Category Archives: Culture

#53 Leader as organization architect

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One possible definition of leadership: it is a set of behaviors that are effective in influencing followers, to get them to do things they would otherwise not do. Most definitions are variations and highlight different nuances, depending on the author’s viewpoint. Regardless of the definition you subscribe to, leadership behaviors are a means to an end. Meaning, you will never display leadership behaviors for its own sake.

For example, at an interpersonal level, the expectation is that with leadership behaviors, conflicts are either not created, or they are easier to manage. You will generally be happier, more effective, more productive, and more satisfied at work. At an enterprise level, organizations encourage leadership behaviors to gain superior performance and a competitive advantage.

Leadership seems to be a set of soft skills. There is one “hard” skill that separates successful leaders from the pack. The ability to be an “organization architect.” Simply stated, this is the ability to see the various interrelated parts of the whole, describe its end state using a lofty and inspiring vision statements, and rally coalitions to execute on initiatives, programs, and projects to make that vision a reality. Being skilled at “whac-a-mole” is helpful. The ability to discover and connect the dots, being open to learn about new dots, empowering others to connect them are some of the daily blocking and tackling that needs to be done for success in leadership roles.

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#44 Falling on the (leadership) sword

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Fostering risk taking is both a cultural process, as well as a leadership trait.

If your organization provides a culture where making mistakes is okay, failing quickly is rewarded, but it is not okay to repeat the same mistake over and over, you will have a healthy “petri dish” for growing leaders.

If your organization has unreasonable and unrealistic standards, where “failure is not an option,” with harsh punishment for failures, then your “petri dish” will breed germs. Such organizations likely use dramatic actions, like a request to fall on one’s sword, to send a strong message to anyone who may think “to err is human, and to forgive is divine.”

An organization that has low tolerance for failure is likely to breed dysfunctional behavior. (I think a super permissive organization will breed dysfunctional behavior as well)

You may hope and pray an individual will rise like a phoenix from the ashes and slay dysfunctional behavior. If this does not happen from within, key leadership positions are filled from the outside with a mandate for change. However, even this “hired gun” leader will have to change the culture first before a call to action from the leadership bench. Otherwise, the result may well be perpetuating dysfunctional behavior and power struggles.

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