Information and
Skills You Need to Get Ahead
In Leading
So People Will Follow, Erika Andersen identifies six characteristics
of what it takes to be the kind of leader whom others would follow. One of
those is generous. In her book, she explains what true generosity is and how to
be generous.
“... Generous
leaders share the wealth on many levels. For example, they are quick to give
others credit for their good efforts and new ideas. They’re also generous with
their knowledge, sharing information with those who need it and teaching others
around them how to do what they themselves do well. They are generous with
their faith in people; they tend to assume best intent (although they are not
naïve) and believe people are generally innocent until proven guilty.”
“Perhaps most
important, they are generous with power. The generous leader, having provided the
information necessary for success, gives people the authority and autonomy to
act on that information. A leader who is fully generous shares both the power
to make decisions and the responsibility for dealing with the consequences of those decisions. She shares
the resources needed to execute on the power she shares and the insight and
support necessary for people to recover from mistakes and failure. Finally, she
is generous with feedback. She takes the time to notice what her staff are
doing or not doing, think about what’s great and what’s not, and share with
them her observations.”
“Generous
leadership makes people feel capable, included and motivated to succeed. It also
makes them feel generous themselves. A generous leader is a powerful role model
and catalyst for an open, honest, supportive organization.”
It is helpful to
have a handful of specific behaviors to focus on. Based on Andersen’s descriptions,
leaders who are generous
1. Assume
positive intent. When the leader is generous in his or
her assumptions, everyone feels good. If I’m an employee and I see that my
leader has high positive expectations and believes I can meet them, I’m likely
to do everything in my power to make that true.
2. Share
power and authority. Effective delegation is the best way
for you to
share power and
authority. It allows employees to demonstrate increasing levels of competence;
you can then respond by offering them increasing levels of autonomy. They
become more independent and capable, and you’ll be freed to take on new,
higher-level responsibilities as well. When you operate as a generous leader,
your
people benefit
and respond.
3. Share
what they know. One of the more frustrating habits of
poor leaders
is to hoard
information and knowledge. When leaders
don’t share key information
or knowledge,
the organization becomes more fragile. If you’re the only person
who knows how to
do an essential thing, what happens when you’re not there? Not sharing critical
information and knowledge makes it much harder for people to succeed
individually and support the organization’s success. Generous leaders not only share information
personally; they embed information sharing into the operations of the group.
4. Freely give credit, praise and reward. When leaders are chintzy with credit, praise and reward, we feel
undervalued and unappreciated. Over the
years, research has shown again and again that one of the key reasons good
employees leave organizations is lack of appreciation for their efforts and
contributions.
When
you as a leader share genuine praise and give people full credit for their
actions, ideas and results, almost without exception, they are inspired to do
more of the same. Learning to give genuine positive feedback is the simplest
and probably the highest leverage place to focus in order to improve your
leadership in this area of generosity. Positive feedback is a simple, powerful
way to let people
know
that they’re headed in the right direction and that you’re noticing and appreciating
their work.
5. Provide the resources necessary to succeed. The kinds of resources those
you
lead will need in order to succeed in this day and age are things like a fair
wage, the tools to do their job (technology, training, good processes, access
to information), a safe and civil working environment, reasonable leave
policies and fair practices in regard to diversity. If you’re wondering whether
those you lead have the resources they need to succeed, the first thing to do
is ask them. Manage
your
self-talk to ensure that you don’t immediately dismiss any requests or
concerns
as unrealistic or greedy. “Generous
leaders want their people to thrive, and they support this intention through
their words and actions. When leaders are generous, their people feel cared for,
seen and valued. People whose leaders
are
generous become more generous in response; they are more supportive of each other,
the leader and the business.”
The
Generosity of Giving Value
Success
depends heavily on how we approach our interactions with people,
according
to Adam Grant in Give and Take. Every time we interact
with another person at work, we have a choice to make: do we try to claim as
much value as we can or contribute value without worrying about what we receive
in return? Social scientists have discovered that people differ dramatically in
their preferences for reciprocity — their desired mix of taking and giving. The
two kinds of people who fall on opposite ends of the spectrum are called takers
and givers.
Givers
prefer to give more than they get. Whereas takers tend to be self-focused, evaluating
what other people can offer them, givers are other-focused, paying more
attention to what other people need from them. These preferences are not about money:
givers and takers aren’t distinguished by how much they donate to charity or
the compensation that they command from their employers. If you’re a giver at
work, you simply strive to be generous in sharing your time, energy, knowledge,
skills, ideas and connections with other people who can benefit from them.
Givers
are able to develop and leverage extraordinarily rich networks. By virtue
of
the way they interact with other people in their networks, givers create norms
that favor adding rather than claiming or trading value, expanding the pie for
all involved.
Givers
reject the notion that interdependence is weak. Givers are more likely to
see
interdependence as a source of strength, a way to harness the skills of
multiple
people
for a greater good. When givers put a group’s interests ahead of their own,
they signal that their primary goal is to benefit the group. As a result,
givers earn the respect of their collaborators.
Because
givers tend to be trusting and optimistic about other people’s intentions, in
their
roles as leaders, managers and mentors, givers are inclined to see the
potential in everyone. By default, givers start by viewing people as bloomers …
they simply start by seeing everyone as talented and try to bring out the best
in them. They see potential where others don’t, which sets in motion a series
of self-fulfilling prophecies. In roles as leaders and mentors, givers resist
the temptation to search for talent first. By recognizing that anyone can be a
bloomer, givers focus their attention on motivation.
The
Generosity of Empowerment
Empowerment
is the natural result of both personal and organizational trustworthiness, which
enable people to identify and unleash their potential, Stephen R. Covey points out
in The 8th Habit. The empowerment enthrones self-control, self-management and self-organizing.
It taps into passion, energy and drive — in short, voice.
In
organizations where people do every day what they do best, there’s lower
turnover, higher productivity and higher customer satisfaction.
Managers
must overcome their inability to give up control. With empowerment,
control
is not lost. It’s translated into self-control. This comes when there is a
commonly
understood end, with agreed upon guidelines and supportive structures
and
systems, and when each person acts as a whole person in a whole job. In this
“directed
autonomy,” managers shift from controllers to enablers: They remove barriers and
become a source of support.
Successful
empowerment depends on management’s commitment to work with
team
members by win-win agreement. The result is an overlapping of the four needs of
the organization (financial health, growth and development, synergistic
relationships with stakeholders, and meaning/contribution) with the four needs
of the individual (physical — survival, health and security; mental — growth
and development; social/emotional — relationships; and spiritual — meaning
and
contribution.
It’s
essential that executives build a culture where people are allowed — even
expected — to push back against a decision that would result in serious
consequences to the overall mission and values of the organization.
The
role of the supervisor is to set up the conditions of empowerment and then to
clear
the path and become a source of help as requested. This is “servant
leadership.” It’s empowerment that
creates heartfelt commitment and excitement.
We
grow personally when we give ourselves to others and our relationships
deepen.
We begin our search for wisdom by admitting how little we know and how much we
need others.
People
are extremely sensitive to a leader’s use of patience, kindness, empathy and
gentle persuasion. Such characteristics activate the consciences of others and
create emotional identification with the leader and the cause or principles for
which he or she stands.
The
Imperative to Give and Receive Feedback
People
can benefit from feedback only if they believe and accept the feedback they’ve been
given, assert John H. Zenger, Joseph R. Folkman, Robert H. Sherwin, Jr. and
Barbara A. Steel in How to Be Exceptional.
Accepting
feedback is a function of four broad sets of skills. First and foremost is the ability
to be humble and reflective. Humility comes when people start to understand
that it is the reactions of others that really matter in terms of their
leadership effectiveness. Their
effectiveness as a leader is determined by others.
The
second factor is personal honesty and integrity. People who are more honest and
straightforward with others tend to be honest and straightforward with
themselves.
The
higher the level of perceived honesty and integrity, the higher the level of
openness to receiving feedback from those around you.
The
third factor is engaging in the development of others. Our research indicated
that those who were better at accepting feedback also tended to be more
effective at developing others. Development is contagious. When people do it
for others, some of it is bound to rub off. Having the perspective that others
ought to improve and develop new skills makes it much more likely that they themselves
will be open to feedback on what they can do to improve. One of the powerful
tools to develop others is to provide them with useful feedback. That works best,
however, when the leader has set the example by seeking feedback from the subordinate,
welcoming any and all messages that would help the leader be even more effective.
The
final factor is taking action and initiative to move forward and respond to the
feedback. Passive acceptance is a helpful start, but without action, nothing changes.
Those who accept feedback and move forward start to respond with energy
and enthusiasm about improving their performance. They provide others with a
clear vision and goal how they will do it. Finally, after they start, they
follow through on their commitment to execute the change.
We
can think of no activity, which if broadly practiced in an organization, will
have more beneficial impact on building strengths in leaders than if they learn
to readily give and receive feedback, but especially to freely ask for feedback
from those around them.
The
Generosity of Not Finding Fault
When
you understand how consequences influence performance, you realize that
finding
fault with people for inappropriate performance is unproductive and unfair,
according
to Aubrey C. Daniels in Bringing Out the Best in
People. They are simply behaving
in a manner consistent with the consequences they are receiving now and have
received in the past. The role of
leaders in every organization is not to find fault or place blame, but to analyze
why people are behaving as they are
and
modify the consequences to promote the behavior they need.
This
approach to management does not overlook poor performance. Nor does it seek to
use only positive reinforcement to attempt to create some type of unrealistic,
utopian organization. Quite the contrary.
The
management system we should create employs all of the consequences appropriately
and skillfully to stop problem performance and promote the kind of behavior
that supports the organization’s goals.
The
first step when attempting to change the way people perform is to understand
why they are currently behaving the way they are. We now know that people do what they do because
of the consequences they experience following their actions. Therefore, it is
helpful to discover what antecedents are setting the stage for the behavior to
begin, and it is necessary to know what consequences are causing the behavior
to continue.
The
ABC (Antecedent-Behavior-Consequence) Analysis is a simple method
for
systematically analyzing the antecedents and consequences influencing a
behavior. This analytic technique will
allow you to understand behavior from the other person’s perspective, even when
it appears to be unproductive, irrational or self-defeating.
Antecedent: Something that comes before
a behavior that sets the stage for the
behavior
to occur.
Behavior: What a person does.
Consequence: What happens to the performer
as a result of the behavior.
Once
you view performance in terms of ABC, you will be able to develop solutions
to
performance problems that you may never have attempted in the past.
In
the ABC Analysis, consequences are classified on three dimensions:
1.
Positive or negative. This dimension answers the question, “Is the consequence
positive
or negative from the perspective of the performer?”
2.
Immediate or future. Here we want to know, “Does the consequence occur as
the
behavior is happening (immediate) or some time later (future)?”
3.
Certain or uncertain. This dimension expresses the probability that the performer
will actually experience the consequence.
Understanding
and managing consequences is the most effective way to improve performance.
Goals
are antecedents for either reinforcement or punishment. If people are punished when
they fail to reach a goal, they will reach the goal only to avoid the
punishment. On the other hand, if people reach their goals and receive positive
reinforcement, they will not stop when they get to the goal but will continue to
perform at their best, knowing that more positive reinforcement will be forthcoming.
The
belief that goals improve performance interferes with the effective use of
goals. If goals are set but there are no consequences for either success or
failure, the goals will produce no improvement and will ultimately be a waste
of time.
Very
clearly, the purpose of setting goals should be to increase opportunities for
positive
reinforcement. If this is the purpose, we should want many, not few, goals.
And, contrary to common sense, the best mistake to make in goal setting is to
set the goals too low. The reasons for these techniques may be obvious by now:
1.
If the goal is low, it increases the probability of success. If the goal is reached
and success is celebrated, the motivation to do even more the next time is
increased.
2.
If goals become the antecedent for positive reinforcement, then the more
goals
you have, the more occasions for positive reinforcement.
The
mistake that is most commonly made when setting goals is associated with the
word challenging.
The concept of “challenging goals” usually causes managers to set fewer goals
and to set them too high. Fewer goals, harder to attain, equal very few
opportunities for positive reinforcement and reward. The fastest way to change
individual behavior is to set small goals, reinforce effort and celebrate
attainment.
Remember,
positive reinforcement accelerates the rate of improvement. The only way we can
achieve dramatic improvement in anything is with lots of reinforcement.
THE
GENEROUS LEADER
In a recent Executive
Insights interview with Erika Andersen, author of Leading So
People
Will Follow, Soundview’s host Andrew Clancy asked about
the leadership quality of generosity. Here is an excerpt from the interview:
Soundview:
What is it that makes a leader generous?
Erika
Andersen: Good leaders understand that their success depends
on the success of others. If you’re just an independent operator, it doesn’t
matter, your success depends on your efforts entirely. But if you’re a leader —
if you’re leading other people — you cannot be successful without them being
successful. All boats rise, right?
So good leaders realize
that, and therefore, on a daily basis, our concern is to support others’
success, and that’s the essence of generosity. If a leader focuses on “How can I
help you be successful?” day to day, then many things will arise out of that
that feel generous: giving you resources, giving you knowledge, assuming you
have positive intent to get over obstacles –– all those things that come across
to people as generous.
No comments:
Post a Comment