What is the secret to being an effective leader?
It’s considered one of the cornerstones of a successful life and career: You separate your work life from your personal life.
But one executive begs to differ — and advises you to do the same.
That man is Johan Aurik, the CEO of A.T. Kearney, a worldwide management consulting firm with over $1 billion in revenue.
“You can’t hide your personal life at work,” he says. “You can only be effective as a leader if you’re also able to share your life with others.”
Originally from the Netherlands, Aurik moved to the U.S. in his early 20s to pursue degrees in American studies at Smith College in Northampton, MA, and economics and international relations at the Johns Hopkins University in Washington, DC.
After graduating, he started working for the Chicago-based A.T. Kearney in Europe and North America, eventually ascending the ranks to become its global managing partner and chairman in 2012.
During those years, he said, he learned to “open up” to his employees.
“I’m pretty open about my personal life,” he told me in Brussels, Belgium, as I interviewed him for my upcoming book, “Before I Was CEO.” That openness goes both ways: He’ll sometimes let his personal life enter his professional life, and he and his family have had to accept the high toll his professional life sometimes takes on his family life.
For example, Aurik went through a difficult period when his father passed away a few years ago. He made no efforts to hide that at work. “I had tears in my eyes, and people could see it. But why would I try to hide that?” he asked.
It’s a human reaction. And showing those is “a sign of strength, not weakness,” Aurik said.
Letting the boundaries between work and life erode helps to make work with others more authentic and to create an emotional bond, he said.
“In a business like consulting, you don’t produce a physical object. You offer your advice, that’s what people pay for. But you can’t get people to rationally trust your advice and pay for it unless they emotionally trust you as well. That’s where the personal aspect comes in.”
That trust factor plays in his relations with his own employees as well — even at the highest level. His experience in a nationwide partner meeting in Colorado Springs in 2013 is testimony of that. “It was the first time I led such a partner meeting as global managing partner,” he said. “I had an important role to play. But at the same time as the meeting, my daughter had her high school graduation.”
Aurik felt he couldn’t miss the graduation, and did what many would consider to be the “unthinkable”: A day into the meeting, after his remarks, he stood up and announced he was leaving the meeting, and left.
How did that go down? “A few people mumbled, of course,” Aurik said. “But in the end, the prevailing talk now is that I set a positive example when I did that.” People appreciated his honesty and respected his priorities.
Why could Aurik leave such an important meeting? “Because I was upfront about it,” he told me. “I stood up during a plenary session and explained my decision to leave. That was crucial. There was no hiding. That’s what I mean when I say you can’t hide your personal life from your professional life.”
Things would have been different, Aurik argues, had he left in silence and sent an email to his colleagues.
In this case, Aurik wouldn’t have left his daughter’s graduation for anything in the world. But that doesn’t mean he would leave important meetings for any personal reason. Rather, he believes the combination of life and career can succeed more often through another recipe: meticulous planning.
“I start planning my agenda a year and a half in advance,” he said. “That way, I can set aside enough time for a family vacation or dinner.”
Long-term planning allowed him to join his daughter for a week as she went on a U.S. road trip to visit colleges throughout Massachusetts and New York, for example.
However, Aurik’s plans don’t stay limited to week-long family vacations: Even a lazy night on the couch at home gets planned in advance, he says. “Those are the choices you need to make.”
And what goes around, comes around. Just as he sometimes lets his personal priorities prevail on his work duties, he often has to let his work duties prevail over his personal life.
As an example, Aurik cites the management buyout A.T. Kearney went through in 2005. As the business went through precarious times, the partners of the company decided to buy out the shares in the company from its then-shareholders, EDS.
During a cold December night in 2005, as the deadline approached, Aurik says he and his colleagues sat in a London hotel, waiting eagerly for confirmation faxes that their colleagues had paid for the buyout.
Aurik had invested his own money in the buyout, “without having a guarantee, and without having an under-limit to my losses.” Luckily, the confirmations of his colleagues came, and in the years following, Aurik and his colleagues could rebuild the 80-year old company “as if it was a century-old startup.”
Those long hours, days, and years at the job meant he had to sacrifice a lot of time with his family. When you don’t clearly demarcate the line between personal and professional life, it requires giving as well as taking.
Are such sacrifices worth it? Aurik says they are. “You have to get everything out of life that you possibly can. That’s my leitmotiv, my constant motivation.”
This article is published in collaboration with Business Insider. Publication does not imply endorsement of views by the World Economic Forum.
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Author: Peter Vanham is a media strategist at the World Economic Forum and a freelance business writer.
Image: People cross an illuminated floor at a banking district in central Tokyo. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
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