Steel Construction Vol 40 No 2 - Tubular Steel Feature | Page 28
SAISC LEADERSHIP
comment AND MANAGEMENT
Tough times
call for aMan(ager)
of Steel
By Hylton Gudmanz,
Executive Coach and Strategy Implementation Consultant
[email protected]
“We cannot become
great by minimising our
capacity to deliver. Our
teams must withstand a
heavy workload without
buckling under the stress,
and serve stakeholders
with an attitude that
encourages client
retention and ongoing
business projects.”
26 Steel Construction Vol. 40 No. 2 2016
Clark Kent a.k.a. Superman is known for his
super-strength, agility, laser-eyed stare and
his ability to deflect the bullets of attackers.
He is a unique, competent, durable and
tough opponent, as we are bound to see
in the forthcoming Superman v Batman
movie. Superman is also, thankfully, a
compassionate person, protective of his
adopted planet and responsive to its people.
Our people need to adapt, innovate and
advance, not reduce and shrink back.
We cannot become great by minimising
our capacity to deliver. Our teams must
withstand a heavy workload without
buckling under the stress, and serve
stakeholders with an attitude that
encourages client retention and ongoing
projects.
Twenty-first Century managers, especially
those within the steel industry, are
increasingly being called on to display all of
the characteristics mentioned above. Many
of us have had parents, teachers and bosses
who trained us to be tough, with little room
for error or questioning authority. This
“grooved” us into a certain way of behaving.
A way that honours consistency, stability,
predictability and control. Unfortunately,
this is no longer the default pattern of
business, as I’m sure you’ve discovered.
Douglas McGregor (MIT Sloan)
differentiated between Theory X and
Y: a belief that people are essentially
unmotivated, untrustworthy and need to
be controlled to perform (X) versus a belief
that people are intrinsically motivated,
inherently creative and will unlock drive
to perform if shown the value of a goal
(Y). Which is the default stance in your
organisation, or your team? I’m guessing
there is a blend, but it may favour a bit
more “X” than is helpful.
The world we live in has been described
using an acronym borrowed from the
U.S. Military, VUCA, meaning “volatile,
uncertain, complex and ambiguous”.
Futurist Bob Johansen has said that the
antidote is “vision, understanding, clarity
and agility”. In essence, we need to lead
(envision, enable), manage (provide clarity
of focus, standards, priorities) and coach
(listen, probe to really understand, reduce
complexity by “chunking” things into
manageable segments).
The Manager of Steel needs to be strong, for
sure, and this means resilience, confidence
in his or her unique value contribution
and personal strengths and competence in
completing the work of the organisation.
Deflecting personal attacks comes from
a secure place of knowing self through
experience and overcoming hardship. Open
leadership is probably required: sharing our
“thinking” and receiving feedback graciously
is well described in the recent book by
team leadership expert, Patrick Lencioni.