The Chronicle

Have you got what it takes?

Thoughts on leadership

- Melanie Burgess

LEADERSHIP is widely considered a learned behaviour, not a trait one is born with or without. But what needs to be learned to create a good leader is a constant area of discussion.

Leaders from the growing food packaging, community care, telecommun­ications, beauty and real estate industries join management consultant Anthony Mitchell in sharing their insights on how to create leadership qualities.

Anthony Mitchell, co-founder and chief potential officer of Bendelta

“Despite the turbulent, rapid-paced world we now work in, leaders must focus on the long term,” he says.

“Typically, the most important long-term investment of all is in people – attracting great people, understand­ing people’s talents and needs, and helping them stretch to their full potential. Great leaders put personal glory, ease and reward at the bottom of their priorities and investment in the future at the top.”

Shelley Sullivan, chief executive and founder of ModelCo and finalist in the CEO Magazine Executive of the Year Awards

“Courage. Passion. Vision. Confidence,” she says. “It took a leap of faith for me to start a cosmetic company up against large, multimilli­on-dollar establishe­d internatio­nal brands. I had the vision to see the big picture and the confidence to continue despite many obstacles.

“ModelCo is now one of the top two Australian beauty brands.”

Benjamin Pollack, chief executive of real estate and developmen­t advisory Urbis

“Collaborat­ion is a necessity,” he says. “Successful leaders must be able to move beyond the day-to-day technical discipline to fully realise the benefits of these collaborat­ive opportunit­ies. We are focused on developing leaders who build a culture of collaborat­ion and creativity, not one of process.”

Jonathan Moss, global chief executive of drinks company Frucor Suntory

“Leading in a rapidly changing environmen­t means leaders need to get crystal clear on the direction of their organisati­on and the culture that drives them forward,” he says.

“We’ve spent a lot of time at Frucor Suntory finding

our cultural sweet spot – combining a strong sense of winning, fast pace, high standards with team work, collaborat­ion and fun.”

Peter Worland, executive director of community care organisati­on Uniting

“Leading in disruption sometimes means turning left when everything and

everyone is telling you to turn right,” he says.

“(Organisati­ons) need the freedom for challengin­g ideas to emerge and discordant voices to be heard. The best leaders know when to heed the common view and when to be contrarian.

“As the conductor of the orchestra, I need to draw on the full talent of the musicians, individual­ly and collective­ly, not limit the expression of their talents.”

Vaughan Paul, vice-president of human resources of Optus

“Leaders must learn to encourage and create space to generate ideas, but also allocate budget to trial, prototype and, most

importantl­y, accept failure,” he says.

“The important balance between the technical breadth of the business and the commercial­ity to drive long-term sustainabi­lity requires leaders who are focused on innovation, culture and talent above the developmen­t of the technology itself.”

 ?? PHOTO: JUSTIN LLOYD ?? TRUE LEADERS: The Iconic CEO Patrick Schmidt and Bendelta director Anthony Mitchell.
PHOTO: JUSTIN LLOYD TRUE LEADERS: The Iconic CEO Patrick Schmidt and Bendelta director Anthony Mitchell.

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