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Home » TRANSCRIPT: You Don’t Have To Be A CEO To Be A Leader: Alex Budak

TRANSCRIPT: You Don’t Have To Be A CEO To Be A Leader: Alex Budak

Here is the transcript and summary of Alex Budak’s TEDx Talk titled ‘YOU DON’T HAVE TO BE A CEO TO BE A LEADER’ at TEDxKI conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

Alex Budak – co-founder of StartSomeGood

There’s a magical moment that I live for when I’m teaching. A moment when I have the absolute privilege of seeing someone transform right before my eyes. It’s when someone realizes for the very first time the potential they have to create change. Where they find their own agency to make a difference for themselves and for others. And when they realize they have far more power than they ever realized.

I’m not a typical UC Berkeley faculty member. I don’t have a PhD. I wear bright socks and blast eclectic playlists as I pull into the faculty parking lot. And I’ve dedicated my life to helping others find their own voice and step into their leadership potential. And it’s that potential that I recognize in everyone that helps me see that the way we think and talk about leadership is broken.

We love to tell stories that are heroic, mythical, almost superhuman. But when we put leaders like these up on a pedestal, it causes so many of us to look around and say, well, it’s just not who I am. Not that brave. Not that charismatic. Not an extrovert. Maybe that means that leadership just isn’t for me. I’m just not meant to be a leader.

I’ve heard that reaction way too often. And it makes sense because the way we talk about leadership and the way we teach leadership at schools and in companies is often divisive, discouraging, and disempowering to nearly all of us.

But I have a fundamental belief that drives everything I do as a social entrepreneur, an educator, and as a dad. Leaders might be scarce, but leadership is abundant. We may have only one CEO, only one executive director, only one assistant regional manager. We may have only a certain limited number of people in traditional positions of leadership. But each and every one of us can practice acts of leadership. Leadership is not a title. Leadership is an act.

Microleadership

To put this abstract idea into practice, I want to introduce you to a concept I call Microleadership. Microleadership breaks leadership down into its smallest and most meaningful unit, which is a single leadership moment. We have these leadership moments that appear before us dozens of times per day. Small little moments to step up and serve others.

Maybe it’s noticing a colleague who hasn’t spoken up during a meeting and saying, “Hey, no pressure here, but we’d love to hear your perspective if you’re willing to share.” Or maybe it’s being willing to say no when everyone else is saying yes. Or maybe it’s being the one person to stay late and help a new colleague clean up after their very first event.

These are all tiny little moments. And if you pay attention, you’ll notice them pop up for you many, many times every single day. The bravest act is to stand up and believe that you can be a leader. But when you think about becoming a leader for the first time, it can feel like a big, scary leap. Like the time my friends and I decided to go skydiving, but made the exceedingly poor choice to use a coupon to try and save some money in my early days as a social entrepreneur.

As we boarded the plane, we saw that even the pilot was wearing a parachute, which was not exactly confidence-inducing. Fortunately, I lived to tell the tale. And once I was back safely on the ground, only then did I let my mom know I had made it.

But your entrance to leadership doesn’t have to feel like a huge freefall. As you make your own leadership leap, let micro-leadership be your parachute. And let that give you confidence to leap from greater and greater heights as you go. And unlike me, you won’t be trusting your life to a guy who I later found out didn’t even work there. He was just a local enthusiast who filled in on tandem jumps when the actual pros were out sick. You can start with a much smaller leap and build your confidence from there using the concept of micro-leadership.

Leadership can feel intimidating. But micro-leadership is inclusive. It’s for all of us. And it all starts with small steps that anyone can do. Let’s take a look at an example of micro-leadership in action.

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Sedona Prince was 21 years old, a college sophomore, and a member of the University of Oregon basketball team. Both the men’s and women’s NCAA championship tournaments were taking place simultaneously. But due to COVID, each was being held completely within a single city.

As Prince entered the women’s weight room, to be shared by every single athlete, she noticed a huge discrepancy. She noticed that while the weight room for the men’s teams was huge and fully equipped, the women’s weight room was basically just some yoga mats and this one really sad-looking rack of dumbbells.

To be sure, Prince was not the first person to notice this unequal discrepancy. Among coaches, players, and staff, across 64 teams, there must have been at least 2,000 people who saw exactly what Prince saw. But they all let the leadership opportunity pass them by. Perhaps they thought they had to wait for permission from someone else to step up and take action. Perhaps they thought only coaches or athletic directors, by virtue of their titles, could affect change. Or perhaps they thought that taking action here had to be grandiose and to fix all of gender inequality in one swoop. Who knows?

But we do know that countless people saw the same thing, had the same leadership moment appear before them, but let it pass by.

So what did Prince do? She didn’t have much of a platform at all, not many followers on social media, but she did have a phone, and a perspective, and a voice, and she made a choice right there to step up and seize the leadership moment.