The Vision: Strategic Access
I have been sharing lately a new vision that I have been able to experience over the last several weeks and months. This experience is from my time with the Belmont University Orientation Council, where I had the unique chance to walk through life with 3 other friends on the council, and over the course of the process, I was able to learn a whole lot about how to love on people, and how to lead others. This new idea and understanding of leadership has caused me to have a new vision for what leaders look like.
I believe that this vision will possibly begin to change the way that we look at ourselves, as well as the way we lead other people… I would like to share that vision with you.
STRATEGIC ACCESS
This one for some reason is probably the most straight-forward and basic principle in the world of leadership, but critical to becoming a great leader, rather than a good leader. For me, I think that I was under the impression that in order to be a good leader you had to know a lot of information about a program and be connected with all of its inter-workings. Though this is true, I began to realize this summer that this quality is only for a good leader and not a great leader.
A great leader will take that knowledge and put themselves in a strategic location of access. What do I mean by this… Let me explain with an example. Every other morning this summer was check-in. For us, as we did this 10 times over the course of the summer, was a very painless process where students were checked-in in a very orderly fashion with flow and direction. A masterpiece by our two girls on our team [Allison and Stephanie... they're just amazing!]
With 25 leaders in the room and around the building smiling and answering questions, we could have been off worrying about other things, such as the next program, or how to make the system even better. We could have even taken a nap… but we didn’t. We realized very early on that if we were able to position ourselves in strategic positions of access, we would in turn maximize the room to make sure no one felt left out or confused.
We had one morning a spot in the front of our lobby of our student center without a single White or Red polo [that means the orientation council, or a Summer staffer]. This provided for some students who walked into the room to become overwhelmed by all that was going on in the room, and allow a bit of panic to wash over their faces. I saw it in this one girl. So, I walked right up to her and said, “Hey, I’m Luke… what’s your name?” she responded through a slight smile, “Hey, I’m Abby.” This started a simple yet incredibly important conversation that allowed Abby to feel as if she was the most important person in the room.
What our group was able to do in that moment, was take a really big and chaotic room, and turn it into a very organized, personalized place of relational growth. You see… when we begin to really adopt the idea that relationships are the most important thing in the world, and merge it with our ability to be in the right place in the room, we begin to see catastrophic change in the way people interact. We saw confused, overwhelmed, stressed students and parents become very much at ease with the situation, and truly happy to be at Belmont!
Positioning yourself in a place where people have access to you allows you to be a place of answers. Answers help relieve anxiety, and begin to create peace. Who doesn’t want an event to run peacefully?
Here’s the takeaway: Put yourself in a place of Strategic Access. A place where people can visibly see you, as someone who has influence, and use that influence to make a difference for all the other people in the room. That is true humility. It would have been so easy to tell our leaders where to be and how to answer questions, but instead we were doing exactly what we asked our leaders to do! WE LIVED THE VISION.
In the end… you guessed it… people were overwhelmingly praising us about how “at home” they felt in this place. How upon arriving on campus they immediately were ready for Augusts’ move in day! How they were actually at peace about their son or daughter to be living here for the next for years! What an awesome thing to walk away with… all for sacrificing a little bit of “Leader” time and placing yourself in the trenches.
Be Strategically Accessible.
Luke


