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A company today must think fast, pivot, and always be on its proverbial toes. With so much change happening all around the world, talent retention and leadership cultivation are ongoing challenges. Without continued dedication to leadership training, a business’s short- and long-term success could hang in the balance. That’s not to say a company’s success is more important than the personal successes of its leaders. In fact, it’s only with great leaders that a business sees success, leaving many organizations wondering about online leadership training benefits.

A leader must be resilient, as well as:

  • Capable of empathy
  • Familiar with accountability
  • Tenacious
  • Self-aware

At The Eighth Mile, we enjoy partnering with businesses to cultivate positive outcomes and successful leaders. Organizations reach out to us to ask about the differences between traditional classrooms and online leadership training and what makes us different. We’ve found, even prior to the events of the past few years, that online leadership training benefits are virtually equal to those of traditional classroom learning —and then some.

Why Should You Choose Online Leadership Training?

If you’ve ever sat through a business meeting in person versus over Zoom or another platform, you can understand a few of the differences between classroom-based leadership courses and online leadership training benefits. There’s a definite difference between uninspired, text-based PowerPoints disguised as a “class” — whether traditional or online — and a specialized course developed according to real-world lessons learned over the course of a lifetime in the military and business. The latter training allows for hyper-personalization, attendance on your own time, and exciting coaching sessions, both individual and group.

We developed our coaching sessions and coursework through years of hands-on experience in the military and through years of lessons learned in and outside of boardrooms and businesses. As such, we know that it’s all about engagement. Without it, and without the online leadership training benefits we’re about to discuss, developing strong, empathic, accountable, and self-aware leaders would be impossible.

9 of the Most Important Online Leadership Training Benefits

Aside from some of the more obvious online leadership training benefits, such as saving on fuel, arranging your schedule as you need to, and not missing workdays, an online leadership training course also provides these lesser-known but ultimately more important benefits for employees, administrators, HR staff, and the company as a whole.

1. Support to Find Success

With a busy lifestyle, you may neglect the things you want for yourself in favor of others, even if one of your goals is professional success. Online leadership training imparts the motivation and confidence you need to overcome obstacles and distractions to achieve those goals.

2. Time to Listen to Yourself

Introspection is a gift, and it is the online leadership training benefit that reveals your weaknesses and strengths in a familiar environment so you can learn to trust yourself and your gut feelings.

3. Learn to Influence Others

Leaders must exude a careful mix of confidence, conviction, and humbleness. In doing so, you can influence and motivate the rest of your team to follow your lead. Really, a great leader helps the whole team become leaders by listening and trusting, which helps build everyone’s confidence.

4. Connect With Other Leadership Professionals

In an online leadership training course, you’ll learn the history of leadership, how ideas and methods evolve, and how those ideas and methods create successful leaders. Leadership is a bit like medicine in that respect — it’s an ongoing practice and it is fluid. You become part of a leadership network that stands together, grows together, and continues learning together from your combined experiences.

5. Gain a Better Understanding Of Your Business

HR professionals can especially benefit from online leadership training. When you’re the one responsible for hiring the right people, it’s important to understand the business and how it works. It isn’t enough to know Human Resources’ language — the HR team should be contributing members to the company’s mission and overall vision. If not, it’s unlikely that upper management will take you seriously because these are necessary aspects of fulfilling your duties, such as workforce planning.

6. Promote and Nurture Teamwork

The best leaders know how to build teams of individuals happy to collaborate. While you are engaged in your training to better yourself as a leader, you also have the opportunity to step away from the team and delegate. As stated previously, good leaders create other good leaders. Now’s your chance to see how you’ve done up to this point.

7. Clear Your Vision

Leaders who have no problem looking at a project and seeing exactly how it works out have clear sight — they’re considered visionaries, especially when presented with a rudimentary idea. Leadership training cultivates your vision. When you can “see” how to make something happen, you can also help others see it too, and motivate them to follow you.

8. Be Kind to Your Budget

Learning & Development is a department most of today’s companies couldn’t live without. As technology and business approaches shift, upper management has to stay on top of these changes by continuing to upskill. As such, one of the greatest online leadership training benefits for your company is the cost — it’s thousands less than a traditional college or university course. You can upskill an entire department in an online course for what it would cost to send just one student to a university.

9. Learn to Fail Better

One of your lessons in a leadership course is how to avoid making mistakes. Now, this doesn’t mean that at course completion you’ll never make a mistake again. What it does mean is you’ll know what to watch out for, how to spot a potentially damaging error before it happens and prevent the worst of the mistakes. As you learn how to do this for yourself, you’ll also learn how to help your team apply the same rationale.

Mistakes are human nature and bound to occur from time to time — the greatest leader won’t seek blame but rather a resolution. And after you fail (because again, you likely will), you’ll now have the tools to get back up, which may be the biggest benefit of online leadership training there is.

How The Eighth Mile Consulting Can Help

If you want to know more about online leadership training benefits, and the leadership style, level of accountability, and overall resiliency we strive to cultivate in businesses of all sizes, let us know. Our 8-week online leadership training course can help you develop strong leaders in your organization or become one yourself. Contact us to learn how we can help your organization improve and help your team unite and confidently embrace the challenges ahead.

Please lower your shield and spears, I swear I come in peace. Recently, I ran a poll where I ventured the question: “Has political correctness gone too far?” I knew I was opening a can of worms. But I had also grown weary of tip-toeing around issues that needed to be addressed, especially with regard to workplace communication. And honestly, I was curious. What is it about this topic that polarizes people so greatly?

Poll Question Has Political Correctness Gone Too Far with results indicating 84% of respondents replied yes and 16% replied no.

As you might imagine, this poll generated both a lot of responses (over 2500) and a lot of comments justifying why they voted the way they did. This revealed some very interesting differences between the groups, as well as some surprising similarities. It also raised a few questions about political correctness and workplace communication.

Political Correctness: Social Evolution or Censorship?

For the purposes of this analysis, let’s look at the respondent groups separately. 

The Yes Group 

Those who said that political correctness has gone too far all justified their decision based on variations and combinations of the following beliefs:

  • Political correctness is a form of censorship. Labeling something as un-PC is just another way of censoring the truth, resulting in the deceleration of cultural evolution.
  • People are too quick to take things personally. People who label things as un-PC are too sensitive and can’t handle conflict.
  • Political correctness tramples over some people’s opinions and not others. This results in a feeling of discrimination.

The No Group 

Conversely, those who don’t believe that political correctness has gone too far seem to have the following beliefs in common:

  • Political correctness is a natural social evolution. It is a by-product of people becoming more enlightened about the effect our behaviors have on others.
  • We do not fully understand our own biases and assumptions. Therefore, we do not always know the damage we are causing others.
  • Political correctness is only vilified by bullies or those who don’t want to be held accountable for their actions.

Political Correctness and Communication Breakdown 

The differences between the two groups are clear. It’s the things they have in common that I found interesting. Both groups had assumptions, biases, and subjective viewpoints that made true communication and understanding nearly impossible.

Assumed Intent

Perhaps the most striking commonality between the groups was that they both assumed the other group harbored ill intent toward them.

  • The Yeses assumed that the Nos were using political correctness to suppress free speech because they were too weak or too stupid to handle “the truth.”
  • The Nos assumed that the Yeses were trying to misdefine the term itself as censorship so they could continue to voice every (presumably horrible) opinion they held. 

In essence, both parties assumed the worst of each other.

The assertions they made about each other fed the narrative of “evilness,” which further polarized and alienated everyone involved. 

Assume the worst about people and you get the worst

Ha-Joon Chang

I’m not saying there are no evil people in the world. But how likely is it that everyone in X group is evil just because they don’t agree with you on this point? Not very. In fact, I suspect that all the respondents, regardless of group, are more alike than they think. They are all looking at the information available to them and drawing conclusions that make sense as they see it. 

So how did they come to such different answers?

Filtering and Context: How and Why We Believe What We Do

Our brains are geared in such a way that they are constantly trying to make sense of the complexities surrounding us. We can’t ingest every single thing, so we filter out what seems unimportant in order to focus on what is. However, because everyone filters based on different criteria, none of us are viewing the world objectively (or accurately).

What you see is filtered through your beliefs. You rarely see “reality.” You see your version of it.

-Joe Vitale

Our ability to focus is a great asset. But when the majority of our beliefs are grounded in partial truths and a singular perspective, it becomes problematic. Even a little scary. Incomplete perceptions of reality can all too easily lead to ignorance, bigotry, and hate.

However, when we delve deeper into an issue–especially the opposing viewpoint–we learn the importance of context. What might be correct in one case is wrong in another. Or something might be both right and wrong at the exact same time.

If we rely solely on the information provided by our subjective experience, we will never reach the actual truth. Only by making a conscious effort to look at every facet of a situation can we come close to truly understanding it.

Confirmation Bias

Confirmation bias is “the tendency to search for, interpret, favor, and recall information in a way that confirms or supports one’s prior beliefs or values.”  Quite simply, if you look for evidence to support your opinion, you will find it–and will subsequently ignore all proof to the contrary, no matter how much of it there may be. 

“I think it’s outrageous if a historian has a ‘leading thought’ because it means they will select their material according to their thesis.”

-Antony Beevor

We saw this behavior in the reaction to the poll itself. The more people stated their opinion as unequivocally right, the more entrenched in that opinion everyone else became. 

Confirmation bias is like a feedback loop. Words said into a microphone come out of the speaker so loudly it is picked up by the microphone, then played out of the speaker, on and on until the cacophony is so loud that nothing else can get through. If left unchecked, it results in irreversible damage to the system and everyone listening to it.

Political Correctness and Workplace Communication

So where do we go from here? In all this polarized thinking, is a meeting of the minds still possible? 

And what of workplace communication? Is there a way to have honest dialog if we are constantly worrying about offending each other?

The short answer is yes, open and honest workplace communication is possible, even in an age of political correctness. But before you can journey down that path, it’s important to understand a few distinctions first.

Understand The Difference Between Values and Beliefs

Values are guiding principles that define our identities by guiding our efforts and behaviors. Though they may shift in priority over the years, one’s values tend to remain constantly present throughout their life.

Beliefs are things that one accepts as true, often without proof. Beliefs can and often do change as we grow and our understanding of the world becomes more refined.

When it comes to forming allegiances, we often place more importance on shared beliefs rather than shared values. However, because beliefs are by definition malleable, they are bound to be challenged or even disproven over time.

The highest-performing individuals and teams make a deliberate attempt to surround themselves with people who have like values but different beliefs. This diversity fuels innovation and creativity, but it doesn’t happen overnight. It requires confronting and breaking down inaccurate beliefs in order to rebuild them into something that more accurately reflects the reality we live in. 

Leading the Charge

This endeavor is not for the faint of heart. There will be a period of defensiveness, bruised egos, and uncertainty. It is in these moments when people might take offense, and others might cry that political correctness has gone too far. But if everyone in the group remembers that the goal is improved workplace communication, understanding, and growth, then what breaks occur will heal courtesy of your shared values. 

Don’t Take Offense

The moment you become offended by something an employee says, the dialogue stops. When the dialogue stops, you lose your influence. After that, it’s only a matter of time before you lose that employee too. The moment we as leaders take offense, we shift the focus onto our personal feelings and ignore the actual problem.

Our egos are the trap. They want us to come out on top at all costs, even if it means dismissing others’ input or hearing only the things we agree with and ignoring the rest. It takes significant fortitude and discipline to absorb someone’s message while taking into account the context of how they arrived at that conclusion. No matter what you’re personal feelings, when it comes to workplace communication, you must listen to and respect your team’s beliefs and opinions in their entirety.

Look for the Silent Majority

As a general rule, the loudest people in the room rarely have the best understanding of the group’s true values or beliefs. Just because they speak a lot doesn’t mean they speak for everyone. 

Instead of relying on these “squeaky wheels,” look around to see if there is a subgroup of individuals who are reticent to deal with the louder, more dominating participants. These individuals may believe that they are alone in their thinking when the opposite might be true. 

As the leader, however, you cannot fall into that trap. As discussed above, getting to the truth of a situation is not simply accepting what is presented to you. You must find a way to communicate with everyone, ideally by creating opportunities for their opinion to be heard

Beware of Festering Resentment

Perhaps the most important thing to recognize is that a lack of two-way communication in this process can quickly lead to resentment. This happened repeatedly with the two groups in the political correctness debate. After a period of entrenched and fruitless bickering, things devolved to the point where people simply shut down because they felt everything they said was being twisted and attacked.

If you think the damages associated with offending people are bad, wait until you see the results of drawn-out resentment. For a society as well as a business, there is nothing worse.

So: Has Political Correctness Gone Too Far?

The answer is yes, no, and it depends.

Very politically correct of me, I know. Still, the fact remains that the answer to the question “has political correctness gone too far” is case-specific to individual societies and cultures. To apply or vanquish political correctness in every arena without accounting for context is not only unhelpful but also fuels the biases that lead to polarization and breakdowns in communication.

One could argue that 84% of people responding one way is an objective indicator that something is amiss. But even if that is the case, fixing it is not as simple as labeling all political correctness as “censorship” and doing away with it altogether. To come to any consensus requires further analysis and contextualization to determine what has caused each respondent to answer the way they did. It also requires participants to let go of their assumptions, recognize their biases, check their egos at the door, and be willing to truly listen to each other.

On social media, civil discourse like that seems unlikely. But for a team of coworkers with shared values, you can hold different beliefs and still have productive workplace communication. And if a belief is confronted and proven inaccurate, it can be rebuilt from a place of mutual growth and support.

In the end, I hope that I inspired some of the 2500-odd respondents to reassess the way they communicate with others. Perhaps it challenged their preconceptions or pressure-tested their previously-held beliefs. Ideally, perhaps some would delve further combat their confirmation bias, and find a slightly different (and, I hope, more accurate) understanding of the world. And that’s a good thing. Regardless of our differing beliefs, I hope we can all agree on that. 

Still unsure about how to foster open and honest workplace communication without sowing discontent or losing respect amongst team members? Our 8-week online leadership training course might be the solution. With four self-paced modules, regular interactive workshops, and individualized coaching, we will make sure you get what you need to build a stronger team.