Pascoe's potshots

Latest

LEADERSHIP: HOW’S YOUR KNOWLEDGE AND COURAGE?

published:2010-08-30 01:00:00

What do lobsters, scorpions and bees have in common? Yes, a capacity to inflict a nasty bite. But they also all lack a spine. An exoskeleton (the lobster’s hard shell) is all that holds their bodies together. There’s no internal bone structure. Some leaders are

This Potshot has 0 comments:

Subscribe


Subscribe to RSS feed

Or receive Pascoe's Potshots weekly by email

Recent

LEADERSHIP: 12 FACETS OF EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE

published:2010-08-23 01:00:00

A valuable gemstone has many facets, each finely polished. To be a valuable leader, you similarly need a range of carefully honed capabilities.

This Potshot has 0 comments:

LEADERSHIP: FIVE FAULTS TO FIX

published:2010-08-16 01:00:00

Another home run for Seth – my favourite blogger. His posting of 13 June* describes the entrepreneur’s desire for a magic lottery ticket –

This Potshot has 0 comments:

LEADERSHIP: WHEN YOU’RE NEWLY APPOINTED

published:2010-08-09 01:00:00

If you’ve just been promoted, you might want to read “Letter to a newly appointed CEO” by Ian Davis, a former Managing Director of McKinsey

This Potshot has 0 comments:

Search Pascoe's Potshots

LEADERSHIP: WHEN IN DOUBT, DISAGGREGATE

You can clarify and focus your leadership actions as a result of analysis and planning
avoiding tired strategies and approaches, which fail to satisfy your priority followers

Seth Godin is part blogger, part public intellectual. Some days, he really nails a topic. Here’s an abbreviated introduction to a recent posting*.

“The typical American buys precisely one book a year … (but) when it comes to books, there is no typical American. There are a lot of Americans who buy zero books … and then there are people like me who buy 400. The average is irrelevant.”

It’s the old warning of the non-swimmer, who drowned in a river of one-metre average depth. So, what’s the equivalent for your leadership? Are you just taking “average” one-size-fits-all actions? Here’s a three-step alternative.

List your current leadership challenges and then:

  • Sort them into technical and people issues. Are they more about commercial problems, technical delivery and market/competition issues? Or, engaging team members, showing self-awareness, defining roles or perhaps creating fun and celebration? Let’s say they’re more about people.
  • So, break down those people issues further. Imagine you’re in their shoes: how are they feeling? How does life look from where they stand? Do they enjoy personal engagement with you? Or, are they lonely and stressed to breaking point? What would they recommend? For you to listen more, clarify roles or what?
  • Also, disaggregate the technical issues. Are customers complaining about quality or service? Are there inefficiencies in your production or delivery? Do benchmarks vary across the business and need codifying so there are best-practice standards?

Success in leadership (as in life) is about making the right moves and executing them both sympathetically and efficiently. It’s not about doing everything at once. Disaggregating and customising are key. Relying on old “average” actions will mean you drown in the variable profile of your day-to-day challenges.

To succeed (and be promoted), find your priority issues and focus first on them. Once they’re done, move to the next ones – whether about people, products or both. Create a personal Leadership Action Plan. This is often the missing link in business planning. You start a new venture with a new plan. So, why not lead your team (of particular people with particular challenges) similarly. A personal action list created by disaggregating the issues and finding those that should define your forward leadership actions. Not just repeating tired approaches learnt long ago – often in different circumstances entirely.

* http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2010/04/when-in-doubt-disaggregate.html

Categories for this Potshot:

Fix key commercial problems, Excel as a technician, Understand your marketplace, Build competitive advantage, Build teamwork, Be EQ-effective, Design structures and roles, Create fun and celebration, Engage people, Recognise internal limits, Attend to customers, Demonstrate efficiency, Lift benchmarks and IP,



Dr. Timothy Pascoe AM
PhD (Cambridge), MBA (Harvard), BE & BEc (Adelaide)
Creator, V|E|C|T|O|R Leadership®

Did you enjoy
this article?
Subscribe to
RSS feed

Please comment on this Potshot

name
the name you enter will be displayed beside your comment
email address
this must be a valid email address. It will not be displayed
Comment
Conditions of posting: please feel free to post your views, but note that any post that is defamatory, contains bad language, or is spam will be blocked and deleted.

Comments (1)

Timothy Pascoe - date: 2010/05/31 05:53 pm


Dear All,

I had a message today from someone checking what I meant by a non-swimmer drowning in a river of one-metre average depth.

Lets assume that you want to cross a river with an average depth of one metre but you find that youve walked almost all the way across and the water has never been above your ankles. Fairly obviously, somewhere in the remaining 5% of your crossing there must be some very deep water - in which a non-swimmer would drown.

This used to be a well-known play on the danger of making decision based on averages.

My apologies if, like me, its a bit over the hill!