gifting.

This article originally appeared on CareyNieuwhof.com and is reposted here by permission.

Dillon Smith
Dillon Smith

Dillon Smith serves as content director for Carey Nieuwhof Communications Limited. He’s also a church leader and has served as the Omaha Concert Chaplain, working with Lauren Daigle, John Crist, Michael W. Smith, Newsboys and other performers.

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