Evolving Leadership in the Digital Age
To have executives change character will always be an uphill
struggle but they can learn to improve their behavioural reactions to difficult
situations and develop greater emotional intelligence that will turn them into
more effective leaders.
Studies
show that organisations which take leadership development seriously outperform
their competition. This holds greater truth today
when leaders in this cyber age find themselves under greater (and increasing)
pressures from globalisation. Twenty-five years ago, very little attention was
being paid to the idiosyncrasies and irrational processes that make up
individual behavior. Corporations and business schools were preoccupied with
models of the rational economic man, not realising that executives are
everything but rational decision makers. The emotional aspects of leadership,
the importance of corporate culture were all but ignored. Leaders at that time
were expected to simply leverage their vision and skills to create sustainable,
results-oriented organisations.
Today
they face added complications of rapidly changing technology, virtual working
teams separated by cultural and geographical boundaries, and the difficulties
of making decisions when faced with an overload of information.
Recently
a former participant from one of my Challenge of Leadership (COL) programmes approached me at a
fundraising event in Holland
and introduced himself. It had been 15 years since he took my class and I
couldn’t place his face. But always being on the lookout for feedback, even
many years on, I asked him whether the programme had an impact and he told me
yes, in fact it had taught him three things. In the first place, it helped him
have the courage to quit his job and become an entrepreneur which had made him
very wealthy. Secondly, it made him change his relationship with his son, that
turned out to be a very good investment, and thirdly, he had learned how to be
more effective in speaking up – to work out what it was he was wanted to say,
and to have the confidence to say it.
In
fact, what happened to him during the COL
program were three tipping points, the kind of “aha” moments that give
people the insights they need to change or develop their behaviour in a way
that better supports their personal and organisational goals. When I created
the programme I had in the back of my mind the “fantasy” to make INSEAD the
foremost business school in “soft skills,” which (when it comes down to it) are
the “hardest skills.” Organisations have followed this fantasy over the last 25
years too, because they’ve realised that it’s critical to success. Modern
organisations look more and more like a matrix star ship, where many ideas
develop and the challenge in putting these ideas into action becomes a very
different story. Vision without action is a hallucination, and execution is
where many well intended decisions get bogged down. To make things happen - to
arrive at seamless execution - requires a leadership model that is less
autocratic but more of an authoritative and networking nature.
We
have moved from the “Command, Control, Compartmentalisation” way of leading
organisations to a more interactive, informative, and Innovation-oriented
model. To be truly effective, today’s organisations need
to have leaders who have the emotional intelligence to create meaning, and have the capability
to inspire and empower their people to get things done. This becomes especially
difficult when the members of an organisation are spread across different
continents. After all, you can’t email a smile or a handshake. You need to
create places of work where people feel comfortable in a network structure; you
need to create organisations where people can have courageous conversations -
organisations with people that are adaptable, self-aware, collaborative,
resilient, and have a systemic orientation. To create these agile organisations
we need people that practice true knowledge exchange and will go beyond silo
thinking.
Why are so many leaders self-destructive?
As
executives climb higher up the corporate ladder these soft skills become even
more important. It is no longer enough to be a functional manager. Ultimately
leaders need to get out of their functional silo to be able to get the best out
of people. Unfortunately, many executives fail to rise to the occasion; they
simply don’t know how.
The
question I often asked myself 25 years ago, and continue to ask myself today
is: Why are so many leaders self-destructive? Why are so many executives so
poor in developing well-functioning teams? Why have so many organisations a
gulag quality?
The
truth is despite having a greater awareness of their role many successful
leaders still share a great sense of anxiety and insecurity. Many leaders are
very unaware of the effect their actions have on others. Basically, they have
very little idea what they are all about. They are strangers to themselves. And
due to their insecurities they may resort to highly dysfunctional behavior.
Also, many of these over-achievers are continually asking themselves, am I good
enough? Am I up to the job? When will people realise that I shouldn’t have this
position in the first place? This is known as the imposter
syndrome. Some compensate by becoming more narcissistic in their behavior to convince
themselves and everyone else that they are truly special. They may suffer from
hubris, contributing to irresponsible actions. Some of them resort to an alpha male, silver backed
gorilla style of leadership. While leaders have had to become more
sophisticated over the past three decades to improve their horizontal
communication to get things done, in times of stress they can regress very
quickly and fall back into this kind of autocratic behavior as a default
pattern.
At
the COL programme (run over a four week period over a year) we bring very
senior executives together to learn from each other, and to help each other
become more reflective in action on a day-to-day basis by asking themselves
what are they are doing and how are they doing it before they act. Through the
use of the “life case study” (meaning they are the cases), they become more
self-aware why they doing what they are doing. COL follows the old injunction: “Know
Thyself.” By focusing on conscious and unconscious behaviour, as well as
rational and irrational action, they learn to prevent irrational and
dysfunctional processes in their companies.
Eventually,
the methodology learned from COL contributed to the creation of INSEAD’s Global Leadership Center (IGLC); it made
INSEAD the leading business school in the world in group coaching; and it also
created the foundation for the Executive Master’s in Coaching and Consulting for Change (EMCCC),
a successful programme now given on two continents. People “transformation”
turned into one of the five principal pillars of excellence that distinguishes
INSEAD from other business schools.
Changing role of leadership
Today’s
corporate world is going through a shift not seen since the second industrial
revolution. The enhanced capabilities and affordability of technology caused by
digital innovation has led to fundamental changes in how business is conducted,
organisations are managed, and consumers behave. As the world is changing,
leadership is no longer defined by what a single leader does (the “Great Man” theories) but by the ability to
collaborate, motivate and to manage networks. Leadership has become a
team sport; leadership behavior needs to be distributed throughout an
organisation.
Leadership
success today has to do with the way people think, the way they feel, the way
they behave in a responsible manner. This is more than charisma and it is not
something that can be learned in three easy steps or over a single programme.
Strong leadership requires continuous development. Clever people don’t
necessarily become wise. But they can learn how to find ways to cope with
stressful experiences by getting to know themselves. It’s always good to keep
in mind that leaders are like wine. Some turn out great; others may turn into
vinegar!
INSEAD Knowledge
Evolving Leadership in the Digital Age
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Wednesday, April 06, 2016
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