Coaching World Issue 12: November 2014 | Page 29

1. Action to Being As trait-based, charismatic and situational theories of leadership evolve toward process-driven, adaptive and gender-neutral approaches, type-A assertive behavior is being augmented with the proven value of listening, balance, resilience, calm and presence. Thanks to the work of Richard Boyatzis and Daniel Goleman, an understanding of emotional intelligence’s importance has entered the mainstream. As a result, self-regulation, empathy, social skills and self-awareness are becoming key indicators of leadership effectiveness, especially in situations where a team needs to think outside the box and not just play politics with a boss who makes all the decisions. That’s not to say that decisive, take-charge leadership no longer has value: There is a time and place for both. 2. Vision to Presence In the late 1990s, one of my regular gigs involved facilitating lengthy debates over mission and vision statements, which would ultimately get boiled down to variations on “We are the best … .” Today, most leaders realize what I suspected back then: By itself, the mighty mission statement doesn’t motivate workers. Without an emotional connection—a core sense of meaning and aspiration—humans are not moved to act. Twenty-first-century leaders must be mindful, connected and present to what is happening now. Ellen Langer and Dan Siegel have studied the impact of mindfulness on organizations and leaders for many years. What they have found is slowly making its way into boardrooms around the globe: The ability to drop into a mindful brain state, where one is not analyzing or planning but is instead observing thoughts and sensations, produces a state of presence where new ways of seeing emerge. All truly powerful vision is actually about the present, not the future. People are moved by how a leader expresses a core sense of what’s possible right now. From this place of centered and focused presence, ideas that will transform the future are born. 3. Ego to Eco Awareness Otto Scharmer, founder of MIT’s Presencing Institute, has written about a crucial mind-shift taking place for today’s most effective leaders at individual, organizational and global levels. It’s the move from an I-based awareness (ego perspective) to what he calls an “eco-awareness.” For leaders who embrace their role as a unifier and force of inspiration, Scharmer says this eco-awareness “creates a more empathic and generative quality of collective attention than people are used to experiencing, where too often we simply debate and reconfirm what we already know.” There will always be a need for strong, independent and selfassured—some might even say egocentric—leadership, especially in times of crisis. Yet, more and more often, today’s real leadership challenge lies in bringing together the full panoply of talents a team or an organization can leverage to solve a problem. This collective dynamic is where an eco-aware leader can shine, bringing people together into a systemic sense of cohesion, collaboration and unity. 4. Ethical to Authentic As a core attribute of effective leadership for many years, ethical thought and behavior is as important today as ever. Yet, if we look beneath the surface of traditional business ethics, we find a strong bias toward black-and-white thinking. In a traditional hierarchy, the leader is the ultimate arbiter of right or wrong, and there is typically one directive to follow: “My way or the highway.” As Harvard Business School’s Bill George writes, today’s leaders need not be simply ethical, but authentic. Authentic leaders operate in a more nuanced way; they reflect on decisions from the inside out, using an internal, moral compass and scanning for feedback from peers, subordinates and the environment. The difference is subtle but crucial: Authentic leaders need to make difficult decisions based on listening, consensus and intuition. They need, at times, to acknowledge vulnerability and the limitations of their knowledge, yet still take a strong stand. Authenticity is more challenging than simple judgments of right and wrong, because today’s world is far too complex and there are rarely any easy answers. 5. Knowledge to Wisdom In my last corporate job, I worked as a consultant in a firm whose motto at the time was, “Everything that can be known, can be measured.” It was a great conceit and a great marketing tool, but it was based on a false premise: that objective knowledge would always win out. Today, we know better. Knowledge is important, and a good leader will strive to expand his or her foundation of facts, theory and data, keeping up with the latest research in a wide range of fields. Yet wisdom, in a post-heroic world, calls forth a different stance: knowing what you don’t know and learning to be facile with your internal landscape of thoughts, feelings, and judgments. As Edgar Schein writes, to dwell in the unknown, asking deep and provocative questions, rather than espousing answers, is a more powerful, inspirational and, ultimately, wise ground from which to lead. CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE > Coaching World 29