小程序
传感搜
传感圈

How This Tech Leader Found Her Voice and Took the Reins of a Major Company

2022-08-20
关注

I'm always excited to talk to women CEOs who have been as successful as my guest for the
recent episode of my Leadership Lessons series, because I know their life lessons will include
wisdom they've had to pick up from the extra hurdles placed in their way. I had a great talk with
Deb Liu, CEO of Ancestry — the largest private online genealogy platform, which allows users to create virtual family trees to trace their lineage and get "hints" about their ancestors and others who might be related to them.

Courtesy of Ancestry

With nearly 20 years in the tech business, Liu has held senior roles at Facebook, PayPal and eBay. She is not only an author, but she also serves on the boards of Intuit and Ancestry and is a seed investor and advisor to several startups. Actively involved in promoting diversity in tech, Liu founded Women In Product, a nonprofit that connects and supports women in the product management field.

Related: 'Everyone's Got a Story of How the Healthcare System Has Fallen Short.' This Founder Is on a Mission to Change That.

"What's special about Ancestry is that it's focused on helping people connect," Liu tells me. "We've gone through a couple of tough years where we lost a million people in America to Covid, and we've gone through a lot of time in lockdown where people haven't been able to see their family. But we are all part of the human family, and how we can connect with one another takes away our differences and focuses on our commonalities."

During our talk, Liu's passion for her company and leadership blew me away. Here are 10 terrific leadership lessons Liu relayed to me during our hour-long conversation:

1. There's a major dichotomy in the minds and lives of many leaders

Many successful people spend their lives shielding their families from the very things that made them successful. This is a huge dichotomy. Liu says that in the end, most people wouldn't take away their own painful, formative experiences because they know what those potholes fostered.

2. Rough seas make good sailors

Liu uses the maritime imagery to remind us that it's the tougher economic times that prove a leader's strength and that of their teams. A good tide lifts all boats, but choppier seas favor the outfits that have prepared for downturns.

3. It's never time to stop learning

If you can remain flexible and open-minded to feedback and new ideas no matter how far you've come in your career, you'll never stop growing and improving yourself. "Your role in life is so much more than just doing your job today," Liu says.

Related: What Has This 100-Year-Old Business Done to Ensure Its Longevity? Its CEO Follows These 7 Leadership Principles.

4. Don't create a dependence on the CEO for answers.

A CEO is there to answer big-picture questions that only they can, but it's not helpful in the long run if team members can't replicate that kind of answer when they're not around. Remember, these are the people who are spending the most time on this particular issue, and they should be the
best prepared to answer big questions themselves.

5. Spend more time on staff meetings than on one-on-ones

Liu says this avoids asymmetry of information. She says staff meetings are an opportunity for everyone to share important conversations and demonstrate transparency around information. They can also break down silos, as opposed to lengthier and more frequent one-on-ones.

Related: Free Webinar | August 9: How to Find Your Voice in the Workplace with Ancestry President & CEO Deb Liu

6. A CEO's purview is unique

For most employees at a company, big decisions around company events and remote work plans "just happen," but the CEO is the one who has to weigh the pros and cons of these things and eventually decide. He or she makes the choices that shape the culture, which can be a very new experience for someone new to the role.

7. Workplaces have a natural bias for extroversion

Liu told me she struggled early on with being a natural introvert but says she learned quickly that those who can respond on a dime to a question are the ones who get asked the next questions. Although the introverts on staff might not be as comfortable talking in larger groups, they have answers in their heads that are just as good or better. As the leader, you need to find a way to access those ideas.

8. Give your staff a framework for decision-making, and use meetings to synchronize efforts

Liu says her team uses a traffic light framework of "red, yellow and green" that can be used to describe issues being faced by different teams during staff get-togethers. At first, there will be a lot of "red" issues, but Liu told me this framework quickly paves the way for more "green" lights and many issues being resolved even before a meeting begins.

9. Team members need to be present at meetings

One of Liu's friends has noticed a particular strategy in meetings, where someone won't show up with anything to add and then proceeds to frown the entire time to drain the energy from the proceedings. Meetings often break up a day's workflow, and if someone is being asked to be present at a meeting, they need to bring their waking self and be receptive to what is being imparted.

10. When explaining things to their team, a leader should learn to frame each issue in three points

It's a fantastic trick and a discipline both Liu and I learned and still practice to this day. The idea is to become more comfortable speaking in front of a team, and to be able to better articulate a problem. When the team asks a substantial question, start on point one and know you're ending on a third point. Even if you don't have three things in mind when you start speaking, you'll get to a point where anything — even things that are made up of more than three ideas — can be pinned on this framework in a way that is reassuring to the team.

And for more from my talk with Liu, watch the full webinar here. The growing collection of episodes from our series gives readers access to the best practices of successful CEOs from the biggest brands, including Foot Locker, Heineken, GoodRx, Headspace, Zoom, Chipotle, Warby Parker and ZipRecruiter.

Related: How Heineken USA CEO Maggie Timoney Succeeds in a Traditionally Male-Dominated Industry

参考译文
这位科技领袖是如何发声并掌控一家大公司的
在我最近一期的《领导力课程》(Leadership Lessons)系列节目中,我的嘉宾都是成功的女性ceo,每次与她们交谈,我都很兴奋,因为我知道,她们的人生课程将包括她们必须从前进道路上的额外障碍中汲取的智慧。我和Ancestry首席执行官deb Liu聊得很开心。Ancestry是最大的在线私人家谱平台,用户可以通过创建虚拟家谱来追踪自己的家谱,并获得提示。关于他们的祖先和其他可能与他们有关的人。在科技行业从业近20年,刘强东曾在Facebook、PayPal和eBay担任高级职务。她不仅是一名作家,还担任Intuit和Ancestry的董事会成员,是几家初创公司的种子投资者和顾问。刘积极参与促进科技领域的多样性,创立了一个名为Women in Product的非营利组织,旨在联系和支持产品管理领域的女性。相关:'Everyone's Got a Story of the Healthcare System Has Fallen .'祖先的特殊之处在于它专注于帮助人们连接,"刘告诉我。我们经历了几年的艰难岁月,美国有100万人死于Covid,我们也经历了很多时间被封锁,人们无法见家人。但我们都是人类大家庭的一部分,我们如何连接彼此,消除了我们的差异,专注于我们的共同点。在我们的谈话中,刘对她的公司和领导的热情让我震惊。在我们长达一小时的谈话中,刘先生向我传授了10条优秀的领导力课程:许多成功人士一生都在保护自己的家人,让他们远离那些让他们成功的事情。这是一个巨大的两分法。刘说,最后,大多数人不会带走他们自己痛苦的、形成性格的经历,因为他们知道那些坑洼孕育了什么。波涛汹涌的大海造就优秀的水手刘用海洋图像提醒我们,经济困难时期证明了一个领导人及其团队的力量。风起云涌,水涨船高,但波涛汹涌的大海更青睐那些为经济衰退做好准备的企业。如果你能保持灵活和开放的态度来接受反馈和新想法,无论你在职业生涯中走了多远,你将永远不会停止成长和提高自己。你在生活中的角色远不止是做你今天的工作,"刘说。相关内容:这家拥有100年历史的企业是如何确保其长寿的?它的CEO遵循这7条领导原则。首席执行官的职责是回答只有他们才能回答的宏观问题,但如果团队成员不在时不能复制这种回答,从长远来看是没有帮助的。记住,这些人是在这个特定问题上花费最多时间的人,他们应该为自己回答重大问题做好最好的准备。刘说,这避免了信息不对称。她说,员工会议是每个人分享重要对话和展示信息透明度的机会。他们还可以打破“竖井”,而不是更长时间、更频繁的一对一。相关内容:8月9日|免费网络研讨会:如何在工作场所找到你的声音与祖先总裁&对于公司的大多数员工来说,公司活动和远程工作计划等重大决策自然而然就会发生,"但CEO必须权衡这些事情的利弊,并最终做出决定。他或她所做的选择塑造了公司的文化,这对一个刚接触这个角色的人来说可能是一种全新的体验。 刘告诉我,她很早就被天生内向的性格所困扰,但她很快就学会了,那些能迅速回答问题的人,才会被问到下一个问题。虽然内向的员工在更大的群体中交谈可能不那么舒服,但他们的头脑中有同样好的答案,甚至更好。作为领导者,你需要找到一种方法来访问这些想法。刘说她的团队使用了一个红绿灯框架"这可以用来描述不同团队在员工聚会时面临的问题。一开始,会有很多"但刘告诉我,这个框架很快为更多的绿色"灯光和许多问题甚至在会议开始之前就得到了解决。刘的一个朋友注意到开会时的一个特别策略,有些人不会带着任何要补充的东西出现在会议上,然后一直皱眉头,耗尽会议的精力。会议经常打断一天的工作流程,如果有人被要求出席会议,他们需要带着清醒的自我,并接受正在传授的东西。当向他们的团队解释事情时,一个领导者应该学会用三点来描述每一个问题——这是一个非常棒的技巧,也是我和刘都学过并至今仍在实践的准则。这样做是为了在团队面前更自如地发言,并能更好地阐述问题。当团队提出一个实质性的问题时,从第一点开始,并知道你会在第三点结束。即使你在开始演讲的时候脑子里没有三件事,你也会到达一个点,任何事情——即使是由三个以上的想法组成的事情——都可以以一种让团队放心的方式固定在这个框架上。更多关于我和刘的谈话,请在这里观看完整的网络研讨会。我们的系列节目不断增加,让读者可以了解到最大品牌的成功ceo的最佳实践,包括Foot Locker、喜力啤酒、GoodRx、Headspace、Zoom、Chipotle、Warby Parker和ZipRecruiter。相关文章:喜力美国首席执行官玛吉·蒂莫尼如何在一个传统上由男性主导的行业中取得成功
您觉得本篇内容如何
评分

评论

您需要登录才可以回复|注册

提交评论

提取码
复制提取码
点击跳转至百度网盘