ADVERTISEMENT
  • About Us
  • Advertise with LA TechWatch
  • Apply To Contribute To LA TechWatch
  • Contact Us
  • Home
  • LA Tech Directory
  • LA TechWatch Editorial Guidelines
  • LA TechWatch Guest Contributor Guidelines
  • LATechWatch Guest Contributor Guidelines
  • Search Results
  • Tell Us About Your Startup
  • Write for LA TechWatch
  • You are seconds away from signing up for the hottest list in LA Tech
LA TechWatch
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
LA TechWatch
No Result
View All Result

8 Qualities That Put You In The Virtuoso CEO Category

Martin Zwilling by Martin Zwilling
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

1199163373_d6af223573_b

As an angel investor in early-stage startups, I have long noticed my peers’ apparent bias toward the strength and character of the founding entrepreneurs, often overriding a strong solution to a painful problem with a big opportunity. In other words, the entrepreneur quality is more important than the idea — in investor jargon, people invest in the jockey, and not the horse.
I have often wondered if anyone has quantified the implied assumption that leadership character is indeed a critical element of the success equation for startups. I was pleased to see a recent book “Return On Character,” by Fred Kiel, a renowned leadership consultant. Kiel has completed a study on more than 100 CEOs, with feedback from over 8,000 of their employees on this topic.
His research concluded that CEOs who received high scores for character also achieved much higher business results — nearly 5 times the average return on assets (ROA) during the two-year period covered. On the other hand, those CEOs with the lowest character scores (self-focused) were distrusted and suspected of telling the truth only slightly more than half the time.
Through interviews, Kiel identified 8 common traits and habits exhibited by all the CEOs with a top-character ranking (deemed virtuoso CEOs — masters of the skills and art of leadership):
1.Displayed and demanded high moral principles. These are summarized as the 4 keystone character habits of integrity, responsibility, forgiveness and compassion. The authors found these to be achievable through self-training and practice, rather than requiring a genetic endowment. That means all of us have a chance.
2.Embraced a worldview of positive beliefs. The scope of the positive leadership views included human nature, organization life and personal purpose. The lower character leaders were consistently more negative and pessimistic in their worldview. In both cases, the beliefs tended to become realities.
3.Developed a higher level of mental complexity. A leader judged high on cognitive complexity tends to perceive nuances and subtle differences that a person with a lower measure does not. High leaders continually challenged their own ideas, quickly adapting them to encompass new information, experiences and meaning.
4.Sought out and listened to critical feedback from others. High-scoring leaders seek and positively respond to feedback from three critical groups: peers, customers and direct-reporting team members. Self-focused leaders, on the other hand, are more likely to resort to denial when faced with unpleasant feedback.
5.Find and enjoy the company of one or more mentors. The leadership benefits of mentoring start in childhood, but are just as important at the mature CEO level. Virtuoso leaders recognize and seek three types of mentoring – career mentoring for the longer term, peer mentoring for tactical guidance and life mentoring for quality of life balancing.
6.Demonstrate the ideas and behaviors of self-determination. Leaders with a high level of self-determination continually seek more competence in their chosen domain, relatedness and connectivity to other stakeholders and the autonomy to act in harmony with an integrated view of themselves.
7.Virtuoso leaders know their life story. By crafting a coherent narrative of their life, they are better able to understand the major events and influences that have shaped their personal development and use that understanding to assess and improve their response to new situations as they arise.
8.Sought and accepted help from many supportive people since childhood. Leaders who have sought help from natural helpers since childhood, including parents, teachers and business influencers, usually feel more accepted, respected and affirmed, and pass that feeling on to followers.
While Kiel’s focus was not specifically on startups, I believe the insights and conclusions apply equally well, if not more so, to startup environments. Every entrepreneur needs to understand the importance of character and leadership in relation to their growth and success, as well as their ability to attract investors. The return on character in business is well worth the investment.


 

Reprinted by permission.
Image credit: CC by Chris Betcher

Angel, startups, entrepreneur, leadership, character, business success, CEO tips

Tags: Angel/Seedbusiness successCEO tipscharacterentrepreneurLeadershipStartups
Previous Post

5 Attributes of People Who Will Grow Your Business

Next Post

The 10 Largest LA Startup Funding Rounds of April 2017

Next Post

The 10 Largest LA Startup Funding Rounds of April 2017

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ABOUT LA TECHWATCH

ABOUT US
ADVERTISE
EDITORIAL GUIDELINES
LEGAL
PRIVACY
TERMS OF USE

CONTACT

CONTACT US
ADVERTISE
TIPS
WRITE FOR US

CHANNELS

LA VC
LA TECH NEWS
LA STARTUPS
TECH DIRECTORY

© 2023 LA TechWatch | All Rights Reserved | Proudly Made for Los Angeles

No Result
View All Result
  • About Us
  • Advertise with LA TechWatch
  • Apply To Contribute To LA TechWatch
  • Contact Us
  • Home
  • LA Tech Directory
  • LA TechWatch Editorial Guidelines
  • LA TechWatch Guest Contributor Guidelines
  • LATechWatch Guest Contributor Guidelines
  • Search Results
  • Tell Us About Your Startup
  • Write for LA TechWatch
  • You are seconds away from signing up for the hottest list in LA Tech

© 2023 LA TechWatch | All Rights Reserved | Proudly Made for Los Angeles

You are seconds away from signing up for the hottest list in LA Tech!

Join the millions and keep up with the stories shaping entrepreneurship. Sign up today.

Close this popup