Have the Qualities of Effective Leadership Fundamentally Changed?

Have the Qualities of Effective Leadership Fundamentally Changed?

Hello!????This is?Everyday Extraordinary Leaders, a series sharing provocative questions and unconventional insights that inspire everyday leaders to achieve extraordinary results. If you're new to our community and would like to receive actionable ideas that will improve your effectiveness as a leader, click the?'Subscribe'?button above. Have a topic you'd like addressed? Let us know in the comments below!

(See below for an invitation to?our next LinkedIn Audio Event! )


A recent ad for the Harvard Business Review’s newsletter read, “The qualities of the most effective leaders are always changing. Read our latest.”

The marketing geniuses for HBR often use hyperboles to describe their journal’s ability to give you the right answer on leadership. I’m mostly okay with that. But when they make a declarative statement about leadership like the one above, it makes me raise an eyebrow.?

The skeptic in me says, “Reeeaaally? Are the QUALITIES always changing?”

No. They are not ALWAYS changing.?Other things are changing, but not the qualities of effective leadership.?

Hear me out.

The Shift

A change did occur in the qualities of effective leadership when the workforce shifted from predominantly assembly-line work to more knowledge- and service-based work. Douglas McGregor captured this transition in his development of?Theory X and Theory Y styles of leadership ?during the 1950s and 60s.?

Since then, a lot has stayed the same:

  • Leaders?tap into an individual’s motivation?by creating an environment that fosters a sense of autonomy, mastery, and purpose.
  • Leaders must?be fluent in the languages of business AND psychology.
  • A leader’s?character and integrity set the tone?for the organization and form the foundation for trusting relationships.
  • Leaders must?maintain awareness of the dichotomies that determine their team’s success…keeping an eye toward the future with an understanding of the organization’s past, cultivating support from outside as well as within the organization, and exploring new territory while appropriately managing risk, to name a few.

This list is a reminder that leading others is not for the faint of heart. It’s hard work!

And it’s become even harder because?one fundamental thing?has?changed: the degree of complexity that leaders must manage has increased alongside the exponential advances in technology we’ve seen over the last 60 years.

The Good News

Though leaders’ jobs are more mentally and emotionally draining than ever, there are several resources that leaders employ to help manage complexity.?

  • Access to information and learning has enabled skill development anywhere, anytime, for anyone.?
  • Technology platforms organize communication and data to keep us connected to each other and to reality.?
  • Leadership approaches have expanded from a Tell-Teach-Mentor model, which is very dependent (and draining!) on the leader, to include a Coach model of leadership, which transfers ownership and learning from the leader to the coachee.

I would argue that the QUALITIES of leadership have not changed much in the last 60 years. The?skill requirements?and?level of awareness needed?have changed in order to?keep pace with growing complexity.

What’s a Leader To Do??

We can reduce the overwhelm that complexity imposes by simplifying a few things. Take a Get Back to Basics approach that mirrors the 4 fundamentals above:

  1. Get smart about motivation. Pick up the book?Drive, by Dan Pink, and evaluate the environment you’re fostering in terms of autonomy, mastery, and purpose.?
  2. Seek a mentor to help you identify gaps in business knowledge. Partner with a coach to identify aspects of your current paradigm that are not in sync with the complexity of your operating environment.
  3. Capture your values, turn them into verbs, and evaluate yourself periodically. Does your behavior match your intent?
  4. Gather feedback (through a formal 360-degree assessment or informal conversation) to understand the degree to which you’re meeting stakeholders’ needs. Develop a plan to address unmet needs that works within your context and personality. (Want help with this? Let me know! I’m happy to share my two decades’ worth of experience with you.)

In a Word: Areté

You don’t need to follow HBR’s advice, or mine for that matter, in order to be an effective leader. HBR's marketing team is wrong: the qualities of effective leadership?are not?always changing. Your people, technology, and the environment?are?always changing, but take comfort in knowing that the qualities of effective leadership have essentially stayed the same.?

Commit to your own path of mastery—an ever-evolving and imperfect thing—and remember this wisdom from Gandhi:?

“Our greatest ability as humans is not to change the world, but to change ourselves.”?

This is why we, as leaders, walk the path of areté. It is the surest way to change ourselves, and, in so doing, to change the world.


Let’s talk about this!

Join me next Tuesday at 1pm PT/4pm ET for a?LinkedIn Audio Event, where I’ll be discussing the topic of this newsletter with my guest, Dr. Jacqueline Kerr. Dr. Kerr is an expert in the science of change, and she has a passion for supporting changemakers like you. We’ll be talking about all of these subjects and more, so you don’t want to miss it.

An Audio-only event is like a podcast that you can participate in. You can listen while you eat lunch, drive home from work, or walk the dog. You can raise your hand to ask a question…and get it answered LIVE!?

I’d absolutely LOVE to have you there.?Register for it today!


Get even more fresh insights--sign up for the Everyday Areté newsletter ?and receive our latest?ideas, updates, downloads, and bonuses?directly to your inbox.

This post originally appeared on the blog at?Academy of Areté .?

#TransformationalLeadership #EverydayAreté #CoachingCulture #GrowthMindset #linkedinaudioevent?#linkedinaudio?#audioevent

Dr Jacqueline Kerr

Navigating Scope 3 Leadership | TEDx Speaker | Podcast Host | Top 1% most cited social scientists worldwide | Equipping global corporations with effective tools to connect & accelerate Scope 3 stakeholder action

1 年

I think what employees value in a leader has changed, but if a leader uses these tools to keep a pulse on employee needs then how you lead is not changing, you might change the what you lead with but the practice of staying informed remains the same.

Elisa Silbert

Senior Executive across Finance, Media, Sport, Wellness Industries | Entrepreneurial Director with passion for Building Brands across diverse markets | Certified Trauma Informed Somatic Therapist

1 年

Well shared Jennifer Campbell ?? Leaders must?maintain awareness of the dichotomies that determine their team’s success. Leaders must?be fluent in the languages of business and psychology.

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Jennifer Campbell的更多文章

  • Are you a REACTIVE or CREATIVE leader?

    Are you a REACTIVE or CREATIVE leader?

    Hello! ?? This is Everyday Extraordinary Leaders, a series sharing provocative questions and unconventional insights…

  • Challenge My Thinking (PLEASE!)

    Challenge My Thinking (PLEASE!)

    Hello! ?? This is Everyday Extraordinary Leaders, a series sharing provocative questions and unconventional insights…

    2 条评论
  • What Does an Empowered Team Really Look Like? (and do you have one?)

    What Does an Empowered Team Really Look Like? (and do you have one?)

    Hello! ?? This is Everyday Extraordinary Leaders, a series sharing provocative questions and unconventional insights…

  • Let's Spring into Authentic Action!

    Let's Spring into Authentic Action!

    Hello! ?? This is Everyday Extraordinary Leaders, a series sharing provocative questions and unconventional insights…

    1 条评论
  • How to Stop Taking Work Home With You

    How to Stop Taking Work Home With You

    Hello! ?? This is Everyday Extraordinary Leaders, a series sharing provocative questions and unconventional insights…

  • How to Reengage Quiet Quitters

    How to Reengage Quiet Quitters

    Hello! ?? This is Everyday Extraordinary Leaders, a series sharing provocative questions and unconventional insights…

    6 条评论
  • What Most Leaders Get Wrong About Coaching

    What Most Leaders Get Wrong About Coaching

    Hello! ?? This is Everyday Extraordinary Leaders, a series sharing provocative questions and unconventional insights…

    3 条评论
  • If “Time is Money," then “Capacity is Mission”

    If “Time is Money," then “Capacity is Mission”

    Hello! ?? This is Everyday Extraordinary Leaders, a series sharing provocative questions and unconventional insights…

    2 条评论
  • Don’t Answer That!

    Don’t Answer That!

    Hello! ?? This is Everyday Extraordinary Leaders, a series sharing provocative questions and unconventional insights…

  • No more excuses for not delegating

    No more excuses for not delegating

    Hello! ?? This is Everyday Extraordinary Leaders, a series sharing provocative questions and unconventional insights…

    2 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了