Sunday, November 17, 2019
Principles of Adaptive Leadership in the Workplace
Principles of Adaptive Leadership in the Workplace Principles of Adaptive Leadership in the Workplace In a traditional business structure, actions and direction come from the top down. The CEO makes decisions, tells her direct reports, and the decision is filtered down to the people who do the work. This chain of command style of leading works just fine in an unchanging world or with an all-knowing CEO. Thatâs not the world you live in, so youll want to look for a different style of leadership. What about adaptive leadership? Dr. Ron Heifetz and Marty Linsky at Harvard University developed adaptive leadership as a way to work within the fast-changing landscape of todayâs business world. What Is Adaptive Leadership? There are four dimensions of adaptive leadership and they create a leadership framework for you to pursue: Navigating business environmentsLeading with empathyLearning through self-correction and reflectionCreating win-win solutions Using these principles, leaders can find methods to respond to their environments in a way that promotes creativity and solutions. No one person can come up with the solution to every problem, and thatâs one of the big failures of top-down leadership. Adaptive leadership utilizes all employees and customers in order to find solutions that work. Hereâs how. Navigating Business Environments With Adaptive Leadership When you do the same thing over and over, you can expect the same result. When events are not going well, you need to change what youre doing to make the situation better. But, just how do you do that? You need to become flexible and embrace change. You need to think about approaches other than the way itâs always been done. This is more difficult than it seems. You can find situations where people resist change at all costs- we did it this way in 1992, and by golly, it worked then, so why change? One of the great failures, when a company failed to navigate the business environment correctly, is Kodak. You may remember film that you put in a camera. It was big business. When digital technology came on the scene, Kodak felt secure that digital would never become better than film. They were wrong. When was the last time you bought film? Kodak didnât adapt to the rapidly changing business environment. Leading With Empathy Through Adaptive Leadership If you canât understand where your employees and customers are coming from, you will have a difficult time meeting their needs. If you canât meet the needs of your customers and employees, they will leave you and go elsewhere. You need to treat employees with empathy and compassion to ensure they stay and help you foster business success. Employees today arenât happy just coming to work and doing repetitive tasks and collecting a paycheck. Customers want products and services that are new and helpful. Behold the rise of the Instapot. This is an electric version of the pressure cooker your grandmother once used, but the creators understood that the modern kitchen was looking for a modern solution to getting a healthy meal on the table. An employee could have said, âHeh, pressure cookers already exist. We donât need this Instapot.â The employee would be right, but it was what people wanted and what made people feel better about making dinner. Empathy led to a huge success. Learning Through Self-Correction and Reflection Through Adaptive Leadership No one gets it right every time. All leaders make mistakes. An adaptive leader realizes this and is willing to make corrections to the course. This also means that in adaptive leadership, you accept failure as part of the process. You can say âwe know this works, so we will keep doing this,â but the business world changes rapidly, so what worked yesterday may not work today. And even if it does work today, it may no longer be the best solution. You have to try new things. This means accepting feedback as well. What are your employees saying? What are your customers saying? Do surveys and actually look at the data. You canât just ask and ignore. You need to reflect on what works and what does not and take the risk to change it. Creating Win-Win Solutions Through Adaptive Leadership Whatâs good for you is good enough, right? Well, if you want to stay in business for a very short time, this works. When you can come together with solutions that work for multiple organizations, youâll find a lot more success. This dimension of adaptive leadership can feel strange if youâre used to operating strictly as a competitor, but what if you and your competitors could actually help each other out? If you want an example of this, go download a few independent podcasts. Youâll find that people who are technically competitors are promoting and praising each other. What happens when they do this? It turns out that people who enjoy hearing one true crime podcast also enjoy hearing others. Instead of cutthroat competition, this group is creating win-win scenarios for each. Josh Hallmark created Two Pods a Day to create win-win scenarios for podcasters. You can do the same for your business. Look for win-wins instead of divide and conquer situations. If you want to become a great leader, try adopting these four principles of adaptive leadership and witness the new life your new behavior can breathe into your organization. - Suzanne Lucas is a freelance writer who spent 10 years in corporate human resources, where she hired, fired, managed the numbers, and double-checked with the lawyers.
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