Newspapers across the country today are honoring the life of legendary UCLA basketball coach John Wooden
who died yesterday. The outpouring of praise might seem unusual given
his long life (99) years and the many tributes already paid while he was
alive to experience them. He also retired 35 years ago as a college
coach, rather than a world leader, so what creates his staying power in
the hearts of so many who never met him, let alone the men he coached,
only some of whom went on to become sports legends?
In addition to all the other possible reasons, I think it is because
60 years ago he created a philosophy that he called his “Pyramid of
Success” which speaks to athletes as well as CEOs about how to dominate
in one’s field and achieve maximum results. It a formula for leadership
that is aligned with current trends called “authentic leadership.” Wooden’s approach was grounded in a player’s developing himself as a
person. The 15 building blocks create a framework that unites ethics and
emotional intelligence with mental and physical conditioning, skill,
and competitive greatness.
Wooden, both a student and teacher of wisdom, said of character and reputation: “Be more concerned with your character than your reputation, because your character is what you really are; your reputation is merely what others think you are.”
Think about the parade we’ve had the last few months of CEOs from companies with huge reputation issues called before Congressional committees to explain what went wrong, why harm was caused, how public trust was lost. Consider the hearings on huge oil profits and high oil prices, health insurers, Akio Toyoda testifying on unintended acceleration, (Toyota), Richard Fuld on the collapse of Lehman, Lloyd Blankfein on Goldman Sachs’ priority on customers, Don Blankenship on mine safety, (Massey Energy mine disaster) and Lamar McKay and others on BP’s oil spill not being the company’s fault (BP America) to name a few. Still to be heard from is CEO William Weldon asked to explain Johnson & Johnson’s series of recalls and how the company has handled them.
What is there about Wooden’s Pyramid of Success that offers CEOs outstanding executive coaching? The pyramid takes the hallmark driven behavior of achievers and blends it with values that create a context for actions. Wooden won 10 national titles. He inspired loyalty and consistent and outstanding performance. He tapped into what his players could be inspired to do to achieve their potential.
“Ability,” he said, “may get you to the top, but it takes character to keep you there.”
The ethical leadership lessons for the court fit very well in the board room.
Wooden, both a student and teacher of wisdom, said of character and reputation: “Be more concerned with your character than your reputation, because your character is what you really are; your reputation is merely what others think you are.”
Think about the parade we’ve had the last few months of CEOs from companies with huge reputation issues called before Congressional committees to explain what went wrong, why harm was caused, how public trust was lost. Consider the hearings on huge oil profits and high oil prices, health insurers, Akio Toyoda testifying on unintended acceleration, (Toyota), Richard Fuld on the collapse of Lehman, Lloyd Blankfein on Goldman Sachs’ priority on customers, Don Blankenship on mine safety, (Massey Energy mine disaster) and Lamar McKay and others on BP’s oil spill not being the company’s fault (BP America) to name a few. Still to be heard from is CEO William Weldon asked to explain Johnson & Johnson’s series of recalls and how the company has handled them.
What is there about Wooden’s Pyramid of Success that offers CEOs outstanding executive coaching? The pyramid takes the hallmark driven behavior of achievers and blends it with values that create a context for actions. Wooden won 10 national titles. He inspired loyalty and consistent and outstanding performance. He tapped into what his players could be inspired to do to achieve their potential.
“Ability,” he said, “may get you to the top, but it takes character to keep you there.”
The ethical leadership lessons for the court fit very well in the board room.
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