Companies make the mistake of focusing on ‘superstar’ hires. Focus on the ‘glue’ instead, behavioral scientist says

Kristin StollerBy Kristin StollerEditorial Director, Fortune Live Media
Kristin StollerEditorial Director, Fortune Live Media

Kristin Stoller is an editorial director at Fortune focused on expanding Fortune's C-suite communities.

Portrait of behavioral scientists and author Jonathan Levy in New York City.
Everything companies know about hiring company leaders is wrong, says behavioral scientists and author Jonathan Levy.
Michael Weschler

Good morning!

Courage. Creativity. Resilience. For years, self-help books and articles have pegged these traits, among others, as the qualities to look for in workplace leaders. But when behavioral scientist and author Jon Levy researched that accepted wisdom further for his new book, he realized it wasn’t true.

“We’ve been sold this bill by all the major consultancies and all the major university MBA programs that here are these essential skills, and if I want to be a leader, I need to develop myself in all these ways I’m just never going to be able to accomplish,” Levy told me. “What’s really frustrating about that is that it pushes all these people who could be fantastic leaders out.”

What’s the real secret to being a stand-out leader? It’s about the feeling that you trigger in another human being, he said—specifically the feeling that there’s a new and better future.

“The emotional response that we have when we interact with somebody is what causes us to want to follow them,” Levy said. “It’s not based on qualifications or experience or capabilities. They don’t have to even be honest, which is super frustrating, because it’s an emotional response.”

Levy explores this, and other learnings, in his recently released Team Intelligence: How Brilliant Leaders Unlock Collective Genius. As the title suggests, he also dug into what makes great teams functionand fail.

He calls out the “too much talent” problem: when company leaders pack their teams with “superstar” hires. Such hires should be made sparingly, he argues, since teams more than half filled with these ambitious and energetic players tend to massively underperform, his research has found.

“The reason is self-interest and egos,” Levy said. “What you actually need are players called ‘glue’ players that focus on the team connecting and functioning. They work as a multiplier that make everybody else perform at multiple of their normal behavior.”

P.S. Fortune’s annual World’s Best Workplaces list was released last week, with Hilton taking the No. 1 spot. For more about the list, and to check out what other companies made the ranks, click here

Kristin Stoller
Editorial Director, Fortune Live Media
kristin.stoller@fortune.com

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