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A Publication of WTVP

Without self-awareness, you can't be a great leader. It's just that simple. If you don't have a good grasp of who you are—your strengths and weaknesses, the nuances of your personality, how others perceive you—you can only "fake" being a leader. You can't lead in the authentic way that engages people and enables them to do their best work. And here's the real problem: You won't know what areas you need to work on.

Being a great manager requires skills in many different areas. Yet you can't fix everything at once. You must apply your focus where you need the most help. That takes self-awareness.

Yet studies consistently show that most human beings have blind spots that hold us back. We don't know ourselves very well—that is, unless we make a conscious, deliberate effort to do so.

That's why we made "Know Yourself" the first chapter in our new book. Mind Tools for Managers identifies the 100 skills that a manager can master to become a better leader, as identified in a survey of 15,242 managers and professionals worldwide. We provide practical advice for each of these skills and direct the reader to MindTools.com for a deeper dive into specific skill-building articles, worksheets, videos, and more.

But back to self-awareness: Our study found this quality is deeply valued by many professionals. In fact, 59.8 percent of managers believe that it's highly important to understand how their own behavior impacts other people. Here are five tips to help you raise your self-awareness and be a better manager.

Discover where you stand on the "Big Five" personality model. We recommend the Big Five Personality Traits model. It's based on findings from several independent researchers in the 1950s and ultimately named "The Big Five" by Lewis Goldberg. The model measures five key dimensions of personality: openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness and neuroticism. By understanding how you score on each dimension, you can make sure you're in the right role and/or take action in "low score" areas to improve your performance. To learn more about the Big Five Personality Traits model and discover strategies for addressing disadvantageous scores, visit http://mnd.tools/1-1. To take an online Big Five Personality Test, visit http://mnd.tools/1-2.

Learn your personal strengths (and weaknesses). The SWOT analysis is a popular tool that helps businesses identify their strengths and weaknesses, but it can also help managers identify their own strong and weak areas.

To learn more about personal SWOT analysis, visit http://mnd.tools/2-1.

If you don't already have clear personal goals, set them now. Setting goals gives you long-term vision and short-term motivation, both of which you need to be a successful manager. That's why the authors recommend that you invest a few hours in thinking about what you'd like your future to look like. Consider areas like career, family, education, relationships, personal finances, and personal enjoyment.

Remember the SMART mnemonic. Your dreams should be specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, and time-bound. This helps you clarify your ideas, focus your efforts, use your time and resources productively, and increase your chances of achieving what you want in life.

To learn more about personal goal setting, including accessing a structured goal-setting program, visit http://mnd.tools/3-1. To learn more about SMART goal setting, visit http://mnd.tools/3-2.

Shore up your self-confidence. The way we view our own abilities is a key determinant of self- efficacy and self-esteem. We can pump ourselves up with positive self-talk and listen to people who flatter us, but this can lead us to become overconfident and to fall flat on our faces. Alternatively, we can put ourselves down and listen to naysayers and critics, leading us to back away from opportunities and not achieve our potential. (No one wants to be managed by a flustered boss who doubts his or her own judgment!)

The key is to strike a healthy balance between these two extremes. Research has shown that being slightly overconfident in your own abilities is useful because it allows you to take on challenges from which you can learn. To learn more about building self-confidence, visit http://mnd.tools/4-1.

Manage your bad moods. Just as we need to be appropriately self-confident as managers, we also need to be aware of and manage the emotions we project to members of our teams. From the moment we come in the door in the morning to the time we leave, people read our words and our body language. For our teams to be happy and productive, we need to manage negative thoughts and project positive emotions. More than this, we need to be positive for our own good at work.

There are tricks you can use to quickly boost your mood, like forcing a smile onto your face for several minutes before you enter the office. But what you really need to do is understand and turn around the negative thinking that underpins your own negative emotions.

We recommend cognitive restructuring—first developed by psychologist Albert Ellis in the mid-1950s—to improve negative moods or combat fear, apprehension, or anxiety about a person or event. Specifically we suggest a technique based on the seven-column Thought Record copyrighted by Christine A. Padesky, appearing in Mind Over Mood. To learn more, visit http://mnd.tools/6-1.

Until you truly know yourself, you will never be a great leader. Only by becoming self-aware can you play to your strengths, understand your own personal goals, forge authentic connections with your team and colleagues, and inspire others to do the same. Start getting to know yourself today and see where it takes you and your team tomorrow. iBi

James Manktelow and Julian Birkinshaw are coauthors of Mind Tools for Managers: 100 Ways to Be a Better Boss. James Manktelow is founder and CEO of MindTools.com. Julian Birkinshaw is professor of strategy and entrepreneurship, deputy dean for programs, and academic director of the Institute of Innovation and Entrepreneurship at the London Business School.

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