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Why I Trust 20 year olds w/ My Future.
Posted by Erik Bennett
In Marcus Buckingham’s book, Stand Out, there is a great tool that helps analyze your giftedness.
My highest scores were as, Provider and Pioneer if you’re playing along. A Provider is someone who values the team and wants everyone to come along for the ride of leadership. No one gets left behind. A Provider would see great value in team leadership and want to give access to many voices. The Pioneer is someone who loves the challenge of doing new things or restructuring an old way to a new way of doing things. Combining those two types produces: Trailblazer. A friend in ministry called me, Daniel Boone. Maybe this is why I love shows like Deadliest Catch and Gold Rush. They are shows about team work and adventure. That could be a Gen M hashtag. #TeamworkAdventure. M’s are a great tool that most leaders over the age of 40 have yet to fully value.
Here is part of what a Millennial can do in your organization. They can tell you whether you are being honest in your evaluation of yourself. Millennials have this uncanny knack at seeing truth for truth. They can spot a fake and sniff out the truth. If truth got buried in an avalanche we’d use Milliennial St. Bernard rescue dogs to sniff out a rescue. Are you engaged with Millennials on your leadership team? Here’s how you can lead them to help you lead your organization:
- Give them a true voice at the leadership table. You will feel scared that their lack of practical experience will derail you. Dismiss that feeling. Fear is never a good motivator. Instead, listen to the words they say and how they make you stick to topic and doctrine. They know a line when the hear it. Use them to help you know the same. Use them to help vocally challenge the norms.
- Let them dream about change out loud. Millennials want to change failing systems. Let them browse your systems and then allow them to dream about a new way of doing things. This will cause you to be scared. Dismiss that feeling. Fear is never a good motivator (yes, I said it again.). Instead, listen to what they dream about. I like hearing Gen M’s dream about the future church, since in fact, they are it.
- Ask them good questions that promote more questions. Gen M thrives in places that reek community. They leave places that don’t. Good questions create atmospheres that allow for community. The question, is the petri dish of community. We ask Gen M questions that help make us all think together through issues. Dont be afraid to ask hard and challenging questions (repeat that sentence about fear). Gen M’s see that as you valuing their place at the table. It makes them bonded to you and to the organization.
- Dont leave their decisions aside without telling them why. Biggest.Mistake.Ever. Gen M’s need to know if they are doing well or if they need to raise their game. To walk through the first three steps and leave this one out will destroy any community you thought you created. Why would you throw that away? Fear (repeat the sentence again). If the decisions don’t make sense for your Org let them know. It wont hurt their feelings. Instead it will energize them toward helping you solve another part of the process.
- Take numbers 1 through 4 and apply it toward a personal friendship. It’s not time they are after, its you. They desire mentoring not coaching. Mentors don’t solve problems they help you solve problems. Coaches dictate who you could be if you followed their direction. Coaches win or lose. Mentors help you prepare for life after the game. Spend an early morning drinking coffee or a late night playing Call of Duty (preferably: MW3). Allow them to see your life and speak into it. You will find that they speak into it with questions so that they will have answers to live their life. This is all about the team and the relationships within it.
Who are the Gen M’s on your team? How are you using them to help impact your organization? How are you using them to impact your own life? How are you creating community in your organization?
Posted in Next Gen Ministry
Tags: gen m, leadership, marcus buckingham, mellenniels, standout
