- Authors
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- Name
- Brian Dodridge
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Visionary leaders are awesome.
They’re even awesome-er if they’ve surrounded themselves with others who can help ensure that their visions get realized—or pushed back if they don’t add up.
Some of you are equipped to work alongside visionary leaders—but sometimes, it can be difficult. Whether the visionary leader is awesome or not-so-awesome, working with them does require a “very particular set of skills” (said best in a Liam Neeson voice).
The person who has this set of skills can: 1) work alongside a visionary, 2) bring their vision to fruition, and 3) speak up when the vision has no real fruit.
This person who is doing this is likely a leader themselves, but not a visionary one. Is that you? If so, you must be able to do two things:
- Know when to align with and put action to their vision
- Know how much horsepower to put toward a vision before realizing it’s not best for your church. (We typically avoid ditching visions, because we avoid sunk costs, but I’ve blogged before about the embracing of sunk costs within the church.)
- Don’t rain on their parade.
- At the right moment, provide a reality-check to the vision.
- Make progress on fulfilling their vision, but do it incrementally (sometimes you’ll be a speed governor).
- Embrace their ability for visioneering, and sometimes, just align on faith.
- When you can’t make all of it happen, give them options.
- Bring focus to any part lacking clarity.