Leadership Lessons from Abraham Lincoln
Reprint: R0904C
In January 2008, CBS anchor Katie Couric asked then-candidate Barack Obama what single book, apart from the Bible, he would bring with him to the White House. He cited Team of Rivals, Doris Kearns Goodwin’s account of Abraham Lincoln’s leadership during the Civil War. It was a signal that Obama intended to model his leadership during the current crisis on the style of his presidential predecessor from Illinois.
By bringing heavyweight politicians who are themselves past and future presidential contenders into his cabinet, Obama has indeed reprised Lincoln’s strategy of creating a team composed of his most able rivals. If the new U.S. president can learn from Lincoln so, too, can business executives now grappling with similar questions of how to lead in turbulent times.
To draw out the lessons of Lincoln’s administration, HBR senior editor Diane Coutu interviewed Goodwin, a Pulitzer Prize–winning historian whose other books include No Ordinary Time (about Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt and their era), The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys, and Lyndon Johnson and the American Dream.
In their wide-ranging conversation, Goodwin discusses the advantages of forming an executive committee of strong-willed, forthright individuals who won’t insulate a leader from uncomfortable but important dissent. She describes how Lincoln managed a group of people who were capable of taking over the top job—and sometimes plotting to do so. She sheds light on Lincoln’s magic, which she says was not so much a matter of charisma as of emotional intelligence. And she takes the historian’s long view on the current economic crisis and the opportunities for political and business leaders alike to take advantage of these extraordinary times.