490 likes | 507 Views
This article explores the conditions that separate successful public organisations from struggling ones, examining mission coherence, operational capacity, and external support. It also discusses forms of mission, capacity, and support drift, as well as leadership challenges in different conditions.
E N D
Leading public organisations Paul ‘t Hart Utrecht University Netherlands School of Public Administration ANZSOG
Public sector ‘heaven’ The institutionalised organisation/program (Selznick, 1957) • A clear, coherent mission (public value proposition) • A made-to-fit, learned ‘technology’ (operational capacity) • Firm internal support • Firm external support Effect: ‘strong brand’, ‘taken for granted’, ‘infused with value’ ‘autonomous’
Public sector ‘hell’ The ‘impossible job’ organization/program (Hargrove/Glidewell, 1990) • Fuzzy, contradictory mission • Low respect for professional authority • Low-legitimacy clienteles • Intense conflict among constituencies Effect: conflict-ridden, under-resourced, rudderless, ‘permanently failing’, hyper-scrutinised
Diagnosing public organisations 1. Mission coherence? 2. Mission specificity? 3. Mission salience? 4. Own operational capacity? 5. Partners’/networks’ operational capacity? 6. Staff support for mission/OC? 7. Regulatory/oversight support for mission/OC? 8. Political support for mission/OC? 9. Clientele support for mission/OC? 10. Clientele status/coherence 1 – 2 – 3 – 4 – 5 1 – 2 – 3 – 4 – 5 1 – 2 – 3 – 4 – 5 1 – 2 – 3 – 4 – 5 1 – 2 – 3 – 4 – 5 1 – 2 – 3 – 4 – 5 1 – 2 – 3 – 4 – 5 1 – 2 – 3 – 4 – 5 1 – 2 – 3 – 4 – 5 1 – 2 – 3 – 4 – 5
Q:Examples of the 4 strategic conditions?How do public organisations get (themselves) out of ‘heaven’?
Forms of mission drift • Mission conflict: competing values, non-decisions, de-prioritisation • Mission creep: ambition, displacement
Forms of capacity drift • Chronically limited capacity: wicked problems, ‘impossible jobs’ • Eroded capacity: complacency, conflict, cutbacks
Forms of support drift • Critics’ feast: conspicuous, repeated, high-visibility delivery failures • Hollowing out: anti-policy/agency interest group lobbying • Political turnover: ‘new brooms’…
Mission, delivery and support drift:Failures of leadership? • Not addressing changes in the operating environment • Not addressing changes in the authorizing environment • Not addressing erosion of internal management, culture & practices
BUT: the nature of the central leadership task you face may vary from place to place, role to role and time to time….
If leadership in/of organisations is about facilitating the engagement with change, then what in your experience is the core work of leadership?
Leadership work • Task 1: Scanning/monitoring: how are we – really – travelling? What is, will be or might be happening ‘out there’ and ‘to us’? • Task 2: Building the case for change: how are we going to adapt to ‘X’? • Task 3: Bringing people along: down, up & out • Task 4: Sustaining momentum: bolstering and consolidating gains
Task 1: Scanning and monitoring • The top-down view: Devise and monitor performance indicators, commission reports
Task 1: Scanning and monitoring • The top-down view: Devise and monitor performance indicators, commission reports, boards • Another possibility: Think and act politically – engage and listen ‘up’, ‘out’ and ‘down’
Task 2Building a case for change • The top-down view: Articulate a vision, create a sense of urgency, drive the change methodically
Task 2Building a case for change • The top-down view: Articulate a vision, create a sense of urgency, drive the change methodically (Kotter et al) • Another possibility: Stir the pot, keep people focused on the real issues & resist avoidance behaviour (Heifetz)
Task 3:Bringing people along • The top-down view: (Over)communicate, use carrots/sticks, co-opt critics, offer side payments, create and celebrate quick wins, persevere in the face of imperfection
Task 3:Bringing people along • The top-down view: (Over)communicate, use carrots/sticks, co-opt critics, offer side payments, create and celebrate quick wins, persevere in the face of imperfection • Another possibility: Empower the people/systems that need changing
Task 4: Sustaining momentum • The dominant view: Remove obstacles to the realisation of the vision (by manipulating venues, procedures, resources) and initiate yet more change
Task 4: Sustaining momentum • The top-down view: Remove obstacles to the realisation of the vision (by manipulating venues, procedures, resources, coalitions) and drive yet more change • Another possibility: Nurture and consolidate newly emergent norms and expectations, and protect the people/teams/networks who invent and epitomize them
Why the Top-Down View is Often Less Helpful Than Assumed:Technical vs adaptive challenges of change
“What’s the problem?” • Technical challenges: • Known/agreed upon nature of the problem • Known/agreed upon nature of the solutions
“What’s the problem?” (II) • Adaptive challenges: • Unknown/disagreed upon nature of the problem • Unknown/disagreed upon nature of the solutions
Adaptive challenges • ‘Situations in which the disparity between values and circumstances cannot be closed by the application of current technologies or routine behaviour’(Ronald Heifetz)
Most change processes involve both technical and adaptive challenges
BUT: The key problem in many change processes is that adaptive issues get treated as if they are technical issues (top-down, project-managed) (thus creating inappropriate dependencies on ‘leaders’, who do not have the answers either)
What kind of leadership would be required to instigate ‘adaptive work’?
The work of ‘adaptive leadership’ • Identify the adaptive challenge: naming realities and framing problems (and accepting the risks involved in doing so)
The work of ‘adaptive leadership’ • Identify the adaptive challenge: name realities and frame problems (and accept the risks involved in doing so) • Regulate the level of distress: keep people focused on the problem (by recognizing and neutralizing avoidance reflexes)
The work of ‘adaptive leadership’ • Identify the adaptive challenge: name realities and frame problems (and accept the risks involved in doing so) • Regulating the level of distress: keep people focused on the problem (by recognizing and neutralizing avoidance reflexes) • Give the work back to people at a rate they can stand: resist pressures to come up with top-down solutions (inappropriate dependencies)
The work of ‘adaptive leadership’ • Identify the adaptive challenge: name realities and frame problems (and accepting the risks involved in doing so) • Regulating the level of distress: keep people focused on the problem (by recognizing and neutralizing avoidance reflexes) • Giving the work back to people at a rate they can stand: resist pressures to come up with top-down solutions (counteracting inappropriate dependencies) • Protect voices of leadership without authority: embrace dissidents, challengers, front-line staff, clients, watchdogs
The Productive Zone of Disequilibrium disequilibrium limit of tolerance productive zone threshold of change technical problem work avoidance time Source: Heifetz and Laurie: Mobilizing Adaptive Work: Beyond Visionary Leadership
Change often induces feelings of….. • Uncertainty • Insecurity • Loss • Anger/frustration ….among staff, stakeholders, political masters
So: Change hurts, and people and organisations are driven to protect themselves from that hurt by mobilizing defense mechanisms. Good change leadership acknowledges the ‘zone of loss’, creates a holding environment for it that allows people to vent, ‘let go’, and move on
“The final test of a leader is that he leaves behind him in other men the conviction and the will to carry on.” (Walter Lippmann, 1922)