Jack Welch, former CEO and near-legendary leader of General Electric, in his book Jack: Straight from the Gut, lists the following six rules that are key to leading a company successfully:Jack20welch202

1. Control your destiny or someone else will

2. Face reality as it is, not as you wish it to be

3. Be candid with everyone

4. Don’t manage, lead

5. Change before you have to

6. If you don’t have a competitive advantage, don’t compete

It’s clear to me why Jack Welch was so successful and famous as a leader; this list is concise and power-packed.  Immediately upon reading it I can think of companies that violate all six completely!  Conversely, as I skim back through the pages of author Jim Collin’s book Good to Great, it is apparent that the great companies all live by these simple but powerful rules.  Jim_collins_5_23

An interesting question might be why the difference between companies?  Why do some organizations wallow around in irrelevance, allowing outside forces and markets to move them rather than the opposite, ignoring reality and instead believing some home-spun placebo self-spin, tweaking and spinning the truth to everyone else, managing and controlling instead of leading and inspiring, resisting change to the point of stodginess, and existing in the marketplace without any distinguishing capabilities, while at the same time other companies push boldly forward, with eyes wide open and focused upon brutal realities, being candid and open and honest, leading from the front, changing rapidly and with agility and buy-in, and establishing clear competitive advantages?

I believe the answer is already eloquently spelled out in both Welch’s and Collin’s book: leadership.

As students of leadership, all three of you dear readers out there would do well to learn from this conclusion: leadership makes all the difference.  That is why we hash through its principles so incessantly on this blog.  Many so-called leaders are simply imposters; or what we used to call ‘posers’ in the motocross world. And many companies just exist, riding out their run until they simply can’t make it anymore.  Excellent leaders understand and confront this brutal reality, learning from bad examples and aspiring to the clarity and courage espoused by Jack Welch’s list. Those that can fulfill his mandate are few but phenomenal.  And the rest, well, they are simply on the race track to give the real leaders someone to pass. 

May you be among those lapping the traffic!  Pursue leadership excellence by memorizing and living this list!  See you at the podium!

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8 responses to “Welch’s Six Rules for Leaders”

  1. Ian from Texas Avatar

    Chris (and the other 2 bloggers)
    I don’t know how the other 2 feel, but when you give me a challenge, a mission, or even a mission-challenge, one thing that is for sure is that you can take the results to the bank.
    What I just wrote wasn’t true.
    I do know how the other two feel, and we all agree, WE ACCEPT THE CHALLENGE!!!
    We also agree that seeing you at the podium would be very cool.
    ๐Ÿ™‚
    Have a great day fellow bloggers!
    Ian from Texas
    PS
    FreedomCount stands at:
    1 month, 4 days, 18 hours, 26 min

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  2. lorie lawson Avatar
    lorie lawson

    Dear Chris,
    Leadership, I feel, is so important. There is so many people today that are stuck in there everday rut. I am not perfect by any stretch, but I am doing my best to become the leader God has called me to be. Quick question, How do you get others to see the dream and the vision that is so clear before me? I want to help others badly, but some just enjoy being in there rut. I’m trying to lead them out of the rut. Anyway thankyou for being such a blessing to us. Lorie

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  3. Lydia Seibert Avatar
    Lydia Seibert

    Hey, Chris, I love your blog’s new look. It is very professional and readable!
    Your comments this morning really hit home for me as I go through various “small stuff” in my life and my business. Every time there is a problem in my team, I must view it as my fault. I’m pressed down by the overwhelming reality that I need to be a better leader, communicator, relationship builder, problem solver, etc. But I am not crushed by these things because I have TEAM leadership development and blogs like yours and Orrin’s to remind me on a daily basis of what it takes to be a great leader.
    Hopefully I learn my lessons and don’t have to repeat them, but in the meantime, I’ll keep reading and listening to the giants of leadership!!
    Keep paving the way,
    Lydia

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  4. Phyllis Hoff Avatar
    Phyllis Hoff

    Chris:
    Wow! What a powerful post. What I think is so very sad is that within some of those organizations that you mention, there are some leaders that get caught in the organizations irrelevance. The end result is that a truly great leader that can make a difference will leave that organization to do something great, as you and Orrin did, and many other individuals that I know.
    Thank you for reminding us of those six rules. We are all so blessed to have such a leader in you, helping us to be better leaders.
    I had a situation the other day, and did not know how to handle it. I pulled out your Confidence CD and listened to it twice before I tackled the situation. As always, I was not perfect, but definitely handled it much better listening to you.
    I thank you once again.
    Phyllis

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  5. amanda Avatar
    amanda

    Chris you seem to have forgotten blogger #4.LOl
    Once again you’ve hit the nail on the head.My husband and I were just discussing this topic last night. We spent I don’t know approximately 6 months or so honing in on our leadership skills. Spending every waking moment studying every piece of literature or CD we could get our hands on, attending every speaking engagement we could find. Preparing for any unforeseen opportunity where leadership could be needed besides at home, work, family gatherings, the grocery store, and we can’t leave out the left lane of the highway. And yet now that the opportunity is here we realize what we’ve learned is price less every minute spent is giving out a million dollar return. With out this system we would be no where. Now is our chance to learn leadership in action. What you call applied leadership. I believe, no I know that as long as I make sure I give credit to God and stay focused on leadership rather than money. I will be blessed abundantly. Thank you Chris for taking time out of your day to help the 4 of us learn more about leadership.
    God bless You
    Amanda

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  6. Nichole Avatar

    Thank you Mr Brady! For saying things others are too comfortable to say out loud. Your frankness, humor and brilliance astounds me each time I hear and read your words. Keep diggin bru-tha!

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  7. Ian Avatar

    Chris,
    Can i be the 4th blogger please!!!! though i will be 1 of the two ian’s on here, you dont have a real blog till you have at least two of em! =)
    Your consistent learning has helped me see a clearer path of whats important and what can wait, I leverage this information to tune my day up and keep on rolling forward to achieve and to help others achieve. Heck!! all i have to do is say “did you see what Chris wrote on the blog!!” thats not so hard!!!Most of the time.

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  8. Icode4u Avatar

    The revolution starts with concise information about which traits to take up to be effective and those traits are always found here. Thanks Chris.

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