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Leadership in Flux. 35-40% of leaders fail in the 1st 18 months of promotion or appointmentRate of failure is increasing
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1. Using Action Learning to Develop Shared Leadership Skills Skipton Leonard – Co-Chair
Michael Marquardt
Cynthia McCauley & Patricia O’Connor
Craig Pearce – Co-chair, Discussant
Arthur Freedman
Jay Conger & Susan Elaine Murphy
2. Leadership in Flux 35-40% of leaders fail in the 1st 18 months of promotion or appointment
Rate of failure is increasing – turnover rate for CEO’s doubled from 1999-2004
1996-2006 – CEO turnover for performance increased 318%
1996-2006 – CEO tenure decreased from 9.5 to 7.8 years
3. Leadership Challenges
4. Vertical/Hierarchical (top-down) leadership - Traditional leadership models have focused on leader®follower influence
In contemporary organizational situations
Emphasis on personal knowledge and skill
Team structures
Focus increasingly upon mutual or shared influence between
Formal leaders and team members
Team members
Lateral/Shared Leadership – Mutual influence among team members is becoming much prominent in contemporary organizations
5. Shared Leadership Meets Action Research Craig L. Pearce
6. What is Shared Leadership? “We define shared leadership as a dynamic, interactive influence process among individuals in groups for which the objective is to lead one another to the achievement of group or organizational goals or both. The key distinction between shared leadership and traditional models of leadership is that the influence process involves more than just downward influence on subordinates by an appointed or elected leader.”
Pearce, C.L. & Conger, J. A. (2003).
Shared Leadership. Sage Publications.
8. Our Initial Research Evidence Pearce (1997) Shared leadership an important predictor of change management team effectiveness. Dissertation-University of Maryland.
Pearce & Sims (2002) Shared leadership a better predictor of change management team effectiveness than vertical leadership. Group Dynamics.
Pearce, Yoo & Alavi (2004) Shared leadership a better predictor of virtual team outcomes than vertical leadership. Non-profit Leadership.
Ensley, Hmieleski & Pearce (2006) Controlling for CEO leadership, shared leadership among top management team an important predictor of firm performance. Leadership Quarterly.
9. Action Research and Shared Leadership How do we develop shared leadership?
What are the fine-grained dynamics of shared leadership?
How can shared leadership facilitate action learning?
What are the limits and liabilities of both shared leadership and action learning?
10. Shared/Collaborative Leadership Collective Leadership
11. Shared Leadership Skills When to lead and when to follow,
When to be directive and when to encourage collaboration and consensus,
How to use intrinsic and well as extrinsic motivators to keep people engaged,
How to engage people’s idealism and desire for personal development and growth to develop inspiring visions and passion,
How to empower subordinates and use and develop their ability to self-manage and self-lead, and
How to develop a mind-set for learning throughout the organization.
12. Leadership Development Strategies Individual Development Plan (IDP)
360-degree feedback + IDP
Traditional Leadership Programs – (Instructor provides knowledge)
Experiential Leadership Programs – (instructor facilitates knowledge transfer from training curriculum)
Coaching/Mentoring
Action Learning – Working on a real problem with a coach that requires shared leadership
13. Using Questions to Develop Shared Leadership Michael J. Marquardt
World Institute for Action Learning
George Washington University
14. Components of an Action Learning Program Project, challenge, task, or problem
Group of 4-8 people with diverse perspectives
Reflective questioning and listening
Developing Strategies and taking action
Commitment to learning
Action Learning coach
15. Elements of action learning that build shared leadership Complex, urgent problem/challenges that require multiple perspectives and shared ideas
Group size that enables all to participate and to learn
Focus on questions and reflective inquiry that emphasizes listening and building on others’ ideas
Development of systemic, holistic action steps and strategies
16. Development of Shared Leadership Competencies via the Learning Coach At commencement of each session, each group member’s leadership skill is identified and listed
Coach informs the group that each competency will be reflected upon during and after the session
Commitment to help each other develop leadership competencies
Competencies are built when the following elements are in place:
Important to the person
Opportunity to practice
Immediate, extensive and positive feedback
Ability to reflect and determine for self
17. Questions from the Coach for Developing Leadership Competencies Questions during Session
What listed leadership competencies have been demonstrated thus far?
What is the impact of that on the progress of the group?
Have any opportunities been missed?
Questions after session
Directed to the individual
How do you think you did on your competency (OK/not OK)?
What could you have improved?
Directed to others
How did this person do in his/her competency?
What did he/she do well?
Impact of what he/she did?
Directed to entire group
What have we learned about this competency?
How can we apply to our work environment?
18. How questions from members and coach builds shared leadership Group problem-solving
Everyone is engaged in solving the problem
Different perspectives are valued
All are expected to assume leadership and to share as appropriate
Group cohesiveness
Questions build cohesiveness, trust, caring, and respect for the other person
Questions enable the other person to be able to help and to be seen as valuable
20. Leadership Beliefs and Practices Beliefs
Creating direction, alignment, and commitment (i.e., leadership) for dealing with complex organizational problems requires senior managers with diverse expertise and perspectives collaborating as peers.
New leadership practices are needed for effective leadership in a peer context.
New Leadership Practices
Working as a leadership team without a formal leader.
Working with multiple stakeholders as partners.
Shared sense-making of complex issues.
Collective learning through experimentation.
21. Action Learning Leadership Projects (ALLP) Teams of senior managers.
Given broad strategic issues within which teams shaped a more focused project.
No experts on the team (including sponsors).
Encouraged to take action.
Encouraged to experiment with more collaborative/shared leadership practices.
22. What capabilities do ALLP teams develop to support shared leadership practices? Engaging across boundaries (e.g., dialogue skills, discovering underlying assumptions, valuing differences).
Understanding the organization as an interdependent system.
Leveraging diverse personal networks.
Diagnosing and addressing sensitive organizational issues.
Effective teamwork.
23. Can ALLP teams generate direction, alignment, and commitment for solutions that address a complex organizational issue? Organization #1: Six months after project completion, nine projects lead to changes or further actions in the organization, six projects had little impact in the organization, and the jury was still out on five projects.
Some differentiators:
Top-level support for the project
Linked to an existing strategic initiative
Team’s ability to navigate the organizational system
Team’s enthusiasm for the project
Degree of focus on a specific solution/intervention
24. Can ALLP teams generate direction, alignment, and commitment for solutions that address a complex organizational issue? Organization #2: One year after project completion: Eight of the eleven projects reported that their recommendations were fully or partially implemented.
Team members’ perceptions of why project deliverables were adopted:
Senior-level support
Involvement of key players
Quality of the deliverable
Innovativeness of the recommendations
System was ready
Directly addressed a strategic goal
27. Organization Development & Change Organization Development & Change [OD&C] is a system-wide application and transfer of behavioral science knowledge to the planed development, improvement, and reinforcement of the strategies, structures, [technologies,] and processes that lead to organizational effectiveness.
28. Action Learning Action Learning [AL] is a team process that enables members to: (1) effectively and efficiently deal with critical, urgent organizational issues [problems, opportunities, and dilemmas] with innovative strategies; (2) develop teams that continuously learn and improve their capacities to perform and adapt; and (3) capture, transfer, and apply valuable, practical knowledge at the individual, team, intergroup, organizational, and community levels.
37. AN EXAMPLE OF SHARED LEADERSHIP
Particularly in uncertain, ambiguous conditions and situations, command/control project leaders are unlikely to have sufficient information, capacity, and adequate competencies to recognize emergent predictable surprises and deal with them in a timely, effective manner.
Organizational change projects are likely to fail when such flawed assumptions prevail.
An alternative assumption is that people who are closest to the emergence of predictable surprises are often best prepared to deal with them.
This requires legitimacy for whoever recognizes a need is entitled to take an active leadership role, regardless of their status.
40. Benefits derived from OD&C + AL Increase executive bench strength by developing shared leadership competencies
Identify & deal with real, consequential trans-organizational issues
Learn how individuals, teams & total systems can quickly grow & develop
Familiarize high-potential managers with different organizational perspectives (functional & hierarchical)
Develop consultative, participative (collaborative) problem-solving & decision-making skills
Learn to build & develop high-performing team
Develop leadership capabilities & practical skills
Gain self-awareness, self-esteem
Influence executive decision-makers
Earn recognition, appreciation, respect (visibility)
41. Building Rigor Into Developing Shared Leadership: Design Features for Action Learning Approaches
42. Is Action Learning the Right Vehicle for Learning Shared Leadership? The Positives:
Team-based designs/rewards
Strong collective identity
Peers
Complex enterprise issues
Facilitated experiences
High stakes, recognition rewards
43. Is Action Learning the Right Vehicle for Learning Shared Leadership? The Dilemmas:
Peers
Project recommendations trump the process
One-time event
Little or no follow-up
Existing organizational architecture and attitudes towards leadership
44. Critical Design Features: Project and sponsor selection
Projects that are multidisciplinary
Sponsors who model a degree of SL
and who are not experts
Participant selection
No subject experts
Multiple levels instead of peers
Moderate needs for personalized power
45. Critical Design Features: Group process
Explicit norms a la IDEO ‘deep dive’
Highly skilled facilitators who also instruct
Task and demand transitions identified
Multiple reflection windows/daily feedback
and debriefing on team SL process
Content learning (beyond project knowledge)
Training in shared leadership and influence tactics
In-company role models sharing their SL experiences
46. Critical Design Features: Deliverables (beyond project recommendations)
Pre- and post-360 assessments of the participants’ capability at SL
Detailed diagnosis of the SL process by facilitators and participants along with measurement
Follow-up
360 assessment six and twelve months out
Coaching
Requirement to instruct their own staff and facilitate one shared leadership team
47. Questions and Discussant Craig Pearce