Authority Relationships (Re-post from OD Net)

Hi Rosa,

I love what you say about freedom and authority as complementary. In response to your question, I believe that if I don’t continue to work my reactions to my primary customer that I become part of the system. It is very tempting for me, especially with my longest standing clients, to focus on the rest of their organization, and stop processing my reactions to them. That very temptation is a reaction to them! Or at least to their positional authority. Why risk mucking up a relationship that has lasted ten years and puts bread on my table? I experience the very tug that leads others in the system to tread lightly with the leader, and to only be open about what seems safe.

It’s the dance of authority that permeates the system at every hierarchical interface. If I don’t get off my duff and be as real as I can at my level, I am reinforcing a façade at every other level.

At my best, I contract and re-contract this with my primary sponsor. At my worst, I let it slide, while I occupy myself with other matters. It takes discipline. It helps to frame the need for candor with one’s boss as part of the overall process of facilitating a healthier organization. I’ve never had such a conversation backfire, to the best of my knowledge, even though I fear each such conversation as potentially work ending. I’m very irrational in such matters, and I believe most people are.

To some extent my od interventions provide structure so that information flows more freely despite authority relationships. And if the customer will sponsor deep change, I build in culture that sustains the flow.

I see authority relationships as part of the essence of human existence, mirroring our early pre-cognitive relationship with powerful figures (our parents or primary caretakers). We then project the hopes and fears and dances of those first two years onto every authority figure in our lives. The possibilities, if one knows how to connect and lead, are for deep, rich and fulfilling engagement. If one mismanages authority, though abdication or emotional abuse (unintended or not), the spirit of individuals and systems gets sucked dry.

Regards,

Gil

—–Original Message—–
From: Rosa Zubizarreta [mailto:rosalegria@igc.org]
Sent: Monday, June 29, 2009 6:26 PM
To: Gilmore Crosby; odnet@lists.odnetwork.org
Subject: Re: [Odnet] Question about article references, frameworks,

Dear Gil,

I agree completely with what you wrote below…

> I see clear and effective authority as a necessary condition for
> participation, and as dependent on participation.
> And everyone has personal and positional authority, whether the
> janitor or the CEO. As the saying goes, “without structure, there is no freedom.”
>

And also, with what you had written in your earlier post on this subject:

> Human
> systems need some degree of freedom and “self-organizing” or they
> become stale. Human systems also need alignment/focus which comes from
> (or fails to
> come) from leadership.

I think the reason I am calling “freedom” and “authority” a polarity, is NOT because I see them as inherently contradictory, but precisely because I see them both as necessary “poles” — different yet complementary, and equally necessary.

In fact my sense is that each without the other, becomes a “shadow” of itself… Freedom without any authority turns into license, authority without any freedom turns into tyranny.

And, I’d love to read more of your thoughts and experiences regarding the
following:

> authority – how I manage it,
> how I deal with people above and below me, how I manage peer and
> cross-functional relations – is a huge variable in personal and
> systemic performance. One which appears to me to be as big a challenge
> for OD people, including myself, as it is for the customers.

With all best wishes,

Rosa

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Whole systems change

My colleagues on OD Net are discussing “whole systems change” which is the art of creating a high performance high satisfaction culture in an organization. Carefullly orchestrated events where a cross-section is brought together to create the new culture are critical to such change. However, many in my profession miss the importance of authority relationships to a healthy culture. Trying to “move beyond” such relationships is a mistake, and almost cetainly an indication of “authority issues.” Working towards a rational approach to and support of authority is a more sustainable path for human beings. Hence, whole systems change must work with and through the authority structure, cascading the change from layer to layer in intact work groups, in conjunction with training and cross-functional events. This is the approach mastered by my father, Robert P. Crosby, and this is an approach that gets consistant results.

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Survey Feedback – A powerful and often misunderstood tool

A colleague in the Nuclear Industry wrote me recently seeking advice on how to promote “Human Performance Awareness” in a group of power plants.  While much has been written within the Nuclear Industry on how to define “Human Performance” (for example INPO, the Institute for Nuclear Power Operators, has some excellent materials for how to think systemically when doing root cause analysis of human performance related events), how to implement the desired behaviors remains elusive.  The following discussion focuses on a powerful yet misunderstood tool for creating the open culture necessary for discussing and improving performance: surveys and survey feedback.

 

A survey of 600 companies conducted by my father, Robert Crosby, and his associates in the early 1980s indicated that “30% of boss-employee work relationships were so sour that they needed to be addressed if meaningful, effective work was to follow” (Robert Crosby, The Authentic Leader, 1998).  Without the ability of management at all levels to hear employee concerns (even if those concerns are conveyed in a less than professional manner) without becoming defensive and combative, no error prevention program (or nuclear safety culture) can fully succeed.  Survey feedback, when properly managed, is one of the fastest routes to reinforcing the desired behaviors at an organizational scale.

 

The nuts and bolts of survey feedback are as follows:

 

1.  Let the people who filled out the survey interpret their own data.  This may seem radical, but it’s actually a return to the methods of Rensis Likert, Ron Lippitt, and other pioneers of survey work.  They knew that no one, no matter their expertise, can provide as accurate an interpretation of their own data as the people who were surveyed.  Equally important, by identifying problems (and strengths!) via data, survey feedback helps break the ice on discussing difficult issues. 

 

2.  Use the process to address and strengthen supervisor and employee relations at all levels.  Effective hierarchical relationships (boss and employees) are critical to achieving production, quality, and safety goals.    Problem solving, whether focused on the hierarchical relationship itself, or on tasks, must include face to face dialogue.  Attempts to deal with these relationships while simultaneously avoiding them (such as with anonymous feedback) are more likely to hurt strained relations than to help.

 

3.  Start at the top and “cascade.”  Survey feedback, like many activities, is easiest to lead if the leadership starts with themselves, and then moves the activity downwards into the organization.   This lends credibility to the process, and allows each layer to participate before facing the potentially difficult task of survey feedback dialogue with their own direct reports.   

                        

“We know what does not work.  It does not work to survey people and not show them the results.  It also does not work to survey people and have top management or an outside expert develop recommendations (prescriptions).  It does not work to survey people and have a general session and report the results to all concerned and do nothing else.  These approaches all have been tried hundreds of times and, with rare exception, been found wanting.  People become irritable and defensive, with a resulting lowered morale and decreased work efficiency.”

Robert Crosby, Walking the Empowerment Tightrope

 

3.  Provide skilled facilitation.  You can’t expect teams with strained boss-employee work relationships to improve those relationships without skilled help.  In a nutshell, these teams need to move from generalizations based (often loosely) on past behavior (“you can’t trust him!”) to reciprocal agreements (i.e., the boss and the employees take responsibility and/or commit to doing things differently) about future behavior.  Even groups with strong work relations benefit from periodic facilitation (all groups and organizations have blind spots).  A cadre of the organization’s own people can be trained to provide some, and eventually most, of this service.

 

4.  Survey both task and relationship factors.  As long as you cover both, and follow a feedback process similar to that outlined here, what survey you use becomes a less important variable.  CKM works with surveys ranging from 160 computer tabulated questions to a survey of 10 questions written on a flipchart.  While choosing the right tool is important, it’s the process that yields the results.

 

5.  Facilitate Specific Action.  The focus of the sessions, especially when there’s strained relations, has to be on future actions/commitments, not on debating the past.

 

6.  Structure Follow-Through.  All groups should meet in some manner (staff meetings, tool box sessions, etc.) to assess progress, discuss and clear up new misunderstandings, develop new actions, and so on.  Many groups will need skilled facilitation during follow-through.

 

With an annual survey, the process of administration and continuous improvement becomes important (see graph).  Unfortunately, this is where most organizations put all their focus.  The process with the most potential, survey feedback where supervisors and their crews work with their own data, is rare.

 

In sum, while the quality of facilitation is a key variable, the use of data to promote and focus dialogue is a basic strategy that can be applied in many ways.

 

“They who put their pencil to the survey paper should

also see and work the data.”                                

 Dr. Ronald Lippitt* (from a private conversation with

John Scherer and Robert Crosby)

*One of the early pioneers of Organizational Development

“There is no more effective way than survey feedback (turning data into action) to involve people quickly at the key points of data gathering, problem solving, solution recommending, action, and follow-through.”

Robert Crosby (Walking the Empowerment Tightrope, 1992, )

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The Leadership Paradox: the Shared Leadership Traits of Gandhi and Patton – excerpted from my free e-newsletter

Modern jargon about leadership, such as “coaching” and “servant leadership,” evokes images of a kindly leader including their people in “consensus” decision-making and providing friendly support to them as they get things done. An even more radical notion, supported by the new science of chaos theory, is to eliminate positional leadership altogether, replacing it with leaderless/self-managing teams. Images such as General George S. Patton Jr. growling as he leads his troops against the Nazis hardly seem relevant in the new kinder gentler paradigm. But General Patton, or the equally tough Mahatma Gandhi, have exactly the traits needed to lead people today, and since the dawn of time.

 

Patton and Gandhi in the same breath? Absolutely. Both were self-differentiated leaders, in the full spirit of Murray Bowen and Edwin Friedman’s theory of leadership. Both trusted their inner guidance systems, and took clearly defined stands which at times frightened and angered people who were allegedly on “their side,” such as Patton’s superiors, and Gandhi’s “middle-class” countrymen. In a military dominated by men who thought one should wait until they had vast numerical superiority before attacking, Patton stayed firm with the belief that “dig in and you are dead.” He repeatedly raced around the defending Nazis, and arguably could have ended the war months earlier, with great savings in lives, if he hadn’t been stopped time and again by his own superiors. Gandhi was so committed to the path of independence for India that he placed his life on the line, through fasts and other actions, with no assurance that he would succeed. Both were crystal clear about their goals, and led towards them relentlessly. Neither waited for consensus before acting.

 

Both embodied the second characteristic of self-differentiated leadership, as defined by Freidman, The Capacity and the Willingness of the Leader to Take Non-Reactive, Clearly Conceived, and Clearly Defined Positions. Yes , when you take a clear stand you will almost certainly face conflict from one quarter or the other. Better men than I, such as Patton and Gandhi, certainly did. But those who try to avoid conflict by avoiding clarity, or  by agreeing with everyone, are doomed to mediocrity. They cannot lead. “Followers” cannot channel their energy without clarity about where the are heading. As John Dewey put it, “There is no freedom without structure.” Clear direction adds essential structure to human systems.

 

Freidman’s “first and foremost characteristic” of a self-differentiated leader is equally clear and straight forward. The Leader Must Stay in Touch. As another self-differentiated leader, General William Tecumseh Sherman, put it “no man can properly command an army from the rear.” The belief that “empowerment” and “systems” can create reliable results allowing a leader to sit in their office or attend meetings all day is a false hope. To lead one must fight the shackles of their computer and the meeting room and get out on the floor. To lead you must engage and learn. When you lose touch, you stop leading.

 

Many in positions of leadership struggle to meet this characteristic. Some are concerned that they will dis-empower the layers of management below them if they “skip layers.” Indeed, empowering middle management and front-line supervision is well worth your attention. But it doesn’t happen through absence. It happens through clear goals and behavioral expectations (such as expecting everyone to constantly be clarifying who will decide what, and by when, and expecting everyone to surface issues/create an open flow of communication), through hands-on reinforcement of those expectations, and by staying in touch without assuming authority that belongs at another level. It’s leaders that “take over” that dis-empower, not leaders that stay in touch.

 

Insist that others, at all levels, do the same. Don’t get caught in the trap of listening to different parts of the system complain about and blame others. Point them towards the others, ask if they want help with the conversation, and if not, insist that they let you know about how it went.

 

In other words, “walk the talk.” Or as Gandhi put it, “Be the change you want to see in the world.” Clarify your expectations, and then live them through your interactions with the organization. Encourage your subordinates to do the same, including letting you know if you seem to be contradicting your own expectations. Encourage surfacing issues, even if, and especially if, they have “issues” with your positions or behavior. Learn to reinforce the behavior of speaking up without limiting yourself to either rejecting or acquiescing passively to what is said. Make sure you understand. If you manage to truly understand what people are telling you, you’ll be in the best position to decide what to do.

 

That brings us to Friedman’s third and final characteristic of Self-Differentiated Leadership, The Capacity to Deal With Resistance. Resistance is an element of human systems. In families, the members predictably focus their attention on the “black sheep” of the system. In organizations, and each work group, it is easy to do the same. When leaders get hooked on trying to convert or manage the most difficult members of their system, they actually reinforce the status of and tension with that member. Energy is drained from all. The likelihood of an impasse or ugly divorce is far higher than the likelihood of converting the resistance into true support. Yet most leaders get hooked into resistance like a moth to a flame.

 

Like Patton and Gandhi, the path forward is to walk the talk of the first two characteristics. Be clear about what you stand for, stay in touch with all parties, and move forward. This may not break the resistance, but it won’t allow resistance to bog you down.

 

This is not to say that the sources of resistance are “the problem.” Some people are simply inclined to be the vocal minority, brave enough to be overt in their discontent (search their comments for solvable problems, and let them help you solve them!). Others, of course, will whole heartedly follow you. The majority will probably “wait and see.” Insist that everyone surface issues and tackle barriers! Create opportunities and structure for engagement! The real problem is not “resistance.” The real problem is if you fuel resistance by becoming obsessed with it, losing sight of your goals, and losing touch with the rest of the organization.

 

So what’s the “leadership paradox?” By leading you empower. Chaos is fine in organic systems, such as a collection of cells, but in human affairs, to borrow Dewey’s words, without leadership, there is no structure, and without structure, there is no empowerment.

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Leading During Tough Times – An excerpt from my e-newsletter

Tough Times may lie ahead. If so, than fear, both legitimate and overblown, will guide many decisions. Hatchet men for hire will have a field day, and companies will crack down on everything from spare parts to paperclips. For most organizations, there is a better way.

The evidence is clear. The more people are engaged…the more they are able to apply their minds to improving their work on a daily basis, not just as part of a faddish program…the more productive and efficient the organization. Persistent and structured engagement, linked to micro (work process) and macro (big picture) goals, creates the stable environment needed for high performance task execution and continuous improvement. Smart management knows that stability is good.

Workers at Toyota surface possible quality issues in good times and bad. They’re the best at what they do because management doesn’t continually change their approach to managing. They are “servant leaders” in the best sense, genuinely thanking the worker that surfaces a possible problem even if they stopped the production line to do so. Toyota gets it that the key to continuous improvement lies in the hearts and minds of their workforce. They are structured for engagement. They understand the paradox that the foundation for productive change lies in a stable approach to managing.

They also understand authority. They are servants to the right behaviors, but they won’t tolerate a worker that wont adhere to those behaviors. To fit in at a Toyota facility, you must understand and be committed through your actions to the system. For most, this is no problem, because the system makes sense, and respects the individual’s ability to think. It’s an environment that lifts the spirits of most workers, whether in the US, Japan, or any of their other far flung locations, and channels their energy on what matters. As John Dewey put it, “There is no freedom without structure.” Toyota is one of the most consistent examples of the power of structured engagement.

This is especially true during economic downturns. Cost control is traditionally approached as a numbers game, and managed top down, without consideration for the impact on the human system. As Benjamin Franklin put it, such an approach is “pennywise and pound foolish.” Employee engagement, trust, morale, and productivity erode. Discretionary effort, vital to high performance, becomes a casualty. On the contrary, resentment, absenteeism, employee indifference, grievances, and even sabotage and theft increase, predictably leading to further micro-managing and security measures. Attempts to address problem behaviors often impact the best employees along with the worst, and chip away at the bond between everyone and the company.

A 2007 American Management Association (AMA) study re-affirms what reams of research have shown, that “the most important relationship within any organization is the one between the employee and his or her immediate supervisor.” During cost-cutting, that relationship, often miss-managed during the best of times, is at risk. Activities that supervisors depend on not only for development but to bolster morale, such as training and business travel, become harder to justify. Wage increases may dry up. All that’s left to cement the relationship is the emotional intelligence (or EQ) of the supervisor (and to a lesser but still important degree, the EQ of the subordinates), and the approach the company and the supervisor take towards engaging employees in the work.

Even when the supervisor and/or the company have a high morale/high productivity/high engagement approach, cost-cutting through downsizing bites into the supervisor –employee relationship by shuffling and losing leaders throughout the system. Navy research, conducted in the late 50’s and early 60’s, documented a 6 month productivity dip every time a team goes through a leadership transition. Left to themselves, it takes that long for the team to understand and warm up to the new leader’s approach (if they ever do). Downsizing, while looking good on paper, creates a surge of productivity and morale disrupting transitions. The consequences, as documented in another (seemingly ignored), AMA study, usually outweigh the gains:

“Do blanket layoffs help business performance? In the American Management Association’s survey last year of 830 companies that downsized at least once since 1987, only 43 reported profit after making the cuts. Only 31 percent reported higher worker productivity. Not surprisingly, 77 percent reported poor morale among the remaining employees. AMA’s conclusion was that firing employees to control costs was largely an exercise in futility. AMA’s main finding? Layoffs are addictive. If you have one layoff, 63 percent of the time you will have another next year, whether or not the first one helped” (From John Trudel, The Ruinous Game Called Downsizing, Upside Magazine, November, 1993).

This isn’t to say that downsizing never makes sense. But it’s no panacea, and there are powerful alternatives.

What to do:

Take a consistent approach in good times and bad

Don’t swing back and forth from employee involvement to more autocratic management. Create an organized approach to continuous improvement at all levels in good times and bad. Everyone is already noticing what impedes their performance, and what aids it. Make sure they have tools for understanding and improving their processes, especially at the crossfunctional and upstream/downstream interfaces, where improvement requires collaboration.

There are many ways to structure engagement and improvement. Pick one and stick with it. Make sure every layer is coaching and supporting the improvement efforts of the layer beneath.

Insist on emotionally intelligent leadership at all levels

Call it what you want, but face the facts. How each leader treats their subordinates, and how they work with their peers, is a huge variable in the performance of your organization. And the higher up in the hierarchy, the bigger the emotional impact. Don’t leave the EQ at the top of the organization to chance. Even better, develop it throughout the organization, both in the interest of succession planning and immediate results.
Minimize disruption

Sometimes it seems that leaders must not think they’re doing something if they aren’t re-organizing. At times, of course, reorganizing is the right thing to do. A less disruptive alternative, however, is to work with the structure you’ve already got. There are many possible root causes for poor performance, besides structure. A lack of consistency, for example, is potentially one of them. Figure out what your predecessor was doing well, and what the organization has been doing well, and continue it. Have the discipline to target your change efforts. like a laser beam, on what has been lacking.

Manage transitions

There’s no need to leave leadership transitions, and the length of time it takes to for teams to achieve peak performance, to chance. Manage every leadership transition methodically. Standardize the process so that the individual leader’s ego doesn’t get in the way. Such a process is available as a free download on our website at http://crosbyod.com/NewLeader.pdf. Assure a quality outcome by providing skilled facilitation. Internal resources, especially following on-the-job training, can provide such facilitation on an ongoing basis.

Focus employees on critical targets, and engage them in a structured way in reducing costs

We haven’t met an organization yet where the employees didn’t know a 1000 ways to reduce costs while improving results. Of course, if that is already what people are working on daily, like at Toyota, there’s going to be less “low hanging fruit.” But most organizations, especially manufacturing operations, have huge gains to realize from involving the workforce in a structured manner in the reduction of wasted time, energy (electricity, oil, etc), and material…not to mention an upswing in mutual respect and morale. Crosby & Associates has helped implement engagement in hundreds of locations globally, and witnessed the results. If engagement isn’t a way of life in your organization, why not make it so?

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Systems Thinking – an excerpt from my e-newsletter

The Paradigm of Personality

Have You Looked Under the Hood and Checked Your Paradigm Lately?

We are all a product of our times. Innocent in our youth, we soak up the beliefs of our culture like a sponge, quickly allowing them to harden into the filters through which we perceive and understand the world. Like the flat earth theory of old, certain beliefs, or paradigms, are so engrained that their wisdom and validity are taken for granted. Yet today’s dominant belief about human behavior -that we have essentially fixed personalities that are the cause, at work at least, of most problems and conflicts – is as limited as the ancient belief that the world was flat. New information is available, but culturally accepted paradigms are stubborn things, slow to give way. Even when one values a new belief, when push comes to shove, it’s easy to slip back into the old. None-the-less, a new and richer paradigm is emerging today.

To fully appreciate this, the reader needs exposure to some underlying assumptions about human behavior. This article explores three paradigms, interlinked but distinct, offering very different possibilities
for understanding and influencing human behavior:

Personality Theory – Based loosely on psychoanalytical theory, this is the predominant paradigm in western civilization today. Without realizing what they are doing, most people habitually rely on personality theory for understanding conflict and performance issues in organizations. Problem analysis comes to predictable conclusions such as individuals “don’t have the right personality” (“he’s too passive,” “she micro manages,” etc) or that the root cause is a “personality clash.” These sorts of personality flaws are considered essentially fixed traits, thus the primary solution is to change out the people, move them around, and/or hire the right people in the first place.

Ironically, the paradigm of personality theory has systemic effects (see .Systems Thinking, below…the emerging alternative), subtly stoking the flames of organizational tension. People put energy, for good reason, into worrying about how they are perceived. They know even if they are flying high today, that they can be essentially written off as flawed tomorrow. That’s always a possibility when organizational problems are narrowed down to individual performance. People become masters at not seeming defensive, and of playing the games of feedback and development not so much to actually develop, but to avoid being labeled as deficient. It is a paradigm afflicted by tunnel vision (“they’re having a personality clash”), and that is in its essence insulting to the individual, thus eliciting defensiveness and brewing CYA behavior.

Sound harsh? Perhaps. The truth hurts sometimes. But never fear…personality theory has its place in the emerging paradigm. Of course we bring our individual strengths and weaknesses to the organization, and are wise to take an active approach to our own development. And of course we are responsible for our own behavior and performance. But there are stronger forces at play than our personality traits, and to focus primarily on personality is like sticking entirely to snail mail in the age of the computer.

The computer age, incidentally, has contributed heavily to the emerging paradigm. But first, another prevalent paradigm that has its place, but only completes some of the human performance puzzle.

Behavioral Theory – By this we mean the aspect of behavioral theory that focuses on skills. That is, the belief that the solution to conflict and performance issues lies in a skills gap, which could be technical, interpersonal, or both. This paradigm has led to the dramatic growth of training and development as a strategy for improving organizational performance. Like personality theory, it’s a paradigm that makes sense to many (as it must, to become a paradigm), and has practical applications, but again overlooks powerful influences impacting individual and organizational performance.

By all means, a critical mass of individuals who, through training, have worked on their own emotional intelligence, have honed their conflict management skills, have studied their personality tendencies through tools such as Social Styles and have learned to respect and stretch into new behaviors can move an organization to higher productivity. But as most people know, there are mysterious forces at play that can derail even the best classroom learning, especially if the paradigm underlying the training is blind to those forces.

Systems Thinking – Many have heard of it, few have made it a way of life. Rooted in computer science (Forrester), social science (Lewin), and family systems therapy (Bowen), this is arguably the most powerful element of productivity and conflict, yet it is a relatively new paradigm that is not yet integrated into popular consciousness. Some core concepts of systems thinking include:

Start with yourself

Most people put their time and energy into analyzing and trying to change everyone else (a byproduct of the personality theory paradigm). The predictable result is defensiveness by others. If one is not skillful at analyzing oneself and working on continuous improvement (which is greatly enhanced by earnestly and skillfully soliciting feedback from others), then one is not likely to be a significant influence on others (although positional authority may lead others to half-hearted compliance).

Over Functioning – Under Functioning

Everyone over functions or under functions to some degree. If I’m vocal, for example, others are likely to be less vocal. Its physics applied to human interaction. Even if I wish they were more vocal, my filling of airtime decreases their need/opportunity to do so. And vice-versa, if I don’t speak much, others will speak more. The only way to change such a dance, is to change my own behavior (in this example, speak more or speak less). The key is to be aware of such patterns, and to be intentional about changing them.

Every part of the system is a reflection of the whole

Morale and productivity are not, for the most part, a personality issue. Multiple studies (including one conducted by our Senior Advisor, Robert P. Crosby, involving over 500 organizations) have linked variables such as feeling respected by one’s boss, being able to influence one’s work processes, being able to make decisions at the lowest possible level, etc., to morale and productivity. While there will always be a few who are demoralized in a system where most are productive and in high spirits, the
vast majority is responsive, for better or worse, to systemic conditions. And each individual in the system, each work group, each meeting is a window into understanding the system.

The leader is the biggest variable in a human system

The Emotional Intelligence work of Daniel Goleman, while primarily a personality and skills approach, has helped increase awareness of systems thinking by emphasizing the amplified impact that the leader has on the emotional health of the system. The leader is not, of course, the only variable. A systemic approach encourages everyone to start with themselves, and fosters ownership and involvement at every
level. None the less, the emotional and systemic intelligence of the hierarchical leadership remains the biggest variable.

The Emotional Field

People are more connected than they realize. Your emotion effects others (are you tense or relaxed?).
Your approach to the conversation effects others (are you putting all of your energy into being heard, or are you also listening?). Your past impacts you and hence others (your history with a person or a group, how you feel about positional authority, etc.). The same can be said of everyone.

Family systems therapists call this convergence of past and present variables the emotional field. Like gravity, it’s invisible. You can only tell it is there by the effects. If it is a strong field, the effects are predictable. For example, if a boss is (or seems) displeased with us, most people react just as
they did as a child when disciplined by their parents. They get sucked into the field of parent-child emotionality. We become more practiced at hiding our reactions, but the internal experience is much the same.

Homeostasis

Given the above, every relationship is a complex system, with its own field. In other words, every relationship – between people, between groups, between layers in the hierarchy – is a reinforcing loop. Each of us is part of the behavior we are experiencing from others…the behavior we like and the behavior we don’t like. And each system craves stability, even when it is dysfunctional. This homeostasis is very hard to break. People instinctively resist most change. Real change requires recognizing the dysfunctional patterns in the system (such as finger pointing), and then patient and persistent leadership towards more productive behaviors.

Take a stand, stay connected

Most of us gravitate one way or the other. We may be good at driving towards task or saying what
we think whether or not it upsets people, or we may be good at building relationships but not so good at taking stands that risk relationship. People get pulled to one or the other extreme by systemic pressure. The ability to do both simultaneously is a core systems thinking leadership skill.

If you change individuals without changing the system, you’ll still have problems. If you swap out the parts when there is misalignment, the new parts will simply grind against each other. Yet that is the primary
approach most management teams take…swap out the parts or rearrange them (i.e., change the structure). Real change requires working on alignment throughout the system, and helping the people at every level think and act systemically.

Real change requires a critical mass managing problems with a new paradigm. What’s your paradigm?

Gil Crosby, first published in Human Factors, Fall 2007, Volume 8, Issue 1

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Authority – Can’t Live With it, Can’t Live Without It!

Welcome to my blog! Presently I’m pondering a title for my second book (perhaps the title of this post will do). My first book, Fight, Flight, Freeze – Taming Your Reptilian Brain and Other Practical Approaches to Self-Improvement, is a self-help workbook combining emotional intelligence and behavioral science. Its essentially a text version of a group learning workshop that my father, Robert P. Crosby, has led people through since the 1950’s, and I’ve continued to deliver since 1984. While group learning is more powerful than isolated learning, Fight, Flight, Freeze still packs a mighty learning punch, if I do say so myself. You can learn more about it at: http://www.eloquentbooks.com/FightFlightFreeze.html

Holding a position and of authority, and relating to people in positions of authority, is the most consistently emotional aspect of work, hence the title of this post and possibly of my next book. A wise leader intentionally encourages subordinates to overcome their fear of authority and say what the truly want, think and feel. A wise subordinate realizes that the reptilian brain’s impulse for survival will encourage playing it safe, but that to truly get what they want they must surface issues. For both parties, this is more easily said than done. Like all emotionality, patterns of behavior regarding authority get set in our earliest attachments, and can only be altered with clear self-awareness, and persistent intention.

Authority relations are the key to productivity and morale. I’ve  spent my life working on emotionally intelligent leadership, and I look forward to spending the rest of my bloging about it! Let me know what you think!

Regards,

Gil

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