Integral Leadership ReviewLeadership Opportunity
Volume I, No. 8 - September 2001

(Renamed Integral Leadership Review in December 2001 )

Integral Leadership Review
Contact Russ Volckmann, Publisher and Editor at russ@integralleadershipreview.com

My sympathy to all of us. We share in the field of sadness.
My hope is that we can all learn to be the change we seek.

Table of Contents, Integral Leadership Review, September 2001

  1. Leadership Quote
  2. Mission
  3. Article: The Leader As a Team Player
  4. New Teleclass
  5. A Leadership Coaching Tip
  6. Summary (publications worth noting)

Mission

I am grateful for the more than three hundred subscribers to Leadership Opportunity Your support means that we can move together closer to a way of viewing and being in the world that is integrating, generative and supports our evolving integrity. Also, I wish to express my gratitude to the many kindnesses, suggestions and offers of supportLeadership Opportunity has received.

The mission of this e-journal is to be a practical guide to the application of an integral perspective to the challenges of leadership in business and life and to the effective relationship between executive/business coaches and their clients.

CoachThee.com If you are a professional coach, you should consider joining the Coach to Coach Network (C2CN) a virtual peer-to-peer community of 700 coaches throughout the world.

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For more information, email your questions to John Agno, C2CN Newsletter Editor, at johnagno@signatureseries.com or visit the links page on his website at www.coachthee.com

The Leader As a Team Player 

In the prior issue I described teamwork among leaders as inspired collaboration. Note that teamwork rests upon a foundation of organization and purpose, all dedicated to achieving evolving business objectives. This perspective is an example of how an integral approach allows us to shift from thinking about either/or (hierarchy or teamwork, for example) to both/and (leading and being a team player). James Collins and Jerry Porras came to advocate both/and in Built to Last.

Hierarchy is one structure that is implied by organization. I am suggesting that teamwork follows from inspiration and is built on a foundation of organization (read system, structure, process including hierarchy). Leaders in business need to understand and communicate that both of these modes are essential in the rapidly changing dynamics of business today. We all need to be clear that there is no moral imperative for one over the other.

For teamwork to be most effective it needs to be inspired. The team is able to perform at new levels of generativity and creativity to respond to new or unanticipated situations. Executive or business leadership teamwork is built on the capacity to manage routine. What inspires? It could be a challenge, desperation, an exciting opportunity, a passionate dedication to a vision or mission, or determination to create an outcome and receive a reward.

And this means that when we are creating and developing capacities for individual leadership, as important as all of the leader competency literature is (and this is most of the literature on leadership), it is important to include what is important about the individual leader's capacity for becoming an innovative player on the leadership team.

Note that phrase: an innovative player. The two parts of this relate to what is important to the leader (innovation) and how the leader demonstrates that (player). What is important is grounded in commitment to leadership purpose, as well as the immediate situation the leader is faced with. It is influenced by the leaders' life events and those of others in his/her life. And part of this constellation of what is important is related to what drives the leader to be an effective team player: a capacity to innovate in the face of novelty and challenge for the leadership team. This may be a functional equivalent of Badaracco's notion of the quiet moral leader (see summary below).

I am reminded that Margaret Wheatley said recently, "All coaching is life coaching." Or words to that effect. When she said this a room full of hundreds of coaches cheered. Well, Meg is right. All coaching is life coaching. And coaching business leaders involves life coaching…and a whole lot more. The capacity of a leader is always influenced by what is present in their individual lives and roles, as well as what is going on in the organizational, business and leadership field in which they find themselves.

Leaders' capacities for innovation are a product of their ability to be clear about their motivations for creative responses as well as their ability to open their minds to new ways of seeing and interpreting their own responses and what is happening in their environment. For many of us, this is the tough stuff. Learning communication skills (challenging though that may be) is easy compared to learning how to think in new ways, discover assumptions, work through our competing commitments and address the boundaries we place on our imaginations. And this is essential for developing the capacity for innovation required for effective executive and leadership teamwork.

The player part of this is the behaviors that creativity and fresh thinking foster. Think about this in the context of an inspired jazz group. When Dave Brubeck and Paul Desmond performed LeSouk in their Jazz Goes to College live performance they were able to anticipate and engage with each other in a way that led to one of my all time favorite jazz performances, one I never tire of listening to. Or a basketball team. Did you ever watch exchanges between Michael Jordan and Scotty Pippin or any of the other Chicago Bulls when they were at their best? They were well organized and their play often seemed to be absolutely intuitive. Each was able to be generative and creative in their exchanges and totally baffle their opposition.

Well, that is the kind of player that I am talking about. For an inspired executive team to perform at that level, each individual leader needs to know how to be innovative and to use that innovative capacity in relation to other team players.

We can look to the literature on creativity or the use of intuition in leadership and find some useful guidance in supporting leaders to develop these capacities. Yet, I think that the single most valuable path to this is the path of experience. Of conscious experience. This means that leaders need to be able to increasingly move into conscious competence in their relationships with innovation, in their sense of themselves and their capacities to manifest this competence in relation to other leaders.

Perhaps the most effective way to develop those capacities is simply to pay attention. Notice what is going on inside and out when circumstances demand creativity on the part of the individual leader and the leadership team.

Next Issue: Leading the Enterprise

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Train for Success Leadership, Team-building and Business Coaching Liz Peterson, President 970 tanglewood drive, suite 100, wheeling, illinois 60090 847.274.7471, fax 847.229.1959 lizpeterson@train4success.com-www.train4success.com

^— ———-——— —^

Summary

If you have been reading these e-journals over time, perhaps you have picked up the theme being iterated: leadership is both an individual and collective phenomenon. There is a growing literature dancing around this theme. Here is another--with a twist.

Joseph L. Badaracco, Jr., "We Don't Need Another Hero,"Harvard Business Review, September 2001, pp, 121-126.

This Harvard professor notes that the individuals we celebrate as great moral leaders represent the gold standard of ethical behavior. However, the studies of this business ethicist are coming up with a different picture.

"…over the course of my career as a specialist in business ethics, I have observed that the most effective moral leaders in the corporate world often sever the connection between morality and public heroism. These men and women aren't high-profile champions of right over wrong and don't want to be…They move patiently, carefully, and incrementally. They right--or prevent--moral wrongs in the workplace inconspicuously and usually without casualties. I have come to call these people quiet leaders because their modesty and restraint are in large measure responsible for their extraordinary achievements."

He offers four basic rules that quiet moral leaders follow:

  1. Put things off until tomorrow. Buy time when things are not in order to allow calm to found. This involves quick fixes and strategic stalling.
  2. Pick your battles. Use your political capital carefully. It is easy to dissipate. Plan ahead on how much you are willing to expend.
  3. Bend the rules, don't break them. Following the rules is a technique for putting things off, but be careful. This may also be a moral cop-out. So, when you bend the rules, make sure you are willing to own up to deeper responsibilities. These may not be ideal ways for dealing with situations, but sometimes situations offer little alternative.
  4. Find a compromise. The idea of compromise has bad press in our culture. Failure to compromise may mean that you are treating moral principles as black-and-white. Recognizing the value of crafting responsible and workable compromises defines how quiet leaders work.

These quiet leaders are characterized as recognizing that they often have mixed motives. Things aren't simple and neat. And they are very realistic. "Taken together, the traits of mixed motives and hard-boiled realism describe the working assumptions of quiet moral leaders. A moral compass points these individuals in the right direction, but the guidelines for quiet leadership help them get to their destinations -- in one piece."

Interestingly, these quiet moral leaders are most often found in the middle of organizations.

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Thanks  
Thanks for taking the time to consider this e-publication in a world of data overload. For leaders, collaborators, consultants, academics and coaches alike; I welcome you to some ideas and a dialogue that may benefit us all. I hope you will contact me soon with your idea, reference or article. Suggestions on improvement are welcome.
Russ Volckmann, PhD
Coaching Leaders in Business and Life
Email: russ@integralleadershipreview.com
Tel: 831.333-9200, FAX: 831.656-0110
Disclaimer:
This material is intended for informational and educational purposes only. Financial, Legal and Professional information is not Financial, Legal and Professional advice. You should see a Financial, Legal or Professional in the area in which you live if you need advice.
You are welcome to share the contents of this e-publication. Please provide source information, including www.integralleadershipreview.com.
Thank you.

© 2001 Russ Volckmann. All Rights Reserved

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