Saturday 1 June 2013

Leadership Behavior and Organization Performance `The Shadow of the Leader' Concept

EFFECTIVE EXECUTIVE AUG.2009
Building High Performance Teams
Leadership Behavior and Organization Performance `The Shadow of the Leader' Concept

This article isn't about values; it's about leadership behavior. The behavior of the senior team has a direct impact on the performance and productivity of the entire organization. The actions of leaders helps the employees identify the values of their organization and stick to them.
Sir! What you are speaks so loudly, I can't hear a word you are saying.
– Samuel Johnson
Several years ago I was invited to attend an end of year conference for one of my large clients. Imagine the ballroom at an upscale Florida convention center filled with happy employees who had just blown the doors off their revenue targets. Everyone was in a great mood and light- hearted laughter could be heard everywhere the attendees went.
On the final evening it was time for the closing dinner, award celebrations and a special guest entertainer. Sparing no expense, the event organizers had reached out to Las Vegas for a well-known stand-up comic who was guaranteed to have them rolling in the aisles – just right for the occasion.
After a great meal came the ceremony with numerous awards and recognition based on the six core values of the company. The values awards were given out by the CEO, who took the opportunity to stress the importance of the company values. "Our values help us produce excellent business results such as we've delivered this year," he said, "but are also the foundation of our everyday behavior."
Then it was time for the festivities. The lights dimmed and out walked the guest entertainer to thundering applause. It was obvious he had been briefed on the company and their stellar results since he started out with a few light-hearted comments about the products and some of the senior managers. It started out great. But as he launched into his routine, a wave of unease rippled through the crowd. The jokes were funny, but more suited for a "boy's night out" than a company meeting. And with each passing joke the tension grew. People began to look around, wondering if it was okay to laugh – they were crudely funny, but.
After a few more jokes the CEO stood up from the head table and walked up on stage. He motioned to the stunned entertainer for the microphone. Buy this time not a fork was moving. He turned to the shocked comedian and said, "Thank you. Your services will no longer be required. You will receive your fee, but your act is finished." He then turned to the audience. "I apologize to you all. This does not fit with our values of respect for all people. I am sorry. I take full responsibility. I firmly believe our values are more important than anything else – they are what make us a great company. How about we enjoy each other's company for the rest of the evening? That's the best entertainment I can think of." And he walked off the stage.
Those in leadership positions cast shadows far and wide across their company. In this case a simple act had a greater impact on the company culture than any speech, any memo, any poster on values or any training course. Because of the CEO's actions everyone in that company realized their values were important.
This article isn't about values; it's about leadership behavior. The behavior of the senior team has a direct impact on the performance and productivity of the entire organization.
Leadership Behavior Impacts Performance
High performance leadership teams understand that their collective and individual behavior casts a positive or negative shadow across the entire organization. And since employees tend to take their cues on what is important and how to behave from their leaders, negative behavior at the top creates negative behaviors far down into the organization, adversely impacting performance and productivity. Whether the leadership team is aware of it or not, their behavior casts a powerful shadow far into their organization. And actions speak louder than words! People watch the behavior of their leaders for clues as to what is accepted and what is not. When the leadership team says one thing and then behaves differently employees quickly figure out the real story. One of the major obligations of leadership is integrity between words and deeds!
When members of the leadership team come into the building and head straight for their offices, head down, not interacting with anyone, that's the story that gets talked about in the canteen and the pubs, not the speech one of them gave on employee engagement and openness. The actions don't match the words.
And an even more powerful shadow cast by the senior team is how they interact with each other. If you want teamwork as a core value across the organization, it better happen at the top or you won't achieve it anywhere in the company, even with the best teambuilding workshops. If two senior executives don't support each other, you can forget about cross departmental support and cooperation. It was this type of poor leadership shadow that led to the nuclear accident at Three Mile Island in the mid-1980s, and countless other examples of suboptimal performance inside organizations. Want to learn more about leadership shadows in your company? Listen to the company jokes; read what's written in the restroom; ask your suppliers; ask your customers. Look in the cultural mirror of your company – it's all there if you are willing to see it.
When was the last time your senior team sat down and had an open discussion about the positive and negative shadows they cast? Try it. It will open up some wonderful avenues of discussion that often lead to breakthrough insights, improved leadership and probably increased performance.
John R Childress is a senior business consultant, visionary and entrepreneur, with thirty years top-tier experience in the field. He helped pioneer the first ground-breaking work on codifying corporate culture and understanding the impact of culture on business performance. He has written and co-authored three books on the subject of leadership and culture based on his consulting experiences with Fortune 500 and FTSE 250 companies.
Born in the mountains of Oregon, raised on the California Coast, and educated at Harvard, John brings a penetrating insight, creativity, and sense of humor to his work.
From 1978 through 2001 John co-founded and then led the highly profitable growth of The Senn-Delaney Leadership Consulting Group, a world-class consulting firm that became acknowledged as a pioneer in culture change. He has demonstrated the ability to create compelling and rigorous intellectual capital, capable of replicable use and revenue generation at the core of consulting engagements. Most of all, John is a classic entrepreneur – possessing an energetic mind, perpetual intellectual curiosity, and an ability to identify profitable business application of his ideas.
Taking early retirement, John has authored two fiction novels; founded Young Virtuosi, a Foundation dedicated to teaching and supporting 10-16 year-old violinists; undertaken multiple fly-fishing expeditions around the world; and spent time at his family home in France.
Most recently he has re-entered the field of consulting as Chairman of The Principia Project, a global network of leadership and change consultants. John's recent work with the CEO of BSkyB, James Murdoch, the CEO of Ford of Europe, and the CEO of Textron Systems (part of Textron Corporation), has focused on creating aligned and productive leadership teams, undertaking turnarounds and supporting significant acquisitions.
John graduated with a BA, Suma Cum Laude, Phi Beta Kappa, from the University of California at Riverside in 1970, gained his MA from Harvard, and was a PhD candidate at the University of Hawaii. He is a man of eclectic interests, each pursued with personal passion. He is a wine connoisseur, owns and operates a Vietnam Fine Art Website, travels extensively for fly-fishing, and is married to a former London Business Woman of the Year.
Many of the performance improvement and turnaround assignments I work on with clients begin with a heavy focus on senior team alignment. Whether it's developing a killer new strategy or implementing a brink of bankruptcy turnaround plan, unless the senior team is pulling together, leading the charge with consistent behaviors and values, it will be difficult to get the rest of the company committed and engaged. If employees hear words of teamwork but see acts of internal competition and finger pointing, they are reluctant to give their total commitment. A negative shadow creates fear and uncertainty, just when we are looking for excitement and courage from the workforce.
I have also developed an organization assessment tool called `Shadow of the Leader' which is a tailored, web-based survey that graphically shows the degree of alignment among the senior team in relation to key values and behaviors required for superior business performance.
We not only give the survey to the senior team, but also to middle management. How would your leadership team stack up on some of these questions?
The leadership team gives encouragement and positive recognition for people's efforts
Our senior team is open and receptive to issues and new ideas
Leadership never places blame, but accepts the accountability for company performance issues
The actions of the senior team indicate that they understand and value teamwork
Leadership in this company encourages open debate and healthy conflict to get at the real facts and solutions
Leadership provides clear feedback and information on business results, strategies, good news and bad news
Our leadership team "walks the talk" and lives the company values and code of conduct
Leadership makes decisions based on facts, not hear-say or politics
The leadership team is passionate and committed to quality (or add customer engagement) at all levels.
If these and other questions were given to middle management, what kind of a shadow would your senior team cast?
A Leadership Team Turnaround
Several years ago one of the best known brands in aviation engine manufacturing had fallen on troubled times and was on the edge of bankruptcy. It seems that the parent company, a large conglomerate, in its wisdom to reduce costs, had outsourced much of the manufacturing of engine parts to subcontractors. In short order the firm went from a manufacturer of high quality engines to an assembly and repair organization. Skilled craftsmen and dye and tool makers were let go since they were no longer needed. While the company had the skills of assembly, they didn't have the skills of supply chain management and quality control and one of the subcontractors supplied them with poor quality crankshafts, several of which broke while being flown on private planes, resulting in massive lawsuits. The company was on the verge of bankruptcy and everyone was blaming someone else. It was union against management, management against the parent company and the lawyers against everyone.
The company needed to get back to its high performance roots, but how? Skill trainings and reorganizations fixed the obvious problems and supply chain management experts helped, but still the company was unable to deliver engines on time and the recall from the previous years was still taking its toll.
When a new CEO came on the scene it was obvious to him that you can't have a high performance company without a high performance leadership team! A quick team alignment survey of the senior team produced a depressing profile – neither the senior team themselves nor middle management saw much evidence of high performance.
A web-based "Shadow of the Leader" survey was sent to both the senior teams and 300 middle managers. While neither group felt the senior team was effective, the results from the middle managers, shown in Exhibit I, tell a sad tale of lack of trust, performance expectations and respect for the senior team.
The same survey was conducted one year later. In between, the senior team focused heavily on their leadership skills, strategic focus, and internal team alignment, and most of all, their behaviors. After several workshops and feedback sessions with employees, the union, suppliers and customers, they realized how their behavior as a team was negatively impacting performance at all levels. One of the key culprits was `excessive silo behavior and defensiveness' on the part of senior executives. They weren't an aligned team at all, but rather a collection of department heads, each trying to protect their own people and areas.
After a year of redefining the required leadership behaviors in every aspect of their work – staff meetings, planning and budgeting processes, behavior on the shop floor – it was time to retake the `Shadow of the Leader' survey once more.
As you can see in Exhibit II, middle managers noticed a dramatic shift in the behavior of the senior team. They were definitely seen by employees as being a high performance leadership team. By the way, business performance in all areas of the company began to improve and everyone now believed the company was well on its way to achieving their turnaround targets!
In fact, a few years later this company won the prestigious Shingo Award for Quality and is once again profitable and a leader in their business segment. And the Union is now in a solid working partnership with management, so much so that three union representatives sit on the senior leadership team!
In closing, I'd like to pose just one question to the reader: What shadow does your senior team cast and how is their behavior impacting performance?

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