Читать книгу Managing and Leading Nonprofit Organizations - Paul L. Dann - Страница 6

1 Introduction and Purpose of This Book

Оглавление

I remember my first formal leadership assignment with great clarity. I had been working as a case manager serving delinquent youth placed in foster care. My executive director had called me quite out of the blue to ask if I might assist with a situation that had arisen within one of the organization's community residences for young people who were transitioning from the state psychiatric hospital back into the community. Apparently, the staff within the residence had “run off” the former program director. It was an uprising of the finest order, a vote of no confidence in his leadership such that the entire staff team was threatening to walk.

When I arrived on the site it was clear that I was not welcome. I still recall the steely greeting and the lack of willingness to engage with me, even at the most basic level. Somehow, I represented the administration and there was no way in hell that the team was going to allow me any opportunity to fill a leadership role. Over the next few months I had what could only be called a baptism by fire. As if in the pitch dark I worked carefully to feel my way through the challenges of becoming accepted as a leader by a disenchanted team. More than once I stumbled and found myself tripping over or even into one difficult situation after another. There were certainly lessons learned and each lesson came with its share of bumps and bruises. There were also breakthrough moments that were a combination of happenstance and strategy gone well.

In this instance, I was thrown into a leadership role with only my wits and whatever sensibility I possessed about the human condition and what it would take for people to once again trust someone in a leadership role. Since that time, now more than 40 years later, I have come across many opportunities to develop my leadership and management capacity. Some of these opportunities mirrored my first formal leadership assignment, necessitating that I knock around in the dark with an ever‐emergent understanding of what needed to be done, a live‐and‐learn method. Other learning opportunities were more formal in nature, through training or education; some were supported by the colleagues and mentors I encountered within the field along the way; and still others came from the work itself. The people we serve, the team, and the experiences you have within the nonprofit field combine to teach you while you strive to make a difference in the world.

After four decades it's remarkable to consider what I have learned through this experience about nonprofit leadership and nonprofit management. There are many lessons learned, some of which demonstrate the simplest strategies to implement effective leadership and some that are by nature more complex, requiring more of one's attention as well as practice to master. And then there are the lessons that fall into the category that is simultaneously simple and complex, where the resulting leadership practice is straightforward yet filled with many layers of dynamism, purpose, and potential.

I must admit that leadership strategies that maintain a simultaneous stance of being simple and complex are among the most intriguing and, incidentally, when mastered, the most potent when it comes to advancing your nonprofit leadership capabilities. In accord with Jeffrey Kluger's (2008) work I have come to think about the presence of simultaneous simplicity and complexity within organizational leadership as simplexity. The idea of simplexity used this way can be considered the presence of simple strategies that have within them multiple layers as well as significant implication for leadership practice. This conceptual frame is similar in some ways to Koestler's classic idea of a holon, where something is simultaneously a part of something else while being whole in and of itself (1967). Of note in the conceptual frame of a holon is the importance of the interconnectivity between the two. Like a holon, strategies within simplexity can stand alone and at the same time are interdependent.

An illustrative way to think about the presence and use of simplexity and its potential for impact is to consider how country or blues music is structured. Country music is largely built using three chords with a chorus, blues music with three chords in a repetitive progression. Simple, right? Well, yes and no; if you consider each genre, it will not take you long to realize the depth and scope of the music that has resulted from these simple patterns. Furthermore, if you have ever picked up a guitar and tried to become the next Garth Brooks or B.B. King, you will quickly realize just how tough it is to take the basic chord patterns found in each genre and become the next music legend. Mastering strategies that engage simplexity takes time as well as specific tried‐and‐true strategies. Do not worry: this book will help you with this as well as other strategies to advance your leadership practice.

This book is an effort to capture the lessons learned from decades of effective nonprofit leadership practice. The goal is to help you avoid, if you wish, some of the knocking around in the dark that comes from being unsure about how to move forward with a leadership situation. And while no amount of teaching or sharing of strategies and techniques can make it possible to avoid instances of “baptism by fire,” this book will assist you in developing a leadership toolbox that will help you advance as a nonprofit leader and manager.

The notion of a leadership toolbox is an important one. Leadership performed well requires that you develop a set of capabilities that can be drawn upon to help advance your goals and objectives. Each of these capabilities have their own nuances and require that you become skilled at implementing them. As we discuss in Chapter 2, being successful in leadership requires practice, similar to the way using a tool requires that you know its purpose and that you have worked enough with it to understand what it offers as well as its limitations, not to mention the level of skill that you bring to its use.

Build Your Leadership Toolbox!

Many of us can recall a former leader or manager (you may have one at this very moment!) who knew how to use only one or two tools of what should have been a complete toolbox for leadership practice. The leader who has only a hammer is ill equipped for the complexity we find in today's organizations—not all problems are nails in need of a hammer. At the risk of over‐using the metaphor, try hiring someone to build your house and see how it goes if they know only how to hammer things. It is not a pretty sight, and the desired goal will be destined to fail. It's comical when you think about a carpenter who can manage only the swing of a hammer, pounding away in an endless effort to cut a board or tighten a screw, only to fail in the end. We laugh at the image, but the truth is that many managers and leaders find themselves with only one or two tools that they have become relatively proficient with. Let's not stick to the same few tools and instead commit ourselves to building a proper set of tools to help advance your capabilities to effectively lead.

The goal of this book is to help you develop your leadership and managerial capabilities. The toolbox seen here contains tried‐and‐true tools. Like the toolbox metaphor, the idea behind this book is to share tried‐and‐true strategies that will assist you throughout your leadership practice within the nonprofit industry. By using tried‐and‐true strategies, you will be prepared to refine and develop your leadership toolbox.

Now it is true that some might criticize the use of tried‐and‐true tools as turning a blind eye to what is new and emerging. The intent here is not to exclude new and emergent strategies—in fact we will explore some of what is new and upcoming—but rather to impart what has been learned as successful strategies for advancing leadership over the course of four decades of successful nonprofit leadership.

This book also endeavors to help you heighten your capacity for what I call scholar/practice‐based leadership. The book draws upon what is written about leadership practice in today's complex organizations and importantly delves into practice‐based strategies and techniques. In this way we integrate what is known in the literature about best practices within nonprofit leadership while exploring practical strategies to ensure the efficacy of your leadership practice. It is important to know what works and how your practice is grounded in what is written about effective leadership as you strive to support the people you serve and the organizations you work for.

Together we work through the lessons learned with an eye toward supporting the development of your leadership practice. Chapter 2 identifies the importance of building your practice, not only for yourself but also for those around you. Contrary to the traditional Western Cultural lens, leadership is not a lone wolf activity where a single actor ensures a successful outcome but rather an activity that, when done well, requires processes that engage the skills of the individual, the entire team, and the overall organization.

In Chapter 3 we explore some key leadership models that you can use to identify your own leadership approach. This is a 1,000‐foot flyover and could be a book in and of itself. The goal here, however, is to provide you with some sense of where your leadership practice either lives or will live as you grow into your leadership style and approach. You will also read about some classic conceptual frames for leadership that I have found to be extremely helpful. Like our box of tried‐and‐true leadership tools, many of the classic frames for leadership practice have true value as we develop our skills and capabilities.

In Chapter 4 we delve into strategies for impacting organizational culture. Here we encounter the conceptual frame of simplexity where many of the strategies are at once “simple and complex.” As in the earlier chapters, Chapter 4 will provide you with an opportunity to enhance your leadership practice as well as the practice of those around you within the organization. The organization's culture is critical to the success of any nonprofit agency and so we give the importance of establishing a positive organizational culture its due in this chapter, returning to these important ideas as appropriate throughout the book.

Chapter 5 explores the practice of Generative Leadership, where leadership development is achieved through leadership in action. Generative Leadership provides you with a way to advance your own, your team's, and your organization's capacity to grow effective leadership. In many ways this becomes the secret sauce for you and your organization's continued success, so be ready to make use of the strategies that are imparted here.

In Chapter 6 we underscore the benefits that can come from engaging our most precious resource: our employees. Through performance management and employee engagement we unlock more of the strategies that have proven to be extraordinarily successful when working to advance leadership practice within and across the organization. Simplexity abounds here as well, particularly when you consider how simple yet critically important the ideas are for ensuring your team or organization's ability to achieve its nonprofit mission.

Chapter 7 explores the use of effective systems to realize desired outcomes for your organization. Thoughtful development and use of systems are critical to ensuring that you can achieve the goals and objectives identified as part and parcel of your organization's purpose, mission, and vision. As you read this chapter, you will see the importance of ensuring that you have built a dynamic and thoughtful set of systems that complement your structure and the values, beliefs, and vision that you hold essential to achieving the organization's mission.

I would be remiss if this book did not also explore the topic of change and the importance of establishing a leadership practice that has the capacity for change management. Chapter 8 does just that by discussing various strategies to ensure effective change management. In today's complex organizations, having a leadership practice that is equipped to manage and guide your team and organization through change is essential. We take time to ensure that the capacity for change management is multilayered by going beyond the prowess of the individual leader to change management at the team and the organizational level.

In addition, do not forget the importance of conflict management, which is explored in detail within Chapter 9. Conflict is a part of everyday organizational life and when it's managed well, it can become a source of growth and development for you, your team, and the entire organization.

In Chapter 10 I share some of the techniques and strategies I have used to engage and advance my team. Many of the strategies here are drawn from years of experience supervising and motivating team members to be their best. Your ability to lead effectively is directly connected to your capacity to develop a strong team. Given this, I think you will find this chapter quite helpful.

In Chapter 11 we explore the world of leadership that lives just outside the metes and bounds of your own organization by helping you to understand the nature of strategic alliances, how they can benefit you, and what opportunities they represent. It is important, as you develop your leadership capacity, to consider how your leadership practice engages with those who are outside the internal activities that typically draw attention and cry out for your focus. Knowing how to exercise your leadership practice with external stakeholders will provide you with new and interesting opportunities to help advance the work and mission of your organization.

Chapter 12 is an effort to bring it all together, knowing of course that each chapter in and of itself will become a resource for you. Within this context I recommend that you take time to read this book from cover to cover, yet also feel free to move between the chapters in a way that serves your current context and interest. In this way the book can become like a home‐repair book. If you found one morning that your pipes had burst (Chapter 4 in our imaginary home‐repair book), you would not start reading from Chapter 1, would you? With the water pouring down I am confident that you would jump straight to Chapter 4 and realize that step one is to cut off the water. Feel free to use this book in the same manner. For example, when I walked into my first leadership role, now more than 40 years ago, I would have turned to Chapters 4 and 6 before reading Chapter 1.

As you will see in the Appendix, I have also included several tools that relate to specific topic areas within the various chapters that you can use to assess your own, your team's, or your organization's leadership and management practice. Each tool is connected to what is explored in a specific chapter and as a result the tools can be used to support as well as advance the information in the related chapter. For example, the Employee Engagement and Performance Assessment tool can help you to operationalize what is discussed in Chapter 6, not only for yourself but also for your team. Each tool has been tried and tested in my own leadership practice and has played a role in advancing effective leadership practice at the individual, team, and organizational level. I think you will find that these tools serve you well as you work to move from theory to practice and implement the various strategies shared within this book.

Managing and Leading Nonprofit Organizations

Подняться наверх