You are my readers of Goodfriend Insights and I appreciate your willingness to receive my newsletter articles. But like any relationship, it needs to be based on honesty and trust. So I need to come clean with you. My bias is impacting my view of what makes a great leader. Admitting this is a difficult thing for me since I have built my professional career on being an objective, unbiased advisor. As a CPA and financial statement auditor with Price Waterhouse, I learned the importance of independence, honesty, integrity, etc. As a consultant, I have always believed in being an objective advocate of the organization's effectiveness - not just as an advocate for the leader, the leadership team or the front line contributors.
My Unbiased View of the Competencies and Characteristics of a Great Leader
So I hope you can see that I am grounded in an objective approach to the characteristics and competencies that make leaders effective. I hope you can see that if a leader becomes very competent in the above characteristics, they are likely significantly influencing the organization's effectiveness.
A Great Leader in My Biased View
I am an imperfect human and have biases like most of you. My emotions and past experiences are impacting my ability to see clearly. I am biased about a leader that has inspired me to believe in hope and even some change. I also know that not everyone sees him as a great leader. Some don't like him at all and some don't feel like he should be entrusted with this role at this time.
But I do. He has earned my respect and he continues to do so. His ability to influence is based on common sense. He still has the passion to succeed despite his detractors. He continues to be a role model for young people and he has affected so many lives in a positive manner.
Yes, I have a biased view of Joe Paterno, the head football coach at my alma mater -- The Pennsylvania State University (Penn State). You don't have to be a college football fan to understand my view of Joe. In fact, those of you who aren't college football fans might be able to appreciate what I see as great leadership characteristics more so than those of you who have your own college football biases -- like you alumni from the University of Texas, Texas A&M, Notre Dame, University of Florida, Florida State, LSU, Alabama, USC, Ohio State, Michigan, Nebraska, Oklahoma, etc.
The following are some facts about JoePa (as he is affectionately known at Penn State) and his coaching career at Penn State:
There is no doubt that as a leader, he has been consistently, very successful in leading his teams to get very good results. It is not to say that there aren't coaches out there who are also great but you can't argue with that track record for that period of time. But the interesting part about Joe has always made it clear that winning is not the only thing for him, "People always come up to me and ask me which one of my football teams was the greatest. I tell them to ask me 20 years after my last one plays so I can see how many CEOs, teachers, doctors, lawyers, they go on to be." I remember as a student in the late 1970s that Joe was unique since he wouldn't run up the score on his opponents like many schools would to get a better ranking in the polls. Charlie Pittman, former Penn State football star said in his book Playing for Paterno, "Maybe it's because he (Joe) sees football as a diversion, not a life or death matter."
Here are some of Joe's other accomplishments:
Every year the calls come from mostly outside the Penn State family (some Penn State alums and students also) that it is time for Joe to retire. Last year, it was his coaching from the press box because of a bad hip. He had hip replacement surgery and vowed to be back on the sidelines in '09. He is back on the sidelines, still trotting out there at 82. There were also calls for retirement earlier in this decade when his teams had losing records in 4 out of 5 seasons from 2000 to 2004. In May 2005 at a speech at the Duquesne Club in Pittsburgh, he said, "If we don't win some games, I've got to get my rear end out of here. It's as simple as that." He has since rebounded with this season being his 5th winning season in a row with a combined record to date of those 5 years of 47-12. He has done more for the University than probably than any other individual. I say let him stay as long as he wants. He will know when it's time.
Joe Paterno's has found a formula that works. There is a Penn State Way. He is a creature of habit and with those principles and values, these habits are worth keeping. Joe and Sue Paterno have lived in the same modest 4 bedroom house for over 30 years in a State College community that is considered quite typical. One student described his house in the neighborhood this way, "You'd never know he lived there. It's not some big crazy house. It's pretty cool that it's part of the community."
The Penn State Way must be working since he has been successful from the 1960s into the first decade of the 21st century. Joe was probably never "hip" in the 1960s and still isn't today as an 82 year old coach. In a recent interview, he said he doesn't own a computer and doesn't send emails. Tweeting was something he did in college when he and his friends would whistle when they saw a pretty girl. He also said he doesn't know much about about "what do they call it, Facebook?"
Your Questions
Why does Penn State Wear Such Boring Uniforms?
It has been a tradition with Coach Paterno to wear very plain uniforms - white jerseys, no names on the back, no stars on the helmet, plain hightop black shoes, etc. Ray Isom, Penn State player in the 1980s described how he felt about the uniforms, "Like most of us, I hated our uniforms. It should be something shiny, something sharp. But it doesn't take long before you realize it's what's inside that counts."
What Type of Relationship Does Joe Have With His Players?
Joe has been described as a demanding, father figure. Many Penn State players have disliked Paterno when they play for him. Many of them change their tune after they leave Penn State:
How Would You Describe Joe as a Person?
There is something very unique about Joe Paterno. Uniqueness can be used to our advantage if we know how to leverage it -- and Joe has done that.
Joe has always been very outspoken. He has ruffled many feathers along the way. He was one of the first major college coaches to speak up in favor of a college football playoff. He pushed for higher academic standards as part of his Grand Experiment to create true student-athletes, not a different class of students at a university. In 1962 (when Joe was an assistant coach), Penn State traveled to Florida for a game and when they went into an airport restaurant in Orlando, the manager and waitress refused to serve Dave Robinson, Penn State's only black player. Joe and other members of the coaching staff refused to eat at the restaurant and took Dave to a nearby coffee shop where they were served without question. Joe said afterwards, "I've never forgotten that incident and I vowed to never permit any of the players I am associated with to ever be embarrassed." Finally, not many football coaches in 1969 would have a public disagreement with the President of the United States - Richard Nixon. But Joe did. Nixon inserted himself into the college football ranking process by declaring that the winner of the Texas/Arkansas game would be No. 1 and he would be at the game to present a No. 1 trophy to the winner. At the time there were only rankings, not a true national championship game. Plus, this was the last regular season game. The bowl games had not yet been played. Penn State was also undefeated and had won 21 games in a row. Afterwards, Nixon wanted to give Joe a plaque for the winning streak. Joe let it be known what Nixon could do with the plaque.
Joe has always been a maverick. He is very contradictory, almost a paradoxical person:
Joe describes himself, "I believe in very simple things. I don't drive a big car and I am not interested in having a big car. We have a nice house, but it is not real fancy. I am not very complex." According to the book, "No Ordinary Joe" by Michael O'Brien, Joe is described by the author as loving his family, good music, reading, long walks and stimulating conversation. He has a multifaceted personality with moods that are difficult to predict. He is described to have a lot of acquaintances but not many close friends.
I believe Joe's paradoxical uniqueness is what makes him a great leader -- because he reaches people in ways that very few people can.
What Can We Learn About Leadership From Joe
Giving JoePa a grade for his effectiveness as a leader (based on the leadership competencies at the beginning of this article) is easy for me. I would give him an "A" rating in all of the leadership competencies. But then again, I am biased.
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Acknowledgements
Joe Paterno: Football My Way, by Mervin D. Hyman and Gordon S. White, Jr., 1971, 1978
No Ordinary Joe: The Biography of Joe Paterno, by Michael O'Brien, 1998
Playing for Paterno: One Coach, Two Eras, by Charlie Pittman, Tony Pittman and Jae Bryson
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