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The Leadership Myths

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Title: The Leadership Myths


1
The Leadership Myths
  • Its rare
  • Its found at the top
  • Its about being super-human

1 2 3
With acknowledgement to Bev Alban-Metcalfe of
www.realworld-group.com
2
Sparkling leadership
  • As you look back what sparkling moments stand out
    for you as experiences of being really well lead
    or managed? What did you learn about worked well?
  • As you look back what sparkling moments stand out
    for you as examples of where you were really
    effective as a leader or someone making a
    positive contribution to change? What did you
    notice worked well for you at that time?

3
What is leadership?
  • Some view leadership as a set of traits or
    competencies possessed by certain individuals
  • others view leadership as an emergent social
    phenomena, a social process shaped by
    relationship within groups.
  • Bolden, 2004

4
Law of the Situation
  • Leadership is transient and contextual
  • Where knowledge and experience are needed the
    person who can is the right person to do it.
  • Not all leadership should be determined by
    position power yet people with authority should
    be prepared to exercise it.

5
The essence of leadership and management
  • is the creation of environments in which people
    can be creative.. Where they can exercise power.
  • leadership can only be judged by results
  • valued outcomes for users and their supports,
    and other key stakeholders

6
Three Domains for Improvement
  • Leadership The art of getting things done by
    enabling others to achieve more than they could
    or would do otherwise.
  • Improvement Science The study and practice of
    enhancing the performance of processes and
    systems of work.
  • Care Delivery Systems The practical realities
    and future possibilities of how care is
    experienced by professionals, users and the
    public.

7
The power lies in the overlap
Leadership in Health Social care
Improvement of health social care
Leadership for theImprovement of Health Social
Care
Leadership for ImprovementImprovement of
Leadership
8
The Successful Leader
  • Communicates clear vision,direction, and roles.
  • Strategically influences and engages others.
  • Builds relationships (with individuals, within
    teams, and across boundaries).
  • Challenges thinking and encourages flexibility
    innovation.
  • Develops, enables, and encourages others.
  • Drives for results and improvement.
  • Practices political astuteness.
  • Displays self-awareness.
  • Commits with passion to values and mission.
  • Demonstrates management skill.

9
The Successful Practitioner of Improvement Science
  • Sees whole systems and understands how they work.
  • Centres improvement on the experiences and voice
    of users/clients, carers, and staff.
  • Seeks to translate evidence into practice.
  • Exposes processes to mapping, analysis and
    redesign.
  • Applies engineering concepts of flow, capacity,
    demand, and waste-reduction.
  • Encourages flexible, innovative rethinking of
    processes and systems.

More
10
The Successful Practitioner of Improvement Science
  • Facilitates active local improvement, innovation,
    and reflective practice.
  • Sets up measurement to demonstrate impact.
  • Works constructively with the human dimension
    (psychology) of change.
  • Sustains past improvement and drives for
    continuous improvement.
  • Spreads improvement ideas and knowledge widely
    and urgently.

11
Successful Care Delivery Systems
  • Deliver evidence-based care in a timely,
    effective and caring manner.
  • Earn and retain the confidence of users, their
    supporters, and the politicians.
  • Operationalise a strategic vision of the future
    (encompassing trends in society, technology,
    funding, and the workforce).
  • Link systems-design to a values-driven
    understanding of the experiences of service
    users.
  • Create seamless-working across all types of
    boundaries for the benefit of service users and
    staff.

12
Successful Care Delivery Systems
  • Prioritise and focus limited development
    resources on the key issues and leverage points
    in the system.
  • Continuously increase capacity to serve by
    improving effectiveness and efficiency.
  • Engage practitioners and other operational staff
    in active improvement of the systems of care.
  • Develop organisational cultures that are
    receptive and positive environments for change.
  • Ensure that all central support functions service
    the requirements of care delivery.

13
Leadership Qualities Framework
14
Common Communication Development Decision-making I
ntegrity Role model Negotiation Knowledge Professi
onal competence Setting standards Flexibility
focus
Leadership Inspiration Transformation Direction Tr
ust Empowerment Creativity Innovation Motivation
Management Delegation Performance Planning Account
ability Finance Teamwork team
building Monitoring evaluating Formal
supervision Control
Leadership and Management (the TOPPS version)
15
(No Transcript)
16
Success factors for leadership
  • having a vision for their organisation which
    transcends short-term issues and targets
  • having the skills to communicate their vision to
    others
  • building trust among different stakeholders
  • being passionate about high performance and high
    quality in their organisations
  • being authentic believing in what they do and
    transmitting this to their staff and those around
    them

From NHS Confederation Report- The challenges of
leadership in the NHS. 2007
17
Success factors for leadership
  • being visible to their workforce and to
    stakeholders walking the shop-floor and knowing
    many of their frontline staff by name
  • being their own person being strong enough to
    do it your way

From NHS Confederation Report- The challenges of
leadership in the NHS. 2007
18
Success factors for leadership
  • being prepared to shape their own destiny rather
    than simply feeling deluged by external pressures
    and initiatives
  • building good teams around them which
    undoubtedly helps to avoid getting ground down by
    the day-to-day demands of the job
  • being able to read the strategic direction of the
    service over a longer time framework and
    translate this into what it means for their
    organisation and then communicating this
    locally.

From NHS Confederation Report- The challenges of
leadership in the NHS. 2007
19
The time challenge
  • the best leaders are those that deal with the
    top-down pressure and create space in which they
    can develop and pursue strategy. However, this is
    difficult and has to be achieved in spite of the
    system.
  • Finding of Goodwin, N. date Leadership and the
    UK health service. Health Policy, 51(1)14960
  • Need to defend time for ad hoc contact- being
    visible around the organisation.
  • Emails, meetings and other demands compete!

From NHS Confederation Report- The challenges of
leadership in the NHS. 2007
20
Transformational leaders are
  • Charismatic Providing role models, aligning
    others around a vision.
  • Inspirational Providing meaning and optimism
    about the vision and its attainability
  • Intellectually stimulating Encourages
    questioning of basic assumptions, and to consider
    problems from new and unique perspectives.
  • Individually considerate Developing the
    potential of others.

21
Transformational leadership- roots
  • James MacGregor Burns transformation as that
    which turns followers into leaders and leaders
    into moral agents.
  • Transformational leadership occurs when people
    elevate each other into a higher level of
    motivation and morality.
  • Thus inextricably linked with the social meaning
    that people attach to their work.

22
A competency based approach is not enough.

Degree to which engaging or transformational
Need is to enact competencies in a
transformational way

Degree of competence
With acknowledgement to Bev Alban-Metcalfe of
www.realworld-group.com
23
Golemans (1995) five independent but mutually
reinforcing components of effective leadership
  • moral purpose
  • understanding the change process
  • relationship building
  • knowledge creation and sharing and
  • coherence making.

24
New paradigm approach
  • Less concerned with Great man models of
    leadership
  • More concerned with change/improvement
  • Transformational- visionary leadership
  • More soft stuff emphasis on working through
    others

With acknowledgement to Bev Alban-Metcalfe of
www.realworld-group.com
25
New paradigm approach
  • Leaders with more faith in other people than they
    have in themselves (and they have a lot of faith
    in themselves!)
  • Leader as servant and partner
  • Ambition, optimism, openness and personal
    humility
  • Importance of connectedness and inclusiveness

With acknowledgement to Bev Alban-Metcalfe of
www.realworld-group.com
26
Reflections of Sir Gerry Robinson
  • Recognise ability
  • Management is not an exercise in bludgeoning
    people. It is about getting people on side, about
    making them feel important. The secret is to make
    them feel special, part of an organisation that
    works, where they play their part.
  • Chimes with Alimo-Metcalfe research on leadership

From NHS Confederation Report- The challenges of
leadership in the NHS. 2007
27
Reflections of Sir Gerry Robinson
  • Achieve role clarity.
  • Give CEOs more control of their organisations.
  • There is too much interference from the centre
    and managers are not left to get on with the job.
    Clinicians dont feel management is there to lead
    or to set the rules.. I felt that managers do
    not believe they have the right to manage.

From NHS Confederation Report- The challenges of
leadership in the NHS. 2007
28
Reflections of Sir Gerry Robinson
  • Felt that managers should be given clear
    objectives and a budget and allowed to get on
    with it.
  • A good approach to working with complexity-
    specify ends not means.
  • Sir Gerry is solution focused! It is about
    making the right things happen and stopping the
    wrong things happening.

From NHS Confederation Report- The challenges of
leadership in the NHS. 2007
29
New paradigm approach
  • Leadership is a contact sport not a virtual
    reality

With acknowledgement to Bev Alban-Metcalfe of
www.realworld-group.com
30
Conclusions from TLQ research
  • A transformational or engaging leader may be
    defined as someone who encourages and enables the
    development of an organisation that is
    characterised by a culture based on integrity,
    openness and transparency, and genuine valuing of
    others.

With acknowledgement to Bev Alban-Metcalfe of
www.realworld-group.com
31
Conclusions from TLQ research
  • This shows itself in concern for the development
    and well-being of others, in the ability to unite
    different groups of stakeholders in articulating
    a joint vision, and in delegation of a kind that
    empowers and develops potential, coupled with the
    encouragement of questioning and of thinking
    which is critical as well as strategic.

With acknowledgement to Bev Alban-Metcalfe of
www.realworld-group.com
32
Conclusions from TLQ research
  • Transformational leadership is essentially
    open-ended in nature, enabling organisations not
    only to cope with change, but also to be
    proactive in shaping their future. At all times
    transformational behaviour is guided by ethical
    principles.

With acknowledgement to Bev Alban-Metcalfe of
www.realworld-group.com
33
Research using the Team Leadership Questionnaire
  • Showing genuine concern has the biggest impact
    on motivation.
  • Being interested in your needs and aspirations
    and how thing feel for you.

With acknowledgement to Bev Alban-Metcalfe of
www.realworld-group.com
34
Gowdy and Rapps observations
  • managers constantly modeled good practice
  • focused less on traditional features of
    management such as attending meetings, preparing
    reports and proposals
  • spent most of their time helping either users or
    staff to achieve their goals

35
As they say..
  • My favourite thing to say is, You help people
    figure out what it is they want you figure out
    how to help them get it then you figure out how
    to get them to keep it. Mixed in with all that
    practical stuff is some kind of friendship, being
    a vehicle for them to broaden their support
    network... I think thats critical (Gowdy and
    Rapp, 1989, p.49).

36
Study of Crisis Resolution Teams highlights
  • IMPACT OF
  • High concern with and engagement of staff
  • Encouraging a shared vision
  • Team leadership capabilities

With acknowledgement to Bev Alban-Metcalfe of
www.realworld-group.com
37
Study of Crisis Resolution Teams highlights
  • CRTs with higher admission rates had less
    positive culture-particularly leadership quality
    at team level re engagement of staff
  • Individual productivity of staff also associated
    with this factor
  • vision and team leadership significantly
    associated with attitudes to work and well-being
    at work but not on performance

With acknowledgement to Bev Alban-Metcalfe of
www.realworld-group.com
38
The gender issue
  • Women more transformational than men on all
    leadership scales, and significantly more
    transformational on most of the scales,
    irrespective of whether the person rating them
    was male or female
  • Alimo-Metcalfe, B. Alban-Metcalfe, J. (2003).
    'Gender Leadership A Masculine Past, but a
    Feminine Future?'. Proceedings of the BPS Annual
    Occupational Psychology Conference, Brighton,
    January 8-10th, pp 67-70.

With acknowledgement to Bev Alban-Metcalfe of
www.realworld-group.com
39
Lessons learned from Australia-, Managing Change
in Long Term Conditions Liz Watson, 2006.
Broader lessons included
  • Respect individual responses to change- cf-
    motivational interviewing.
  • Compromise.. But not too much
  • Manage yourself and your emotions

40
  • Think about the leaders youve been inspired
    with over the course of your working life. Almost
    without exception they will be people with high
    self-esteem, whose actions are congruent with
    their espoused views, who understand their own
    beliefs and values and who have a sense of their
    own direction.

41
  • ..To be truly effective as a leader youve got
    to be comfortable with who you are and what you
    are about. Essentially concentrating on leading
    yourself is a powerful way to grow your ability
    to lead others.
  • Chris Lake. Programme Director. Developing
    Leadership Potential, Roffey Park Management
    Institute. Cited by Peter Gilbert

42
Kouzes and Posner describe five fundamental
actions which people said build the credibility
of those they wanted to lead them.
  • Know your constituents.
  • Stand up for your beliefs.
  • Speak with passion.
  • Lead by example.
  • Conquer yourself.

43
Courageous leadership and the challenging of
basic assumptions
  • e.g. Delegation of nursing management to local
    authority social services is therefore a definite
    route to partnership for Long Term Conditions
    s31 health act flexibilities allow ,
  • but will anyone dare take it? .
  • Lorimer, R. (2006) p47

44
Four principles of effective team leadership
  • Clients are people
  • Learning for a Living
  • Making something from nothing
  • Focus on client outcomes

45
The challenges
  • financial pressures and targets encourage
    short-term thinking
  • ..and research suggests reduced efficiency of the
    wider system
  • managers are forced to focus upwards (e.g. to DH)
    and not across their trusts towards the interests
    of patients and staff

From NHS Confederation Report- The challenges of
leadership in the NHS. 2007
46
The challenges
  • some policies, in particular payment by results,
    encourage trust boards to think about the
    survival of their own organisation rather than
    the wider health community
  • the role of the chief executive, and how success
    should be measured, is not always clear

From NHS Confederation Report- The challenges of
leadership in the NHS. 2007
47
The challenges
  • training can be inadequate, or non-existent, at
    all levels of management
  • there is often a lack of evidence about what
    works if evidence were available, it could be
    used to inform decision-making
  • decisions take a long time to implement because
    of reliance on consensus

From NHS Confederation Report- The challenges of
leadership in the NHS. 2007
48
The challenges
  • Engaging practitioners is key to success and
    often falls short at every level
  • there is a culture within the NHS which
    encourages bullying, and this stifles leadership
    potential
  • the size of the workload and unrelenting pressure
    can stop managers from carrying out the work they
    should be doing
  • many managers stay in post for only two or three
    years, while practitioners tend to remain at the
    same trust for many years
  • while there are good even exemplary leaders
    in the NHS, there are not enough of them

From NHS Confederation Report- The challenges of
leadership in the NHS. 2007
49
The challenges
  • middle managers, sandwiched between clinicians
    and senior managers, are often disempowered and
    need more support
  • stability and more autonomy would encourage the
    development of new leaders
  • every leader needs to prioritise supporting
    leaders in the level below.

From NHS Confederation Report- The challenges of
leadership in the NHS. 2007
50
The filling in the sandwich
  • Middle management the critical layer between
    corporate management and practitioners.
  • The most stressed group in the NHS workforce.
  • Often feel disempowered- so like practitioners
    exercise what power they have by saying no or
    taking flight from authority.
  • Thus need to link their development strongly with
    neighbouring layers in hosting organisations

From NHS Confederation Report- The challenges of
leadership in the NHS. 2007
51
Can leadership be learned?
  • YES, BUT.
  • Leadership is a set of skills but it is dispersed
    and dependent upon the context and the job
    needing to be done.
  • How you do it is as important as what you do!- be
    transactional in a transformational-engaging way
  • There are significant emotional components
  • Reflective practice and learning is needed
    rather than books or story-telling alone
  • Context, methods, and participants must be
    carefully matched for success

52
Processes of development
  • ..leadership practice takes shape in the
    interactions between people and their situations,
    rather than from the actions of an individual
    leader (Spillane, 2004)

53
Processes of development
  • ..if we consider leadership as a collective
    process rather than an individual property then
    we need to challenge the traditional approach of
    sending only senior management on leadership
    development programmes, and encouraging others in
    the organisation to follow the leader.
  • Bolden, 2005, p.7

54
What are the major blocks to the success of
leadership development initiatives?
1 2 3
  • Senior managers- excluding themselves
  • Senior managers- discrepant views with
    subordinates regarding what leadership is
  • Senior managers- simply blocking development

From Alimo-Metcalfe, B. et al (2000). British
Companies at the beginning of the 21st Century.
Factors that impede leadership development
initiatives. London Carers Research Forum.
With acknowledgement to Bev Alban-Metcalfe of
www.realworld-group.com
55
Development to make a difference
  • Take a longer term view which encompasses the
    wider system.
  • Create more time for really important issues-
    such as improving delivery and staff
    understanding of the wider strategy.
  • Focus on practitioners, middle managers and the
    next generation of CEOs.
  • Aim for more stability
  • Ensure that espoused values are expressed in
    behaviour (e.g. by tackling bullying).

From NHS Confederation Report- The challenges of
leadership in the NHS. 2007
56
Development to make a difference
  • Context requires a a much wider and more subtle
    range of influencing and persuasion skills than
    would be required in some other settings.
  • Pay attention to the skills required for a much
    more complex world in which thinking, listening
    and influencing will become much more important
    (12).
  • Develop sophisticated skills to deal with the
    emotional side of organisational life that are
    probably even more important than the need to
    improve technical skills
  • NHS North West chief executive Mike Farrar

From NHS Confederation Report- The challenges of
leadership in the NHS. 2007
57
Some distant reflections from the turn of the
century!
  • Goodwin (2000) advocated a move away from a focus
    on individual skill development towards a local
    leadership mindset.
  • Leadership development as mandatory, locally
    focussed, based around action-learning
    principles, and concentrated on
    inter-organisational and shared leadership
    between organisations rather than leader-follower
    relationships within organisations.
  • Goodwin, N. (2000). The national leadership
    centre and the national plan. British Journal of
    Health Care Management. 6(9), 399-401.
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