No One Was Born to be an Effective Leader - The Science of Effective Leadership Explained
Alex Draper
Author | Speaker | Founder & CEO | Eliminating Workplace Toxicity | Helping Leaders Build Trust-Based, High-Performing Cultures with CARE to Win
Have you ever said, heard, or read, “you were born to be a leader”?
Not the whole truth. Not one human was born to lead effectively.
We can all lead. But to lead effectively, for me, this is black and white. No grey area here.
My definition of effective leadership in the context of this blog is, “to achieve the results expected of you whilst sending your team home to their families less stressed than when they came.”
It’s about making people feel fulfilled, eager, and safe. Anything less than that is not effective. Are you an effective leader? Is your boss effective? If yes, believe me when I say, they didn’t wake up like that. Here’s why…
A ‘Brainy’ Look into Great Leadership
Scientific evidence predicts the probability of effective leadership is a nurtured set of values and behaviors.
Great leaders can be shaped early on. Every leader sat in a highchair, before the boss’ chair. From an early age, their probability of developing leadership talent was determined by environmental indicators and signals to translate experience into expertise. Experiences such as parenting, teachers, and your network of friends.
Research by PWC argues 30% are genetically destined to be leaders. But destined does not mean effective.
There are no guarantees, even with a genetical head start and positive environmental indicators, you will end up an effective leader. It still stands that leadership is an unnatural act.
Psychotherapist, Margaret Cochran says “We’re wired to worry”. “It’s a survival mechanism; our brains have not evolved much over the last 10,000 years, and we must remember where the tiger is more than where the blueberries are.”
Worry, especially the kind accompanying a long and drawn-out period of extreme uncertainty like our uncertain and ever-changing workplaces, has physical ramifications. Cochran adds:
“Our fight-or-flight response gets activated, then we end up with a whole lot of chemicals in the system. The uncertainty we’re currently experiencing is not a tiger we can run from, so it goes on and our bodies are full of cortisone and adrenaline”.
For teams to perform at their best, they need to think straight. Too much cortisone and adrenaline keep that proverbial tiger chasing your team and in a state of stress.
Teams must feel safe in a worry-free environment to be their true selves and perform beyond expectations.
Cutting the Red Wire to Ineffective Leadership
Present-day humans are running advanced society software (modern technology) on caveman hardware (our brain).
Our brain’s processor isn’t big enough for the 21st Century. To function effectively, we’ve created mental shortcuts called heuristics to solve problems and make judgments quickly and efficiently. This way, we process information at speed without stopping and thinking to ensure our brain and body functions are scanning and ready for threats. To slow down and think is to steal resources from threat prevention. That hinders our survival and therefore not a happy place for our brains.
A bias is a negative result of a heuristic. There are over 165 known/documented biases, but there are hundreds, if not thousands of human biases affecting people on any given day. Here at DX, we have documented and researched dozens of biases that affect leaders and teams daily.
The main challenge for leaders is that it’s quicker and easier to assume something than it is to stop and think and “know” something. Their brains love speed and want to move on. This is good for the brain of the leader, but it’s not good for the brains of those they serve.?
This is really why no one was born an effective leader. To do it effectively, you must fight your brain’s primal evolution and desire to survive. Gulp.
Leaders are humans and ineffective leadership is easy. They, like all of us, have blind spots created by the brain.
The brain is SELF-ISH. We need leaders to be SELF-LESS to be effective.
That’s why there are so few good leaders out there. It’s in our fibers.
By leaving those fibers unattended, and just doing what their brain says they should, leaders will be self-ish, self-centered, and put themselves before their team. Things like not explaining the why. Not being transparent. Micro-managing teams. Surface level human interaction. Their team’s certainty’s is an afterthought.
Ultimately, that’s the brain’s number one protocol. Survival. To keep ME alive. To keep ME safe and certain.
An effective leaders’ primary purpose is to keep their TEAMS safe.
What is the Cognitive Bias Codex? What Does it Mean for Leadership?
This fun little diagram is the cognitive bias codex .
Visual & Algorithmic Design: John Manoogian III
Concept & Categorization: Buster Benson
List of 188 Cognitive Biases: Wikipedia
So, no one was born to be an effective leader. You’ll have to work hard to become aware of, train, and counter the brain’s primary purpose. Keep your team alive before yourself.
After thousands of years of evolution, the brain has become so vast. For simplicity’s sake, just know that the brain processes around 11 million pieces per second . Each one passes through the brain to scan for threats. The reptilian brain focuses on safety. Is this a threat? Do I need to fight or flee? The human brain allows us to take information and provide context, reason, and logic to it. If it doesn’t make sense, it triggers stress and anxiety.
Cognitive abilities are compromised when the brain’s perceived safety is attacked, meaning our logical brain responsible for creativity, decision-making, and self-control, goes offline. Now, it’s very difficult to concentrate, make decisions, or control emotions (Lupien, 2012).
So then effective leadership is very simple:
Put the brains of those we serve into a certain, unthreatening, safe place so they can perform.
How? Let’s give you a head start.
4 Steps to Fight Thousands of Years of Evolution
Step 1 - Clarity
The brain craves clarity. It was and still is, necessary for the survival of 7.5 billion people. Back in caveman days, we needed to know what food was safe to eat, who was on saber tooth tiger duty, where the nearest place to take shelter was, etc.
Clarity is a fundamental part of our early brain development and is highlighted in each major region.
Remember those 165 biases? One of them is the curse of knowledge: a cognitive bias that occurs during a conversation between humans and one individual unknowingly assumes the other has the same background to understand.
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This happens daily. Your brain is selfish. It wants to survive. It’s quicker and easier to assume the person knows what you’re talking about than it is to slow down and make sure they really know.
It’s telling you “Don’t ask, just move on. All’s good here!”
You drop those acronyms like there’s no tomorrow, without considering “do they know what I am talking about?”, and leave the conversation assuming they’ve understood everything you said.
The recipient says nothing. They don’t feel safe as their brain is now stressed by the acronym overload!
When new information doesn’t check into your library of knowledge, it activates your threat circuitry. The higher brain is a prediction machine, always assuring things in our world are familiar.?Something as simple as an unknown acronym can trigger the threat circuitry. ?
We need certainty for cognitive ease, otherwise, cortisone is released. We go into threat mode, switching off the decision-making part of the brain, and we can’t function at our optimal levels. People need clarity. Something as simple as finishing conversations with, “can you repeat back the notes we talked about?” Or re-reading an email before you send it, thinking “will the person receiving this understand what I’m talking about?”
In both cases, effective leadership involves using that one gem in short supply. Time. Just a quick slowdown. Thinking, versus doing. For the benefit of others. Empathy = Effective leadership.
Not to mention hybrid working, economic and political forces heightening emotional strain in the volatile world we live in. To lead effectively is no easy task.
In the modern age of back-to-back meetings, we don’t have time to ask. We don’t have time to re-read emails. We don’t have time to save 30 mins’ planning time in our calendar. Without time, how can we even get past step 1?
There are 3 more steps, by the way, to be an effective leader and combat the brain!
Step 2 - Autonomy
The most successful tribes and societies were those who innovated and differentiated themselves. Tribe fitness was based on their abilities to evolve and adapt to accomplish goals. That’s how we developed new tools, and new means of cultivation, and improve what’s already successful.
When we lack that control, we’re forced to comply at a large cost to our engagement. A little like micro-management. With little flexibility and control, this triggers the brain’s threat circuitry.
Stop telling your team how, where and when to get their work done. Start asking. Combat the law of least effort bias and use the tools we were given. Two ears and one mouth, use them in that ratio.
Give them a strong purpose, a why, with crystal clear clarity and expectation, and then let them loose. Trust and flexibility go a long way in the modern workplace. Alas, it's quicker and easier to tell you how to do things my way, than it is to allow you to make a few mistakes and do things your way while growing the muscle memory of your team.
Lack of perceived time is an effective leadership killer.
Step 3 - Relationships
The brain is wired to establish, secure, and maintain interpersonal bonds, because in those early years, that was the most efficient way to survive (Dunbar, 1998).
We need a sense of belonging. We need to be valued for the human that we are.
If my values and skills are not wanted or listened to, the threat circuitry switches on again. Leaders need to demonstrate empathy. This, like anything effective, needs time. Leaders must make time for non-work conversations with teams. To find out what makes them tick. Who they are, and where they come from. What made them the human they are?
That’s the secret sauce to effective leadership. Knowing your team at the human level gives you the data to truly treat them how they want to be treated.
But the conversational narcissism bias shows up all the time! It decreases empathy and certainly doesn’t show you’re listening. Coined by Charles Deber, conversational narcissism is, “the tendency to steer conversations back to yourself.”
I’m sure we’ve all fell victim to this ourselves (or know someone who has). Many times, it comes with the intent to “connect” with another individual by relating to them…but it can just as easily appear as U-turning the conversation to you!
When you feel someone doesn’t have your back, your threat circuitry’s alive again. We must find time to build relationships. There it is again, time. We are human after all.
Step 4 - Equity
Equity comes from a desire to receive an adequate allocation of the resources of our tribe. If you have 10 people on your team, that’s 10 different preferences to serve. ?When we perceive something to be unfair, it activates the insula (Cheng, 2017). This is where disgust comes from. Disgust and perceived unfairness trigger the threat circuitry in the brain.
You can’t treat all 10 people the same. Impossible. No two people are the same, so equality won’t work. In fact, being equal with your team will cause someone to be disgusted and disengaged. Treating all 10 people how they want to be treated, and giving them the CARE they need, is the path to becoming an effective leader.
This is the CARE equation. C + A + R > E. This is an easy acronym for your brain.
As a leader, if I communicate clarity effectively to each team member, it gives them the autonomy to deliver that clarity their way, allowing the leader more time to build strong relationships with individuals, obtain data to know what makes them tick, to ultimately ensure equity is felt within the whole team.
Equity is a feeling of empathy and inclusion that makes people feel safe. Psychologically safe. Clarity, autonomy, relationships, and equity? = Effective Leadership 101. No one was born to do that effectively. No one.
CARE: The Four Essentials of Psychological Safety to Inspire High-Performing Teams
To summarize, our brains receive stimuli that are filtered through the brain, to present a binary response. Is this information a threat to me? Yes, or no?
The response differs based on the individual, their interpretation, and the context leading up to it. As leaders, it’s critically important we avoid triggering threat responses in our team’s brains. Those threat responses prevent establishing and nurturing psychological safety, engagement, and performance in your team.
Effective leadership is to put the brains of those we serve in a safe place through just enough Clarity, Autonomy, Relationships, and Equity? to that individual.
We are wired to win. It’s survival. Nearly everything we do is done subconsciously, processing those 11 million bits of information every second. Unless we find time to stop, think and slow down to combat those biases, we’re always out to prove ourselves and win at something. That unconscious selfishness triggers the threat circuitry of your team.
Effective leadership is to be selfless and build psychological safety within teams. Give them certainty and not ambiguity. Your team wants to be safe.
Choose to consciously win at leadership. Slow down. Find time to lead. Find time to CARE. An easy start includes putting 30 minutes into your calendar every Monday right now to answer these four questions:
1.?????How do I know my team is on the same line of the same book as I am this week?
2.?????How can I make sure my team knows they can challenge the status quo and be creative in how work gets done?
3.?????When can I find time to get to know something new about my team from a non-work perspective?
4.?????What can I do to make sure the team has the resources they need to be successful this week?
Good luck CAREing more effectively for those you serve. Whether it's at home with your family, as a leader of a team, or as a team member and those you work with daily.
More on CARE here: https://www.dx-learning.com/the-care-experience
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Experienced Medical Device Product Manager | Technical Background & MBA | Driving Innovation in Healthcare
1 年Very nice read. Thanks for sharing.
Principal | ProChain Solutions | Help CXOs Finish Urgent, Important Projects 20-50% Faster and Predictably; Eliminate Organizational Chaos/Overwhelm, 95%+ On-Time, 2X Output, Proven Results
1 年Alex, this is excellent. Thanks for sharing :D
Property Manager at Equity LifeStyle Properties, Inc.
1 年Thanks for posting this..I agree with it and everyone could learn from this. Always try compassion for the people who work with you...
Esposito Financial Group UBS Financial Services, Inc.
1 年We are all contingent beings…