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A Whack Up 'Long Side The Head
Of Human Resources: The Leadership Imperative
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by Brent Filson |
Editorial Note:
When we think about leaders and leadership training we usually
think of those in middle and upper management. Thinking like this is
shortsighted as explained in this article. Although the focus
in this article is on the role Human Resources in leadership
development, the lessons here are applicable to the entire
organization. Attention to this detail can make a world of
difference.
Kay
Graham-Gilbert
When we perceive the simple center in the seemingly complex, we
can change our world in powerful new ways.
Albert Einstein perceived the simple E=MC2 in the complexities
of physical reality and changed the history of the 20th century.
Big Daddy Lipscomb, the Baltimore Colts 300 pound all-pro
tackle in the 1960s perceived the simple center of what was
perceived to be the complex game of football. "I just wade
into players," he said, "until I come to the one with the ball.
Him I keep!" and changed the way the game was played. |
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Likewise, human resources, despite its complex activities,
should have a fundamentally simple mission, yet it is a
mission that is being neglected by many HR professionals. I
call that mission the Leadership Imperative helping the
organization recruit, retain, and develop good leaders.
Clearly, without good leaders, few organizations can thrive
over the long run. What characterizes a good leader? A good
leader consistently gets results in ethical and motivational
ways. Because they interact with all business functions and
usually provide education and training for those functions,
human resource professionals should be focused primarily on
recruiting, retaining, and developing leaders that get results.
Any other focus is a footnote. |
Yet working with human resource leaders in a variety of
companies for the past two decades, I find that many of them
are stumbling. Caught up in the tempests of downsizing,
compliance demands, acquisitions, mergers, and
reorganizations, they are engaged in activities that have
little to do with their central mission. Ignoring or at least
giving short shrift to the Leadership Imperative, they are too
often viewed, especially by line leaders, as carrying out
sideline endeavors.
Many HR leaders have nobody to blame for this situation but
themselves. By neglecting the Imperative, they themselves have
chosen to be sideline participants.
Here is a three-step action plan to get the HR function off the
sidelines and into the thick of the game.
Recognize. Link. Execute.
Before I elaborate each step, let me define leadership as it
ought to be. For your misunderstanding leadership will thwart
you in applying the Imperative.
The word "leadership" comes from old Norse word-root meaning
"to make go." Indeed, leadership is about making things go
making people go, making organizations go. But the
misunderstanding comes in when leaders fail to understand who
actually makes what go. Leaders often believe that they
themselves must make things go, that if people must go from
point A to point B, let`s say, that they must order them to go.
But order leadership founders today in fast-changing, highly
competitive markets.
In this environment, a new kind of leadership must be
cultivated leadership that aims not to order others to go
from point A to point B but instead that aims to motivate
them to want take the leadership in going from A to B.
That "getting others to lead others" is what leadership today
should be about. And it is what we should inculcate in our
clients. We must challenge them to lead, lead for results with
this principle in mind, and accept nothing else from them but
this leadership.
Furthermore, leadership today must be universal. To compete
successfully in highly competitive, fast changing markets,
organizations must be made up of employees who are all leaders
in some way. All of us have leadership challenges thrust upon
us many times daily. In the very moment that we are trying to
persuade somebody to take action, we are a leader even if
that person we are trying to persuade is our boss. Persuasion
is leadership. Furthermore, the most effective way to succeed
in any endeavor is to take a leadership position in that
endeavor.
The Imperative applies to all employees. Whatever activities
you are being challenged to carry out, make the Imperative a
lens through which you view those activities. Have your
clients recognize that your work on the behalf of their
leadership will pay large dividends toward advancing their
careers.
Recognize: Recognize that recruiting, retaining, and developing
good leaders ranks with earnings growth (or with nonprofit
organizations: mission) in terms of being an organizational
necessity. So most of your activities must be in some way tied
to the Imperative.
For instance: HR executive directors who want to develop
courses for enhancing the speaking abilities of their
companies` leaders often blunder in the design phase. Not
recognizing the Leadership Imperative, they err by describing
them as "presentation courses." Instead, if they were guided
by the Imperative, they would offer courses on "leadership
talks." There is a big difference between presentations and
leadership talks. Presentations communicate information.
Presentation courses are a dime a dozen. But leadership talks
motivate people to believe in you and follow you. Leaders must
speak many times daily to individuals or groups in a variety
of settings. When you provide courses to help them learn
practical ways for delivering effective talks to have them
speak better so that they can lead better, you are benefiting
their job performance and their careers.
Today, in most organizations, the presentation is the
conventional method of communication. But when you make the
leadership talk the key method by instituting "talk" courses
and monitoring and evaluation systems broadly and deeply
within the organization, you will help make your company more
effective and efficient.
Link: Though such recognition is the first step in getting off
the sidelines, it won`t get you into the game. To get into the
center of things, you must link your activities with results.
Not your results their results.
Clearly, your clients are being challenged to get results:
sales` closes, operations efficiencies, productivity advances,
etc. Some results are crucial. But other results are
absolutely indispensable. Your job is to help your clients
achieve their results, especially the indispensable results.
You must be their "results partner." Furthermore, you must
help them get sizable increases in those results. The results
that they get with your help should be more than the results
that they would have gotten without your help.
For instance, when developing company-wide objectives for
leadership talks, you should not aim to have participants win
a speaking "beauty contests" but instead to speak so that they
motivate others to get increases in measured results. When you
change the focus of the courses from speaking appearance to
the reality of results, you change the participants` view of
and commitment to the courses and also their view of and
commitment to you in providing those courses. So have the
participants define their indispensable results and link the
principles and processes they learned in the course to getting
measured increases in those results.
Execute: It`s not enough to recognize. It`s not enough to link.
You must execute. "Execute" comes from a Latin root exsequi
meaning "to follow continuously and vigorously to the end or
even to the grave.`" Let`s capture if not the letter at least
the spirit of this lively root by insuring that your
activities on behalf of your clients are well "executed," that
they are carried out vigorously and continuously in their
daily work throughout their careers. If those activities are
helping them get results, you are truly their "results partner."
For instance, in regard to the leadership talk courses, HR
professionals can lead an "initiative approach." At the
conclusion of the course, each participant selects an
initiative to institute back on the job. The aim of each
initiative is to get sizable increases in their indispensable
results by using the principles and processes that they
learned.
The initiatives and their results should be concrete and
measurable, such as productivity gains, increases in sales,
operations efficiencies, and reduced cycle times.
The participants should be challenged to get increases in
results above and beyond what they would have gotten without
having taken the course. They should be challenged to get
those increases within a mutually agreed upon time, such as
quarterly reports.
In fact, if the participants don`t achieve an increase in
results that translates to at least ten times what the course
costs, they should get their money back.
Don`t stop there. Getting an increase in results is not the end
of the course, it should be the beginning the beginning of a
new phase of getting results, the stepping up phase. The more
results participants achieve, the more opportunities they have
created to achieve even more results. The leadership talk
course should have methods for instituting results` step-ups.
One such method can be a quarterly leadership-talk round table.
Participants who graduate from the course meet once a quarter
to discuss the results they have gotten and provide best
practices for getting more. Human resources should organize,
direct and facilitate the round tables. In this way, the
results the leaders are getting should increase quarter after
quarter.
When HR professionals promote such leadership talk courses,
courses that are linked to getting increases in indispensable
results and that come with the "results guarantee," those
professionals are truly seen as results partners in their
organizations.
I have used the leadership talk as an example of how you can
greatly enhance your contributions to the company by applying
the Leadership Imperative. Don`t just apply the Imperative to
such courses alone. Apply it to whatever challenge confronts
you.
When you recognize how that challenge can be met through the
Imperative, when you link the challenge to getting increases
in measured results, and when you execute for results, you can
transform your function.
You don`t have to be as distinguished as Einstein or as awesome
as Big Daddy Lipscomb, but you will in your individual way
perceive the simple, powerful center of things. You`ll be in
the thick of the most important game your company is playing
helping change your world and the world of your clients.
2004 © The Filson Leadership Group, Inc. All rights
reserved.
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The author of 23 books, Brent Filson's
recent books are, THE LEADERSHIP TALK: THE GREATEST LEADERSHIP TOOL and
101 WAYS TO GIVE GREAT LEADERSHIP TALKS. He is founder and president of
The Filson Leadership Group, Inc. and has worked with thousands of
leaders worldwide during the past 20 years helping them achieve sizable
increases in hard, measured results. Sign up for his free leadership
ezine and get a free guide, "49 Ways To Turn Action Into Results," at
www.actionleadership.com
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