Advertisement
Home LIFE & CULTURE Money & Career

How To Get A Leadership Role At Work

Position yourself within your company to win that next-level leadership role.

Youโ€™ve done your desk duty and youโ€™re ready for the next big career move. While putting in the hard work while meeting deadlines, delegating effectively and taking on bigger and richer assignments demonstrates a determined work ethic, there are several other not-so-obvious strategies you can put in place in order to secure promotion into leadership roles. Hereโ€™s your five-point practical plan for leadership success:

Advertisement

Work your digital rep


โ€œWhen I was in jobseeker mode, I actively contributed to online groups in my career sector and shared articles from business heads I admired,โ€ says Victoria, 35, a vice-president at an environmental research company who recognised the power of promoting herself as a โ€œthought leaderโ€, or expert in her field. โ€œI also suggested to prospective employers that they view my recommendations on LinkedIn in lieu of written references. By paying for premium access I could see who was viewing my page and then directly follow up with them.โ€

Victoriaโ€™s online dedication paid off, and she was approached by her current employer about a job that was yet to be advertised. Why? Because of her dense online profile, sheโ€™d effectively already made it halfway through the interview process.

Sally-Anne Blanshard, director of Nourish coaching consultancy, says online recruiters are always snooping around social sites, so make them work for you โ€“ recommendations in particular are a hit with future bosses.

Advertisement

โ€œIf someone you worked with is saying, โ€˜I love what you did with this project, thank you so much,โ€™ let them know youโ€™re building your digital footprint and ask them to please repeat what they said on your LinkedIn page,โ€ she advises. โ€œItโ€™s instant online evidence as to why you are good at what you do.โ€

And as always, beware the double-edged sword of social media: while it can help raise your profile it can, just as swiftly, ruin it.

Gain visibility


When given the opportunity to shine, seize it. โ€œBecoming a voice and learning to interpose a room with opinions, and not feeling youโ€™re asking silly questions, is where women really let themselves down,โ€ says Paul Wilson, chair of the Australian Human Resources Institute. To channel confidence in meetings, he suggests feeling the fear and speaking up anyway. โ€œClarify, come in at critical points with a perspective and be prepared to ask questions.โ€

Advertisement

โ€œI had to learn confidence,โ€ admits Alana, 29. โ€œI knew I had the skills to rise to the challenges of a promotion, but until I spoke up in front of the right people I was always going to get overlooked. It wasnโ€™t until I met with a career coach that I realized my mistake had been to wait for someone to approach me, instead of me maximising my visibility.โ€

Sara Watts, vice-principal of operations at the University of Sydney, says practice makes the difference: โ€œIf youโ€™re shy, practise talking to people in a safe space to get used to the idea that itโ€™s OK to have an opinion and express it.โ€

And you donโ€™t need perfection: speaking up with 80 per cent knowledge is better than staying quiet.

Sign up for internal training programs

Advertisement


Internal schemes are a sure-fire way to secure leadership skills, as well as declaring you are looking for acceleration to the top.

โ€œMentors and internal education schemes are incredibly important in helping overcome the reticence that some women have to plough forward,โ€ explains Peter Wilson, author of Make Mentoring Work (Major Street Publishing, $34.95). โ€œI interviewed 90 of Australiaโ€™s top business, government and society people, and every one of them had a mentor โ€“ and theyโ€™re still looking for people they can learn from in their daily life.โ€

Channel your ambition


โ€œI was described as โ€˜ambitiousโ€™ by everyone from high school teachers to aunts and uncles,โ€ says Olivia, 34, CEO of a digital advertising agency. โ€œBut they delivered it with negative connotations. As a result, it took me several years to feel comfortable voicing my desire to push forward with my career. Eventually, I found an environment that allowed me to communicate my vision for the company and myself. It was a case of practising assertiveness versus aggressiveness.โ€

Advertisement

Wilson agrees that the way to channel ambition is by using a direct style with an underlining humility. โ€œNot heavily bragging, but showing a positive, purposeful tone,โ€ he says.

This behaviour can be implemented at any stage of your vocational climb. When hiring, many companies pinpoint leadership qualities even from entry level. โ€œI look for people who are taking responsibility for their own development and display a willingness to be stretched. It helps if the person lets me know that they want to progress,โ€ points out Watts.

Use the C-word


The latest buzzword in the business world is โ€œcollaborationโ€. โ€œIt used to be called โ€˜teamworkโ€™ and now everyone loves โ€˜collaborationโ€™,โ€ says Blanshard. โ€œIt takes skill to be able to deal with different types of people.โ€

Advertisement

This is especially true with cross-generational management because, says Blanshard, โ€œYouโ€™re adapting to working with your grandmother as well as your little sister โ€“ resisters and early adopters.โ€

If you find yourself in this position, Blanshard advises taking the initiative in proposing changes in the way people do things. โ€œCome up with alternatives instead of accepting the โ€˜this is how we do itโ€™ process,โ€ she says. โ€œChallenge the way the business operates so youโ€™re coming at it from a different perspective and being noticed.โ€

Related stories


Advertisement
Advertisement