Managing Your Fears During
Tough Times
Fear is reality when dealing
with difficult economic times.
How you manage it is the measure
of effective leadership

Fear is endemic in an
organization facing hard times. But managers
should not show fears they feel to their
team. It sends the wrong signal and can
cause employees to lose faith. Stoic,
perhaps, but it is the reality of leading in
an organization. Fear persists, however, so
how leaders deal with it is important.
First and foremost, the
leader needs to remain in
control of himself and his team.
Until told otherwise the manager
must adopt the command position
by knowing and acting on
expectations for self and the
team. Moving forward, here are
things a leader can do to deal
with the situation.
Be realistic.
High achievers fear something
more than business failure; they
fear they will not perform up to
expectations. It is critical to
address that possibility. One
way is to game it out in your
mind. Play the "what happens if"
scenario for each action step.
If this happens, then what? Or
if that happens, what do I do?
Rolling the scenario out in your
mind may give you comfort of
knowing the consequences. So
often the unknown is more
fearful than the known. "Fear,"
goes the German proverb, "makes
the wolf bigger than he is."
Confide in a friend.
Talk it out with a friend,
preferably not a subordinate.
You can role play the scenario
with her as a means of gaining
perspective. Invite your
colleague to ask you questions.
So often the simple act of
speaking out loud is helpful.
Verbalizing the situation forces
an individual to frame the
situation in ways that can lead
to greater clarity.
Look for inspiration.
Find an outlet to release your
fear. Exercise is always good;
keeping yourself fit is healthy.
Some find hope in their faith;
others find it in doing
something completely different,
perhaps coaching a team,
volunteering at a shelter, or
organizing a food drive. These
things can be fulfilling because
they get you outside of yourself
by helping others.
Lighten up.
Dwelling in fear is a zero-sum
game. You must abandon that
mindset. Make light of the
situation. Lampoon it. Take a
cue from humorist, Dave Barry,
who wrote, "All of us are born
with a set of instinctive
fears—of falling, of the dark,
of lobsters, of falling on
lobsters in the dark, or
speaking before a Rotary Club,
and of the words 'Some Assembly
Required.'" Absurdity never hurt
anyone.
Fear is reality when dealing
with tough times, but how you
manage it is the measure of
effective leadership. One who
succumbs and gives up surrenders
the ability to lead. Standing up
to fear, acknowledging its
presence, and resolving to move
forward, requires determination,
and yes courage. That's the
stuff of leaders.
  
Whether your training need is small and focused, or
enterprise-wide, you can count of Frontline Learning to deliver.
For more than 20 years we have been helping organizations
achieve their business objectives with targeted training
initiatives.
|