Regenerate!

October 20, 2009

Who should I promote?
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You are a CEO and you are weighing options for filling up the position of the Operations Head, which has fallen vacant because the previous occupant left his job. The previous occupant could not cope with the job pressure.

You have a couple of successful project leaders.  Should you chose one of them or should you look beyond?

The usual tendency is to reward good performers by a promotion. That would seem fair. But it is better to ask yourselves some questions. Here are they and some thoughts too.

What are the additional skills that the Operations Head needs to have over above what a competent project leader needs to have?

I think that the foremost skill a good operations head must have is the ability to assess, select, and develop competent project leaders. A strong project leader may be good in use of project management tools and may also be resourceful in solving day to day problems. The operations head, on the other hand, needs to be skilled in dealing with longer term needs like developing more versatile pool of resources, establishing ealry warning systems, cost management etc.

Another critical skill that an operations head needs to have is the ability to influence things horizontally. Even a good project leader may not have been tested on this.

One more skill that project leaders may not get tested on is the ability to diagnose (processes) and take preventive actions.

Why did the previous head fail to meet job pressures?

It is likely that the previous occupant of this post lacked the above skills. It is also possible that your operations group lacks some capabilities that are needed to meet client needs. It is possible that the previous head did not have the diagnostic skills to spot the deficiencies and skills to build new capabilities in your team.

It is very risky to choose someone for promotion on the basis of success in previous job. The risks go beyond immediate failures. Sometimes hardworking people overcome their lack of above skills by resorting to working extra hard (but still in their old areas of comfort), making their people to work unreasonably harder, and other such heroic methods. These can be damaging -talented people may leave, your organization may become more susceptible to shocks.

What is the way out?

1. For every important leadership position, identify differentiating skills needed at that level compared to lower levels. See e.g. Career Planning. Use these to evaluate candidates.

2. Establish ongoing leadership development programs. These programs will not only develop people but they will also provide you with more informed answers when you evaluate people for promotions.

October 9, 2009

Regenerative Leadership -a model for development
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The Regenerative Leadership achieves more from less, it embraces changes before they threaten existence, and it sets the organization on to the virtuous loop of higher and higher performance.

The Regenerative Leadership is a loop consisting of activities such as:
-making sense of reality
-understanding, articulating, and implementing general and specific values
-Leveraging small and big ideas
-learning and teaching
-articulating larger vision
-coming up with actions and taking actions that change reality (bias for actions)
-Learning from all above and revisiting all above periodically (the regenerative loop)

I have found that this loop releases energies for change and transformation in organizations that take up such leadership development programs.

For knowing how the regenerative leadrship helps you develop your leadership pipeline read about career planning.

Hemant

April 6, 2009

Managers and Leaders -why CEOs need leadership pipelines
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Often, the words manager and leader are used interchangeably. It might be so because, in real world people have only one designation. For example, CEO, VP Marketing, CFO, Operations Head, and several common designations do not say anything about leadership or management. Individuals charged with responsibilities have to play both the roles. But some people tend to predominantly display characteristics of leaders or managers.

Adjectives

Let us start with the adjectives used to describe them. Leaders are described as great, strong, visionary, inspiring, creative, ….or on the negative side as destructive or weak. These adjectives are not used when we talk about managers. We refer to managers as efficient, quick, meticulous,…. and on the negative side as inefficient, bumbling, or confused.

Seeing things

Individuals have to act either as managers or leaders depending on the circumstances. But their inherent or default behaviors can be discerned. Those who are inherently managers usually have a narrow or blinkered vision. Managers will exclusively focus on their areas - competency, group, department, division, or company. This allows them to get after immediate tasks. Leaders, in their broad sweep of vision, take in longer value chains, non-obvious competition, and likely market destroyers. Having done, that leaders are much better in seeing things as they are in a brutally frank way. Managers are likely to see things in ways that will simplify their choices and defend their decisions. An operations manager may rationalize presence of excessive inventory to meet delivery targets. If the operations manager is a strong leader she will seek to find out how to bring flexibility and speed in operations so that lower inventory is enough.

Goals

Managers manage resources to produce planned outcomes. Leaders will mobilize resources for desired results. She, as a leader, will think a great deal in deciding what is desirable. For example, a production manager will use allowed tolerance bands to meet the targets, a person who has strong leadership traits might accept this as short term compromise but will soon put in place process improvements necessary to avoid such trade-offs in future.

Fall in line?

Managers, obsessed as they are about ‘running the show’ or ‘not rocking the boat’, stress on uniformity and conformance. Have you made the comparison of various vendors in the standard format? -they will ask. Managers will try and avoid ‘judgment’ to the extent possible. Leaders will go beyond. They will ask questions about the owners, their priorities, their commitments which may not fit into a standard format. Leaders will not hesitate to ‘judge’. They will stand by their choice. Managers would be content in proving that their decision making adhered to the approved procedure. If one of the team members has some special talent which can justify some re-organization of work, leaders will go ahead and do that. Managers will try and talk to the talented person and ask her to fall in line.

Framework

Managers work well within the existing framework if not in spirit but in letters. Leaders think about the ultimate accountability that comes by holding a job and will establish appropriate framework. Faced with budget limits for quality improvements, a leader will invoke the ‘higher’ values, argue her case by mentioning likelihood of a much larger loss of goodwill and revenue in future than the extra expenditure being proposed.

Managers will avoid conflict through trade-offs. They will find out what is possible and go about achieving it efficiently. Leaders will expand the zone of what is possible and choose from much larger sweepstakes. In the process, if there are conflicts they will not alter the goals just to avoid the conflicts. Managers bring efficiency in doing what is possible. Leaders bring effectiveness by going after what is desirable.

Motivate or inspire?

Managers reward people for work done. Leaders make the work rewarding by showing possibilities, extending horizons, and raising great visions. While going after the larger goals, leaders challenge themselves and their people to do what might be considered to be very difficult. Leaders use such situations to develop their people. Leaders invest their time in developing people through coaching. Managers invest company’s money to nominate people for training. Through all this, leaders inspire people, whereas managers try to ‘motivate’ people. Leaders are good in learning lessons from life and work and are even better at applying them to achieve worthwhile goals. They use their stories to develop their people into better leaders. Managers too learn their lessons but they may be content in using them to avoid trouble or to survive.

Leadership pipeline

Good managers work hard. Great leaders are not content with hard work alone; they are obsessed about achieving more from less. They bring in change and regeneration. In order to sustain and thrive amidst change, organizations need leaders at different levels. CEO s need to plan for a leadership pipeline.

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