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Augusto Giacoman advises
The most impressive thing about this tough leader was how much he
companies on people and
organizational issues for cared.
Strategy&, PwC’s strategy
consulting business. He is a
director with PwC US based in
When he first came to our battalion, he gathered all the officers
New York.
together for a leadership development session. Then he played a
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video of the classic children’s story The Giving Tree, by Shel
Silverstein. The Giving Tree describes an enduring relationship of
unconditional and self-sacrificing love between a tree and a little
boy. In the silence after the video ended, he uttered a simple command before dismissing us:
“Be the Giving Tree for your soldiers.”
Through the medium of a familiar children’s story, he charged us to care to about our
soldiers more than ourselves. I watched his philosophy of caring yield incredible results in
the unit, both in garrison and in combat in places like Mosul and Sadr City.
Academic studies have shown that there are proven benefits to developing a caring attitude.
Of course, caring for business colleagues doesn’t always come naturally to leaders. It takes
conscious effort and practice. The first step is to recognize that caring — and demonstrating
that you care — brings benefits.
The next step is a counterintuitive one: Get in touch with your own dissatisfaction. Think
about that first Monday back after a long vacation, the challenge of dealing with a difficult
boss, the disappointment when a deal goes bad. Choosing memories that evoke negative
emotions and experiences will help you get in touch with anxiety over the future or fear of
failure. Then, recognize that your team members are experiencing the same frustrations and
worries as you. Just as you want to be free from anxiety and stressful emotions and thoughts,
so do your employees. This simple reflection naturally generates a desire to help others with
their dissatisfaction, and can produce the optimism and energy necessary to do it.
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12/19/2017 The Caring Leader
Finally, think about the ways in which your success would have been impossible without the
help that others — including loving parents, supportive teachers, and empathetic mentors —
have provided. Then consider that continued success will require further assistance from
others, including work colleagues. This realization provides a self-interested reason for
leaders to care about the well-being of their team members.
Hard-core individualists who doubt leaders’ need for supportive teams should consider the
famous study by Harvard Business School professors Boris Groysberg, Ashish Nanda, and
Nitin Nohira. They studied more than 1,000 “rock star” analysts — securities analysts named
by Institutional Investor magazine as among the best in their industry over a period of eight
years, from 1988 to 1996. They found that when stars switched firms, their job performance
fell and they rarely reached the heights of their previous success. The causes of this
performance plunge are multifaceted. But the authors concluded that losing the teamwork
and relationships at the places where the analysts became stars were important contributing
factors.
There are, of course, risks to caring too much. A study by Middle Tennessee State University
professor Mark C. Frame suggests that the higher up the organization one is promoted, the
less his or her care is valued. Leaders should combine caring with some level of assertiveness
and independence. Although our sergeant major cared about his soldiers, he still put them
through tough training. Yes, he made us watch a video about The Giving Tree. But when a
soldier required discipline, the sergeant didn’t hesitate to mete it out swiftly.
The image of the shouting alpha-wolf leader as someone who gets results has been shown to
be a myth. From the streets of Baghdad to the boardroom, care has proven to be an effective
tool for leaders.
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12/19/2017 The Caring Leader
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