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In my recent post, You Aren’t Smart Enough, I shared a list of counselor types a leader should surround themselves with in order to make great decisions. As important as good counsel is, it is just as important, perhaps more-so, to know how to avoid bad counsel.
Below are a list of bad counselor types that I tend to be very cautious around. Listening to these types of people when trying to make a decision will keep you thinking to yourself, “Oops! I did it again“. “Did he just reference a Britney Spears song?”, you ask. Oh, baby, baby, not on purpose. She does come to mind, though, when I think of bad decision-making.
Good leaders avoid bad counsel.
By the way, all of the above folk are related. There are a lot of overlapping attributes, and the family reunions are…special. There are better people in your organization that you can spend your time with. Find them and enjoy their company instead.
If you have made a string of bad decisions, you should think about how you are making decisions and consider the counselors you look to for advice. If the people I’ve described above are your go-to people, Staahhpp. Be kind to them. Treat them better than you would want to be treated, but by all means, stop asking them for their advice. They could be toxic to your career. If they come to you for advice, give them wise counsel, but you don’t need to listen to them.
Ephesians 4 teaches that whenever you try to stop doing something, you need to quickly put something else in its place. A way to avoid bad counsel is to quickly find good counsel. By the way, some of the descriptions above might be a description of you. Don’t hold it against me. Recognize it, acknowledge it, and then work at it.
Reach out to someone who you think might care about your success, and have a very open and candid conversation. That might include apologizing to them first. It’s difficult for me, as I’m sure it is for others, to take people seriously and genuinely, when they have consistently displayed the above behaviors over an extended period of time. Ask them for clear, quick, and candid accountability, and then accept their input when they oblige.
This is one of many articles in my Finding Leadership Series. To learn more, go to “Finding Leadership – An Introduction to the Series” or click on the series introduction in the sidebar.
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