Читать книгу The Vitality Imperative - Mickey Connolly - Страница 8
ОглавлениеThe prime requirement for achieving any aim, including quality, is joy in work.
—W. Edwards Deming
First and foremost leadership is about being a human being. The future world will be much more purpose- and values-driven, so we want leaders that clearly understand this. It’s important to make people feel more comfortable working in situations where the win-win is not driven just by your shareholder but by all stakeholders, and that requires a different skill set.
—Paul Polman, CEO, Unilever
Promises are the uniquely human way of ordering the future.
—Hannah Arendt
Pam is quitting.
“I don’t know what I’ll do next,” she says, “I am leaving because almost anything will be better than this.”
A highly regarded manager at one of the largest corporations in the world, Pam is talented, well-compensated, and has much of her career ahead of her.
“We’ve gone through years of trying to do more with less. It has not worked. We move from acquisitions to layoffs to demanding more from overwhelmed employees who begin to hate their work. I don’t want to be part of that toxic cycle any longer. There has to be a better way to lead an organization.”
Pam’s company has experienced sporadic increases in productivity per employee, but they’ve done it by demanding more output, not improving how work gets done. Productivity numbers are now in rapid decline and high performers are on their way out the door.
Pam’s company is learning the hard way that increasing stress is not a sustainable source of productivity improvement.
And Now for Something Completely Different
Susan is not quitting—nor does she want to.
“I love my work, and it’s not just because we are so successful,” she says. “I like how we are successful: our CEO actually believes sustainable success needs a smart business model, co-created and implemented by energized employees. Where I used to work, we assessed employee engagement a lot, but it never really improved. Here, we don’t just assess engagement—we cause it.”
Like Pam, Susan is talented, well compensated, and has much of her career ahead of her. And she loves her company.
“You know what else I love?” she asks. “Both my daughters say they would be proud to work here.”
So, the billion-dollar question is, what’s the difference between Pam and Susan’s organizations?
Susan’s organization is achieving more with less time, money, and stress. And that is the story of vitality.
What Is Vitality?
The Vitality Imperative is about how work gets done. From our experiences with more than four hundred organizations on six continents, we are now certain that Susan’s vitality work culture produces more great achievement with less time, money, and stress than Pam’s.
The definition of “vitality” includes “the capacity to live, grow or develop; the presence of intellectual and physical vigor; energy.” What organization wouldn’t want those attributes? We’ve learned that vitality is good for stockholders, for customers, and for employees—yet it is unusual in large enterprises.
And that is to their detriment. Whoever masters vitality as a source of performance has an extraordinary competitive edge and provides a deeply satisfying life for themselves and the people they lead.
What We Promise You
As you read through this book, we make three promises to you.
First, we promise a fast-moving, quickly valuable reading experience that features:
• Principles. Self-evident rules that provoke new thought and action. While the principles come from what we have observed in our work, they are only valid if they fit with how life works. We trust that an introspective look at your life will serve as proof of the validity of what we say.
• Examples. Brief descriptions of the principles in action. We will contrast examples that destroy vitality with those that create it.
• Practices. Personal and team activities to test the principles and cultivate your personal and organizational effectiveness.
Second, we promise immediate, positive impact in your life if you read with a specific challenge in mind—your personal vitality imperative—that shares these characteristics:
• The challenge is important to you and the organization in which you lead.
• It requires resilient, self-supervising performance from people you lead.
• It requires collaboration across organizational boundaries.
• Success or failure is measurable.
• You are not already confident that it will turn out well.
At the end of each chapter, we’ll invite you to stop and ask yourself, “What do I now see about my vitality imperative, and what action will I take?”
Finally, we promise more days when your leadership feels like an energizing privilege and fewer days it feels like a burden. This promise applies wherever you feel responsible for the success of others: at work, with your family, and in your community.
Of course, our promises only matter if they are relevant to you. So, let’s contrast two forms of leadership so that you can decide if The Vitality Imperative is worth your time and attention.
Vitality or Not: Different choices for leaders, different experiences for employees
In her foreword, Anne Murray Allen makes the case for vitality. Anne’s research fits with our experience over the last thirty years. Energized, committed employees—those who would describe their workplace as exhibiting vitality—create superb, enduring performance. However, creating a Vitality culture is not for the faint of heart and begins with an important choice.
Leaders and philosophers have differed for ages on how to best produce results through others. These can be summed up in two models:
1. The Superior Leader: Put superior people in charge and follow their instructions.
2. The Connected Leader: Put the most connected people in charge and count on them to understand challenges, inspire commitment, and coordinate contribution.
The Superior Leader Model
The Superior Leader approach is, at best, benevolent domination. Many leaders have produced significant value doing exactly this. The results, however, are rarely sustainable after the organization grows enough to require self-supervising work. There are exceptions, but they tend to feature unusual competitive advantages like a unique technology, market opportunity, or a creatively disruptive business model—and even those eventually deteriorate.
Riccardo Muti, a world-renowned musician and conductor, serves as a good example. Muti is said to have musical perception so refined that his hearing is insured for millions of dollars. Currently, he is the music director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and has held important posts in Florence, Philadelphia, Salzburg, London, and Milan. “Muti is brilliant,” says a fellow musician. “Not only his instructions are clear, but also the sanction: what will happen if you don’t do what he tells you to do. It works to a certain point.”
Despite Muti’s brilliance, his tenure at Milan’s famed Teatro alla Scala, known internationally as La Scala, ended badly. In 2005, nearly all of the seven hundred employees of La Scala signed a letter of no confidence to Muti. The letter said, among other things, “You are using us as instruments, not as partners.”
Muti resigned, citing “staff hostility.” He contributed to La Scala with years of musical excellence, and yet, he reached the limits of his way of leading. La Scala was ready to move on without him.
The Connected Leader Model
By contrast, the Connected Leader approach largely depends on leaders with unique gifts in the art of connection. These are women and men who intuitively grasp how to connect people to each other and reality in a way that reveals opportunity and inspires high performance. They tend to spearhead times of surprising achievement that leave people feeling proud and deeply satisfied.
Greg Merten, an influential leader at Hewlett-Packard from 1972–2003, is a great example of a Connected Leader. For much of his time at HP, Greg was a senior vice president responsible for Inkjet supplies. He oversaw operations in the United States, Europe, Asia, and Latin America. Greg felt strongly that a large multinational group of employees and supply-chain partners could operate as a community held together by shared purpose, values, and learning. During his tenure, the business results were extraordinary and turnover of high-performing employees was very low. When he retired, the employees of the HP site in Aguadilla, Puerto Rico engraved the following words on a parting gift:
Thanks, Greg:
For caring more than others thought was wise,
For dreaming more than others thought was practical,
For risking more than others thought was safe,
And for expecting more than others thought was possible.
Those are the words of a community of people who felt connected, cared for, and challenged to do great things.
As HP has since shown, you can damage and lose such vitality. Historically, the problem with the Connected Leader model is that it is dependent upon the presence of unusually gifted people. When those people depart, the deterioration of vitality often begins.
With The Vitality Imperative, we make connected leadership learnable. The principles and practices serve those who choose the Connected Leader approach to organizational success. It is an important choice between two very different methods of control: the personal brilliance of a few or the connected contribution of many—a choice that can literally change the entire course of an organization.
As one executive told us, “I got to a place in the growth of this company where I needed to change. We had succeeded because a few of us were smart, vigilant, and demanding. That was our era of ‘hands-on control.’ However, as we got bigger there was a lot of unsupervised work going on and hands-on control was not enough. We’ve spent the last few years changing how we lead so the company continues to grow. These Vitality principles have helped us enter the era of ‘remote control.’ It has been uncomfortable, sometimes difficult, and well worth it. We are getting more done with less time, money, and stress.”
The Damaging Impact of the Superior Leader Model
We have analyzed thousands of employee surveys across the world and conducted live interviews with employees on six continents. We have discovered that when the Superior Leader approach has outlived its value, the employee experience includes three damaging impacts: fear, mechanics, and manipulation.
1. Fear of embarrassment, fear of failure, fear of retribution, and general fear of disappointing someone in a position of power. When people experience fear, they tend to avoid conflict and suppress open dialogue. That lack of candor, as we will discuss later, is a major cause of waste, stress, and mistrust. Criticism and threat feel normal.
2. Mechanics are the rule. Rather than feeling supported by processes that make the right thing easy, people report how bureaucratic rules and habits keep them from getting work done. They feel dominated by out-of-date processes and measures that impede contribution. Those processes seem to lack a living spirit because they make employees feel like inanimate objects rather than human beings who want to help.
3. Manipulation results in widespread mistrust in the communication coming from leadership. Authenticity feels like the exception, not the norm. Leaders are falsely positive instead of open and honest about the problems facing the company and them personally. Leaders lecture employees about better behavior instead of demonstrating the behavior themselves. The company makes brand promises in marketing campaigns that feel nothing like how it operates day-to-day.
We are not saying that these leaders are committed to fear, mechanics, and manipulation; we are saying that the Superior Leader approach frequently generates these experiences as the enterprise outgrows the personal brilliance of its leaders. If any of your associates are reporting these types of experiences, it is good evidence that Vitality is at risk or already seriously damaged in your organization.
The Positive Impact of the Connected Leader Model
Employees of a Connected Leader organization report very different things than those of a Superior Leader organization. The former group reports a culture of energized high performance, which is The Vitality Imperative in action. When asked what explains their energy, commitment, and success, they report three things:
1. Community is a sense of belonging, rooted in common values and common purpose—the experience of being “in this together,” and looking out for one another on the journey to a shared achievement. In a genuine high-performance community, our differences combined with trust produce brilliance. Whereas most leaders only think about trust when it is at risk, Vitality leaders create trust ahead of time so there is always more trust in the relational bank when they need to make a withdrawal.
2. Contribution means making a meaningful difference. The enjoyment of contribution is deeply human. Have you ever stopped in the middle of mowing a lawn and admired the difference between the short grass and the long grass? We all love being valuable and leaving things better than we found them. When vitality is the norm, people report feeling like the solution rather than the problem. They feel recognized for their contributions and believe that their leaders work to make the right thing easy and the wrong thing hard in support of those contributions.
3. Choice is the victory of commitment over compliance. Each of us chooses to be devoted or not; it cannot be demanded. When vitality is present, people report thoroughly understanding strategy and priorities and personally choose to support success. They report a personal relationship to organizational values and adopt them as their own. This deep clarity and ownership lead to more decision-making discretion. Colleagues feel trusted, and it takes less time to get things done. Connected leaders have the awareness and skill needed to inspire committed choice rather than merely demand compliance.
Vital organizations reliably achieve more with less time, money, and stress. When that energized performance is present, people report experiences of community, contribution, and choice.
Betting on vitality, however, requires different awareness and skill than betting on personal brilliance and position power. For the last twenty-five years, we have appreciated that awareness and skill in leaders around the world, and we now know this: there is a design to vitality, and a committed leader can learn the design and put it to work—both personally and organizationally.
Fanning the Flame of Vitality
Eons ago, humans valued fire and yet could not create it. When lightning struck (literally), people captured the fire and tended to it carefully to keep it available for warmth, protection, and cooking. Keepers of the flame sustained the precious resource. When the fire went out, it was gone until lightning struck again. Eventually, we learned to create fire, not just catch it, and the human experience was transformed.
Vitality is a bit like that. Most leaders are grateful when it strikes but are not all that great at conjuring it at will. From our research into vitality, leaders who reliably create and fan the flame of vitality have organized their awareness and skills into seven promises that are divided into two categories: igniting vitality and sustaining it over time.
In our experience, the defining difference between those who employ the Superior Leader model and those who champion the Connected Leader model is the willingness to engage with and keep these seven vital promises.
Igniting the Fire
Igniting the fire of vitality takes creating the right conditions. Just as you can’t start a fire in the rain without the proper spark or without combustible materials, you cannot create vitality in an organization without inviting connection. This takes intention and commitment. In our experience, there are four key elements that create an environment conducive to igniting vitality:
1. Presence: Awareness without prejudice
Presence is to vitality what oxygen is to fire. Each of the other promises depends on the quality of presence. So, cultivating presence is a crucial act of leadership.
2. Empathy: The power to appreciate the purposes, worries, and circumstances of others
Leadership without empathy is ill-informed at best and bullying at worst. Empathy is not “soft.” It is courageous, skillful, and wise to quickly comprehend the world of another and all influence depends on it.
3. Purpose: The mutual resolve of a community
Authentic purpose lowers supervision costs while improving performance. It is not only logical, but felt emotionally and physically. We will share ways to locate the intersection between the deep personal purposes of individuals and the important purposes of an enterprise.
4. Authenticity: Accelerating achievement through truth
Living true to ourselves and to our word sounds right and yet doing so can be a major challenge. Authenticity, however, is not just a moral imperative, it is also a skill. We will explore how a well-told truth creates connection and turns conflict into useful intelligence.
Sustaining the Fire
Igniting vitality in an organization is not enough, however. If not sustained, cared for, and fed, vitality will eventually blow out. In our experience, there are three more promises that must be kept to sustain vitality in an organization once it has been ignited:
5. Wonder: Fueling the fire and keeping our best day in front of us
Creativity and innovation rest on wonder. In this book, we will show how practices that combine curiosity and possibility free us from imaginary limits and inspire fresh thinking.
6. Timing: The victory of evolution over revolution
Revolution is an act of desperation for people who have been bad at evolution. When we are good at seeing and acting on what it is time for, we create less resistance and more cooperation. We will share what we have learned about timing and how it builds organizational agility.
7. Surprising Results: Making a meaningful, continual, and energizing difference
Vitality grows in cycles of surprise. When people produce valuable results beyond their own expectations, there is widespread, energizing delight. The key is designing and delivering short cycles of surprise, and we will show you how.
This book will explore each of these promises and show how, together, those promises ignite and sustain community, contribution, and choice. The image below summarizes our offer. If it is attractive to you, then we welcome you as a fellow traveler and ask that you read on.
Throughout the book, we will invite you to visit thevitalityimperative.com, an online resource intended to be a “reader’s companion” that supports and deepens your exploration of these ideas.