Posts Tagged ‘Change’

Business Week: Your Leadership Portfolio

Monday, July 26th, 2010

Here is a thorough article for those who have technical skills and are transitioning into leadership settings. I was specifically struck by the part that talks about those in CIO positions being proactive change leaders. What was said rings true: “Proactive change leaders take actions to influence specific individuals, giving them parts to play in the change effort. They engage with people throughout the change process, addressing emotional reactions and maintaining commitment.”

My value add is that it is critical for these proactive change leaders to understand the behavior patterns that lie underneath the emotional reactions. This does not mean leaders need to become depth coaches or see themselves as therapists (that is an old model of thinking). What they need to do is ask open ended questions and find out how their direct reports have responded to change in the past. That is the clue to helping move things forward in a positive way.

In “Don’t Bring It to Work” the 13 most common behavior patterns in the workplace are discussed. There is even a quiz you can take at www.sylvialafair.com to observe your patterns and have your employees take the quiz. It is a great eye opener for the emotional areas of change that will show up whether we want them to or not.

Article: Your Leadership Portfolio: The View from C-Level

Former senior IT leaders who rise to head of the function are often surprised by the competencies that they are expected to have at the C-level. As we discussed in the second installment in this series (“Your Leadership Portfolio: The Critical Move from Senior IT Leader to the C-Level,” May 28, 2010), the key competencies for senior IT leaders are Team Leadership, Collaboration & Influencing and People & Organization Development. These are largely people skills, requiring the ability to influence and lead high-performing teams. As the Leadership Competencies Development Journey graphic (below) indicates, the progression to IT Function Head CIO requires the individual to place a much greater emphasis on the development of broad business skills, underpinned by people skills.

Not surprisingly, many very capable IT leaders struggle to master this critical inflection point, which demands more active engagement outside the IT organization. They can prepare for this challenging transition by actively seeking opportunities to get hands-on business experience, while taking care not to derail their IT careers. Ideally, such experience would mean responsibility for a P&L, but it could mean taking responsibility for a business project and its budget, or participating as an equal partner–not just as an IT representative–on a committee focused on some key aspect of the business. They can also look for ways to collaborate more closely with business-unit heads, or other top business leaders, on market challenges. Then, when they step into the C-suite, they will be prepared for the vastly changed perspective it brings.

The Function Head CIO: Leveraging Where and How the Company Makes Money

What does a Function Head CIO really do? Instead of focusing primarily on the IT organization, as the Senior IT Leader does, the Function Head CIO must look out across the entire enterprise, work with C-level peers, and become an active and credible provider to the business. This change of perspective brings three critical competencies, and their associated behaviors, to the fore:

* Market Knowledge: This is about understanding where the company makes money. At the reactive performance level (shown on the y-axis of the Journey graphic), one may have only a general understanding of the company’s marketplace. But IT Function Head CIOs at the active level demonstrate a detailed understanding of the market, the competitors, the suppliers, and, where appropriate, the regulatory environment. At the proactive level, they identify market sub-segments and understand the profit potential of each.

Proactive performers look beyond the current environment and identify emerging trends and segments, understand how competitor actions affect competitive dynamics, and the implications for their company’s technology landscape. They use their detailed market knowledge to create innovative ways to engage and serve customers, partner with suppliers and blunt competitive threats. At the very highest level, which is rarely attained but is worth noting, the result can be new products or services that reshape the market.

* Commercial Orientation: This is about how the company makes money. At the reactive level, the individual understands the importance of commercial success, works toward financial goals, and understands how various functions contribute to profitability but may lack a thorough understanding of how to link activities to financial metrics. Active performers identify areas of the function that can contribute to profitability, and they act quickly on commercial opportunities. The proactive leader generates profit-making initiatives beyond their immediate area, drives commercial behavior throughout the organization, and finds new ways to maximize profitability from each step of the value chain. At the highest level of performance–again, rarely attained–the leader is able to create long-term advantage by reshaping the business model of the industry.

* Change Leadership: As the graphic indicates, competency in change leadership is also important at this stage and becomes even more critical for the Business Strategist CIO. Performers at the reactive level of Change Leadership tolerate change, while active change leaders are adept at advocating change and communicating a clear and compelling new direction. In pushing for change, they set clear targets that focus people and activities on achieving the change agenda and develop metrics that both monitor and motivate change.

Proactive change leaders take actions to influence specific individuals, giving them parts to play in the change effort. They engage with people throughout the change process, addressing emotional reactions and maintaining commitment. And they build coalitions of such people and create champions who then mobilize others. The even more proactive are also as at home with process as with people. They introduce high-impact actions such as redesigning organization structures, processes and systems to drive and reinforce the desired changes. In rare cases, that ability coupled with their relentless drive for renewal creates and embeds a culture of change that continually adapts to new and evolving markets.

The Transformational CIO: Bringing the Customer into Focus

Having proactively demonstrated Market Knowledge and Commercial Orientation, the Function Head CIO will be poised to take on the role of Transformational CIO with its additional demanding competency of External Customer Focus.

* Customer Focus: Many IT people are accustomed to thinking of customers inside the four walls of the company. But for the Transformational CIO, the focus widens to include the external customer. At the reactive level, Customer Focus is essentially order-taking, a stance the Transformational CIO will have moved far beyond. At the active level, Customer Focus is about actively digging into and understanding the customer’s needs, seeing services from the customer’s perspective, and identifying the unique key measures of success with a given customer. These behaviors are used internally by the outstanding IT Function Head CIO, but will be extended outward for the outstanding Transformational CIO.

At the proactive level, the benchmark behaviors include delivering improved customer offerings with win/win impact, developing best practices for working with the customer, and championing those best practices internally. The highly proactive Transformational CIO initiates and manages multiple contacts with the customer’s organization, creating impact far beyond individual transactions and in some cases becoming a trusted advisor to the customer and contributing to strategic discussions in the customer organization. In rare instances, the most accomplished Transformational CIO is able to partner with the customer to develop new supplier relationship models that can change industry dynamics and force competitors to follow or fall behind.

In the next installment in this series, we take an even deeper dive into this critical stage of the journey, the last stop before its culmination in the role of Business Strategist CIO.

Steve Kelner is a partner in the Boston office of Egon Zehnder International. He is a leader of the firm’s Leadership Strategy Services practice, specializing in management appraisals and team effectiveness. He can be reached at steve.kelner@ezi.net.

Chris Patrick is a partner in the Dallas office of Egon Zehnder International. He leads the Global CIO Practice. A former practicing CIO, he helps firms across all industries identify, assess and recruit top technology talent. He can be reached at chris.patrick@ezi.net.

Leadership Steps to Ensure a New Future

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

School is out, or almost out. It is a time of endings and beginnings. High school seniors are moving on, college grads are moving on. I recently went with my daughter to tour my granddaughter Arielle’s new elementary school. She also will be moving on after preschool graduation next week. (I was concerned I would make some slick comments if these little ones wore caps and gowns, fortunately they will be in play clothes).

In any case, we all need to roll up our sleeves and take a more active part in the education of the next generations. The Washington Post article gives food for thought. It is high time we look deeply at the fact that our education system needs renovation. For the most part it is not preparing our youth for the dizzying, whirling world in front of all of us.

Presently we are consulting with the Derry Township school district and the administrative team is tackling the core questions of what else should we be imparting to students past the required curriculum. It is tough and important work and we would like to hear from other educators about the role of the schools in the 21st century.

In the meantime I am watching an open and eager five year old already “liking” her new school. I can only hope she stays open to learning as time goes on.

My comment to the article:
Donald Kettl hit that proverbial nail smack on! It’s no longer skills for jobs, it’s learning how to learn, how to think. I have seen amazing and relativley fast change come through the dialogue model first started by physicist David Bohm and philosopher Krishnamurti. Here is my “however”. We truly need to start with the bright shiny little ones entering kindergarten who are so open and ready to learn to learn rather than check the boxes. Change is systemic and needs to go way up river so the next generation of college presidents has more wiggle room for innovation.

Leadership Strategies: Making Envy Go Away

Thursday, April 1st, 2010
Envy: Green Eyed Monster

Envy: Green Eyed Monster

In the April edition of  Harvard Business Review is an article about how envy can sabotage your company’s performance. The word envy is one of those emotional words that spark memories. I immediately went to a time at age fourteen when we were all nervously trying out for the volleyball team at camp.

It was not for love of volleyball that was merely the vehicle; it was prestigious because the team would travel around the state to other camps at least once a week. It meant freedom; it meant checking out the boys and comparing them to those left at our home camp. It meant freedom, oh I already said that.

There were two slots left. There were three of us vying for these places. I was standing next to Lois Fisher. We were the rivals, the envy twins. We were always in competition. We said we liked each other to everyone, yet, the tension was always there between us.

I won the slot, she did not. I felt so superior, in ways that all fourteen year old girls know; subtle yet calculating. She ended up as the coach’s assistant. So, every game had Lois on the sidelines making comments about me, my stance, my hits and mainly my misses.

I did not perform well. Lois’ eyes were always boring holes in my body. I was so determined to prove her haughty judgments wrong I often froze when the ball was coming right to my outstretched arms.

Fast forward to a work experience; there she was again, no, not Lois Fisher, this was a guy named Matt Stevens. He had the same smirk, the same capacity to judge. I was a mess. I kept missing the ball.

Then I took the time to go back to the essence of my angst. It was that envy thing. I tracked back in a moment of quiet to Lois. Then I got to the “aha” moment that had all the workplace conflict melt away. I went to the place I had learned in the leadership development program from years ago. I went home!

What I realized was that the core of the tension, the jealousy was still lurking there, still under the radar, still connected with my older brother, the one who became a doctor, who always had the right answers, the one I saw as always judging me.

Here is where the Harvard article is good, yet misses a key point. The questions to ask yourself to find the source of your envy do not go back far enough. They won’t get to the “mother root” and thus will keep the pattern coming back over and over.

What I know, and why I wrote “Don’t Bring It to Work” is that when stress hits the hot button, when emotions get the best of us, we need to look into our original organization, the family. That is where the patterns that spark upset lie. It is where we find that the Lois Fisher and Matt Stevens of the world are still remnants of something older, more primal that drive us. Once we can observe these old patterns we can begin to change them. Staying in the present to find solutions can only take us so far.

A Life Changing Story

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

life changing

I am delighted to receive responses to my blog request for life defining sentences. Today enjoy the blog based on how one of our “Total Leadership Connections” facilitator’s looks at her life process and the essence of leadership development from a universal perspective.  Along with working at Creative Energy Options, Jocelyn Goss is an educator at a Church in Philadelphia, Pa. Enjoy!

      “When we are running about life doing our own thing, casting our own dreams and wishes and thoughts and desires, there are things that are taking place in our life that we cannot see and have no knowledge of that are the actual and inevitable plans for our life, the plans and purposes that we were actually created to possess and live out. There comes a divine time when that plan is cast and set into place, and it makes no difference where you are, what you are doing or who you may think you are, the plan gets cast, regardless and there is nothing that you can do about it. It just gets cast because it’s all a timing thing and there is nothing we can do to orchestrate universal timing. Once its cast, you can choose to participate or not. You can choose to continue to do your own thing… but I have found the most life changing thing is when you find the courage to move out on what is your predestined design for your life, even though you may have great fear and it may take you way off course of your intended self chosen life destination, but I can attest that taking that journey into what is your designed destiny, changes your life instantly. Its taking that trust walk into destiny, and that trust walk takes you into places you never new existed, beyond anything that you could have imagined your life to be. It allows you to live a life that is full of grace and ease. How many of us are struggling and toiling to keep our own developed dreams and desires alive and functioning within our own strength. When you take a deep breath and trust the authorized destiny for your life, your life changes. You have been created for a purpose, you have a job that no one else but you can do. Move into your created purpose and let it change your life into one that is beyond your expectation!”