naMBA Series: WTF is Flexibility?

naMBA Series: WTF is Flexibility?

Welcome to?Not An MBA?Weekly. Every week, I'll share fresh and useful insight on how to get more out of your work, life and leadership. If you like your ideas to be fast, fresh and bullsh*t free, you're in the right place.

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This week kicks off our five-part series on strategic leadership, based on the modules in You Don't Need An MBA: Leadership Lessons that Cut Through the Crap.

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A personal note

In my 32 years, I’ve moved 34 times. I had three kids by 26. I left foster care as a teen parent, and put myself through university and into a career without the safety of family support.?I’ve moved cities, left jobs, started businesses and coped with parental abandonment, divorce, and the death of my loved ones. And in all the madness, I’ve never really… stopped.

I’m grateful for how those experiences shaped me, because without them, I wouldn’t have developed some of my best qualities: persistence, motivation, a strong appetite for risk and a capacity for managing disaster. But as I came to learn the hard way, they have a ceiling.

In the last two years, I realised my grit and self-determination had made me an insufferable control freak, and a shocking delegator. My inability to let go was getting in the way of building a sustainable business and a balanced life, and I was finding it harder than ever to trust others. As the months ticked on, that fear got in the way of my personal and professional relationships, disconnecting me from my friends, partner and children. Years of pushing myself to the limit finally took their toll and in late 2020, I reached total burnout. Unable to think straight, my mental health caved in and I watched in terror as my burning passion and drive slipped away, replaced by naps, Netflix and gardening.

Thankfully, that passion returned – though I now need to be careful with it. Over the last six months, I’ve been carefully putting things back together. I’m learning new ways of living and working that prioritise connection and interdependence, by building a team and learning to call for help. It’s not an easy journey, and I still get it wrong most days, but I know it’s the only way I’m going grow. For all my expertise in leadership and growth, I’ve faced the consequences of my own inflexibility – and, thankfully, I’ve lived to tell the tale.

I'm not special

Little about my story is truly unique. I work with overwhelmed senior leaders daily, with their own version of this journey – where the skills that got them to the top aren’t paying off anymore. It’s true for us all. Strengths overused become weaknesses, but it's hard to stop before we get to that point.

As our strengths and abilities propel us forward, we double down on them. Our work ethic gets results, so we work harder. Our empathy connects, so we give too much. Our conscientiousness gets us recognised, so we become detail freaks.

But it's dangerous. If we cling too hard, and don’t see the warning signs in time, we eventually reach a point where our best traits are the things that hold us back.

What are your biggest strengths? They're probably the things you proudly list on your CV, or give examples for in job interviews. Write them down, and look at them for a minute. Ask yourself... how might these strengths start to hold us back? Where might we need to rebalance?

There's a good reason the 5 modules in You Don't Need An MBA and Not An MBA are in a wheel. Those skill areas all require a constant rebalance, and there's no one-size-fits all prescription for how to move forward. Instead, it's about identifying which part of the wheel you're already strong in, and tilting it to rebalance in the areas that you aren't.

What is true for everyone, however, is that flexibility sits at the core. It doesn't matter how good we are, at anything, if we don't stay open and change tack when we need to.

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For me, I had a strong performance zone. My work ethic became burnout and a lack of trust. For others, it’s their influence zone that becomes overused, which becomes a lack of boundaries. For others still, it’s their decision capability they invest in - which becomes over-weighted toward technical expertise and lacks perspective. While our challenges might be different, the process is largely the same.

WTF is flexibility?

Flexibility is our ability to bend without breaking.?

In my work with ambitious leaders, I’ve learned that genuine flexibility is the single-most important skill for sustainable success. When we stay aware of ourselves and our surroundings, take agency over our future, and build resilience for ambiguity and disaster, there’s little that can hold us back.

Pandemics, natural disasters, legislative change, staff movements and PR disasters become par for the course as we move and bend in response to our environment. From that core, we can build the other skills that set us up for leadership success –strategic decision-making, systems thinking, performance leadership and influence. But if we stay inflexible and cling too tightly to what we’ve invested in, it’s impossible to make real progress.

Signs you need to be more flexible:

  • You’re facing change or transition
  • You’re feeling out of your depth
  • What usually works to keep you sane isn't working so well anymore.

How to be more flexible

Every interaction, disruption or problem is an opportunity to build?your awareness, agency and resilience. Legend has it that Benjamin Franklin made a point of focusing on?one virtue each week and practising it daily. Cultivating flexibility can be handled in the same way.

Here’s some ideas:

  • Read widely and ask questions – what’s happening out there? What are other people doing?
  • Dismantle a problem you’re facing by starting from scratch – what if this wasn’t a problem at all? How could you eliminate the entire process?
  • Schedule time with people you trust, to get a new perspective on your environment and behaviour – what is it about your leadership or your business that isn’t working well anymore? How can you shift that?
  • Next time something negative happens, try to think of three different interpretations that might be more useful – what if this was a gift, or an opportunity for growth?

Get ready to stretch

Flexibility is a skill worth having – and this has never been more obvious than the events of the last 18 months, where the COVID pandemic has shattered our ideas and assumptions about how to lead, work and live.

Ultimately, leadership flexibility is about staying attuned to our environment,?taking responsibility for our behaviour and learning from our?experiences so we can keep adapting –?because we’ll need to.

For more on the five key skills of a strategic leader, make sure you're subscribed to Not An MBA weekly, to get the next four parts in the series. Even better, check out the Alicia McKay Academy, where you can take a FREE mini-naMBA and boost your skills.

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Shaun Foley

Social Science and Psychology Researcher | Unraveling Insights from Data and People

3 年

Excellent article Alicia McKay. As our environment changes we must adapt and become flexible. We can often become comfortable in the moments where things feel 'good' and things are going well. But if we remain in the comfortable and dont venture into the uncomfortable, we ourselves will not develop and grow. Flexibility at times will require us to venture out into some unknown and uncomfortable. Perhaps it may be about learning a new skill, developing a new relationship, or changing direction in a current venture. Adaptation and flexibility is key in an ever changing environment.

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John Owens

Intuitive, inspirational & transformational mentor bringing personal freedom to owners & CEOs through business success.

3 年

Alicia McKay, LOVE your writing style and dynamic perspective! ??????

Matt Ward

Executive leader with experience in education, sport, & agriculture. Skilled in nutrient support, environmental farm services, and animal nutrition I bring an authentic and collaborative style plus a proven track record

3 年

Quality points and a good way to frame things when change comes and deep breathes are required. Thanks for sharing

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