The Leadership
Lesson They Don't Teach In Business School But Should
Kathy Caprino Harvard Business Review
I’ve always believed
leadership exists to disrupt mediocrity, but I’m afraid in recent times many
leaders are losing that battle. Somewhere along the way, they threw in the
towel and settled for a weak-kneed, watered-down version of leadership – they
have rationalized and justified themselves into an acceptance of mediocrity.
The sad reality is that in
many cases, the education, training and development leaders receive today is woefully
inadequate. We are producing analysts and risk managers and
labeling them leaders. We’ve taught them to be practical, analytical, and
risk adverse, but have failed to equip them to lead.
Too many leaders look
alike, think alike and act alike. It’s almost as if courageous leadership has
been bled out of many of those holding positions of leadership. Great
numbers of leaders seem to have wandered off course and are badly in need of a
road map to help them
So, what is hacking
leadership? It’s a framework for thinking, acting, and leading differently.
It challenges conventional leadership constructs, and offers insights on why
what we’ve been duped into referring to as leadership is actually very far from
the real thing. The thought is to use adaptive, applied, and creative thinking combined
with enhanced problem solving skills to become a more skilled leader. To become
more self aware as a leader, to more rapidly identify blind spots, and to close
critical gaps keeping you, your team, and your organization from reaching your
leadership potential.
Hacking [hak-ing] – present participle
of hack (verb) to discover an alternate path, clever and skillful tricks,
shortcuts and workarounds, breaking the code, deciphering complexity,
influencing outcomes, acquiring access, and creating innovative customizations
to existing/outdated methodologies.
While there are many
things that can cause a leader to fail themselves and those they lead, I’ve
identified 11 critical leadership gaps and blind spots, which if not
identified, understood, and addressed can be fatal to both leaders and their
organizations. While entertaining, what they teach you in business school, and
what you read in most books is radically different than what you experience in
real life – is it not?
As the world continues
to evolve, so must our leadership acumen. Real leaders must learn to hack time-tested leadership
principles to make them more relevant, practical, and effective. Leaders must
stop holding on to false truths held as real, and lead in new and different
ways. Leaders must spend more time exploring what they don’t know rather than
waxing eloquent about what they do know. They must seek out diverse and
even dissenting opinions in search of what’s right rather than being concerned
about who gets the credit for being right.
The bottom line is this –
the principles contained in my book Hacking
Leadership will not only challenge your current perceptions and
beliefs, but they will provide you with an actionable road map to becoming a
better, more engaged, more relevant leader. Here’s a brief excerpt from
the book:
“Leadership means many things to many
people. And not all forms of leadership are created equal. Leadership can
represent a pursuit, discipline, practice, passion, skill, competency,
obligation, or duty. Leadership driven by any of these constructs can be
effective, but where leadership really gets interesting is when it combines all
of these traits to become purpose driven. The best leaders understand the
critical importance of transforming personal values into a greater sense of
purpose. It is only at the point where leaders become committed to purpose that
they’re able to surrender to it and let purpose guide their approach to
leadership. It’s often this revelation that transforms leaders in title only
into passionate purpose-driven leaders.”
So, my question is this:
are you ready to challenge your own leadership beliefs to discover whether or
not they’re serving you as well as you think? If you are, you might want to
pick up a copy of Hacking Leadership.
Thoughts?
No comments:
Post a Comment