Steven Mays: Lessons in Leadership
Description
Steven Mays developed the Power of 3 paradigm as a guide for leaders, whether they’re just starting out or seeking ways to improve.
Steven possesses a strong background in electrical engineering, 30 years of professional experience in the nuclear power industry, and a family history of service in various government and non-government positions.
Through the years, Steven has learned key lessons in leadership, risk assessment, and regulatory application — lessons that he is eager to share with the rest of the world.
Steven joins me today to discuss leadership, both in terms of its broader definition and its finer points. He shares his motivation for developing the Power of 3 leadership method while tackling the fundamental areas of leadership that his method covers.
He discusses and differentiates power from leadership, style from action, and love from despair, while illustrating how despair can cripple even the strongest leaders. He also shares his thoughts on the right ways a leader can inspire, share credit, take responsibility for blame, and bring out the best in his followers.
“We have a dearth of good leadership in the world – and we suffer for it.”
Steven May
This Week on The Power to Live More Podcast:
- Steven’s background and the core of what he does.
- Why he decided to write his book, The Power of 3.
- Why he believes that leaders are made, not born.
- Why people grow up to be weak in fundamental areas of leadership.
- The aspects of leadership and followership that everyone possesses and must develop.
- The difference between arbitrary power and true influence and leadership.
- The concrete steps Steven is undertaking to help people become better leaders.
- Why great leadership is less about style and more about action.
- The specifics of the Power of 3 leadership method.
- The three characteristics necessary for a leader to have a strong foundation — and which of those is the least important.
- The three categories of challenges a leader might face.
- Steven’s rather peculiar choice of an “excellent” leadership book.
- Why the “true” opposite emotion of love isn’t hate, but despair — and why it prevents people from becoming effective leaders.
- The two types of inspiration a leader can provide.
- How a leader should handle credit and blame.
- How Steven deals with a bad day.
- How the right leadership approach can make a tremendous difference in a person’s life.
Resources Mentioned:
- The Road Less Travelled by M. Scott Peck
Connect with Steven Mays:
Connect, Share, Inspire
Thank you for joining me for this week’s episode of the POWER to Live More Podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and would like to help support the show, please head over to iTunes or Stitcher, subscribe to the show and leave your honest review! You can also help me reach even more amazing business owners and leaders by sharing your favourite episodes on your social media channels.
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Show notes provided (brilliantly, my words not theirs!) by Lidwell Writing Services, LLC
Top Tool to Consider
Here I recommend a tool that I use. Don’t be a slave to tools / bright shiny objects though, you don’t have to use them all!
Buffer
I thought I’d shared this tool before but apparently not!
Buffer is a great way to share content on social media with least fuss. I have it connected to my Pocket account via Zapier so that I can easily add useful content that I read to my Buffer queues.
In Buffer you add your accounts, set your sharing schedule for each account and then you can add your content to a queue to feed those schedules.
It means that when I have an article reading fest (most mornings!), I can easily add useful content to my Twitter, LinkedIn and Facebook Group queues without there being a flood of shares in that moment.
The other way I use it is to see which articles have proved popular. Each week I add three of my shares to this newsletter for your delectation and I choose them by looking at the click throughs that they’ve had through my Twitter account.
It’s amazing to see that some shares come in at under 10 click throughs and others in the thousands.
You can also use Buffer to share in the moment but I won’t tend to both – though of course I should be using that functionality if I want to get all shares included in my stats!
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