The Leadership Mystique Manfred Kets de Vries

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The Leadership Mystique Manfred Kets de Vries

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Title: The Leadership Mystique Manfred Kets de Vries


1
The Leadership MystiqueManfred Kets de Vries
  • Nicole DiScala
  • Prof. Mary Ellen Georgas
  • Leading Change in Internet Business
  • February 2, 2006

2
Who is de Vries?
  • A professor at INSEAD business school who teaches
    on subjects such as developing emotional
    intelligence.
  • His research interests include cross-cultural
    leadership, stress, entrepreneurship,
    organizational change and career dynamics.
  • His books focus on practicing leaders who want to
    be more effective.

3
1 Leadership and the Clinical Paradigm
  • deVries is a strong believer in the relationship
    between emotional intelligence and effective
    leadership.
  • The clinical paradigm has three facets that are
    underpinned by our unconscious.

4
2 What you see isnt necessarily what you get!
  • Perception isnt reality
  • He performs a study where most executives cannot
    count how often the letter F appears in one
    sentence.
  • This proves that these are just cognitive
    distortions.
  • We also have emotional distortions.
  • Individuals that are able to reframe problems and
    work both sides of their brain are most likely to
    succeed.

5
3 All Behavior has a Rationale!
  • deVries believes that we behave irrationally in
    the name of reason.
  • He believes that we avoid confrontation because
    we face unpleasant consequences.
  • This behavior is called transferential (meaning
    confusion in time and place).
  • Many executives are prone to character disorders
    such as narcissism, schizophrenia,
    hypersensitivity, and mood swings.
  • Because these disorders live within our character
    they are difficult to change.

6
We are all products of our past!
  • deVries believes that we are a developmental
    outcome of earlier experiences modified by our
    genetic endowment.
  • This follows his belief of why we avoid
    confrontations (past experiences with parents -
    when we confronted them, we lived through
    unpleasant consequences).
  • He believes that we live our lives forwards but
    understand them backwards.

7
Emotional Intelligence
  • Society focuses on logico-mathematical
    (left-brain) intelligence that can be measured in
    an IQ test.
  • deVries believes that a high IQ does not
    necessarily equate to being a good leader.
  • deVries believes that (right-brain) emotional
    intelligence (EQ) is equally as important as IQ.
  • Since EQ can be developed and IQ cannot, it is
    very important to get to know our emotions, learn
    to manage them, and learn to deal with others
    emotions we can build our EQ.

8
REMEMBER! We have two ears and one mouth
because we should actively listen twice as much
as we speak!A great leader listens to his/her
workers.
9
The Mussel Syndrome
  • Employees today are not lifelong employees.
  • Executives that surround themselves with yes
    men are being replaced by idea and information
    organizations.
  • Leaders today are challenged to build an
    effective relationship with subordinates who are
    suspicious of them.

10
The Failure Factor
  • deVries believes that irrational behavior by a
    leader is common and often leads to failure.
    Some examples include
  • Leaders who get others to do their dirty work
  • Tyrannical behavior
  • Micro-managing and distrusting others
  • Playing games at work

11
Can you be honest with your boss?
  • deVries believes that many leaders ask for
    constructive criticism but rarely accept it well.
  • Employees are left realizing that is better to
    just keep their opinions to themselves.
  • The resilient (high EQ) leader deals with
    problems proactively, reframes situations
    positively, and fantasizes about a rosy future.

12
The Dynamics of Succession
  • Leaders are like wine some age well, others
    turn to vinegar
  • Senior leaders are like products they have a
    life cycle.
  • Leaders either follow an evolution or revolution
    path.
  • Senior positions should always realize that
    succession should be planned.

13
The Dilbert Phenomenon
  • Many organizations say that people are our
    greatest asset but take human capital for
    granted.
  • People nowadays would rather save their energy
    for activities outside of work.
  • Employees should feel alive at work but
    unfortunately, the more important the job the
    more emotional restraint you are expected to show.

14
LIFE LESSONS!
  • Learn to say no.
  • Spend time with your families.
  • Dismiss the work now and enjoy life later
    strategy.
  • Nobodys last words were ever, I should have
    spent more time at the office.

15
The Rot at the Top
  • deVries believes that the personality of the
    leader influences the organizations strategy and
    structure.
  • The five big faults are
  • Dramatic
  • Suspicion
  • Being detached
  • Depression
  • Compulsion

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Dramatic Leaders
  • They are superficially warm and charming but they
    lack sincerity and consideration for others and
    their work relationships are unstable.
  • The goal of these kinds of leaders is unbridled
    growth in order to meet their own narcissistic
    need.

17
Suspicious Leaders
  • Distrust others and are easily offended or
    angered.
  • They are cold to followers as they supervise
    closely and punish mistakes severely.
  • Employees that share these kinds of views are
    hired and promoted.
  • Employees that dont agree are treated with
    suspicion.

18
Detached Leaders
  • Are mistrustful and prefer not to interact with
    followers.
  • These leaders want social acceptance but have
    cognitive and emotional deficits which means they
    are unconcerned about social isolation.
  • They are often bored and their organizations
    always look internally.

19
Depressive Leaders
  • Feel a sense of helplessness and have low
    self-esteem.
  • They throw money at bank managers and
    consultants.
  • They are trying to buy the imagination and plan
    of action to substitute for not having one of
    their own.
  • These types of leaders are generally found in
    mature markets.

20
Compulsive Leaders
  • They are whizzes at aspects and management.
  • deVries believes that they fear being at the
    mercy of people or events, and want to control
    anything that may affect their lives.
  • They are obsessed by details and exclude pleasure
    and fun from their lives.
  • Their organizations supervise their staff closely
    and have standard operating procedures and
    bureaucratic structures.

21
A leaders faulty personality can damage an
organization BUT a faulty organization can
damage a leaders disposition and manner.
22
Achieving Personal and Organizational Change
  • For change to happen at work, deVries believes
    that peoples heads and hearts have to be
    affected.
  • Workers have to be willing to be stretched and
    uncomfortable.
  • Willingness to forget old ideas and accept new
    ones comes one individual at a time.
  • It is believed that organizational change occurs
    in terms of individual change.

23
The Five Cs of Change
  • Concern about present, unpleasant emotions like
    sadness, anger and frustration induce a
    reappraisal of behavior and then change.
  • Confrontation is a trigger for the first
    incremental changes.
  • Clarification of change means making it public.
    You have to go through with the change once it is
    made public.
  • Crystallization stage brings ideas and plans to
    definite form.
  • It is then that the mindset shows that Change has
    been achieved.

24
Effective Leadership Includes
  • Change-oriented
  • Able to draw on bases of power to influence the
    group
  • Contextually aware
  • In possession of competence clusters personal,
    social and cognitive
  • In possession of surgency skills they are
    assertive
  • In possession of impression management skills
    they appear confident even when they are not.
  • Sociable
  • Agreeable they are flexible and willing to
    reframe situations
  • Dependable and trustworthy
  • Analytically intelligent and able to think
    strategically
  • In possession of high EQ they know what they
    stand for and know how to develop relationships.

25
Leadership in a Global Context
  • Cultural values influence leadership practices
    and decision-making styles, and should be learned
    by cross-cultural leaders.
  • Global leaders are adaptable, are at ease with
    ambiguity and have a sense of humor and the
    ability to relate to all people.

26
Roles Leaders Play
  • True leadership needs an architectural and a
    charismatic aspect both can be learned.
  • The architectural aspect means that the leader
    needs to repeat their message and model the
    behavior they want repeated.
  • This means decentralizing decision-making and
    letting people feel that they are making a
    difference.
  • The most powerful people in the world are people
    who know when to let go.

27
Leadership Development
  • There is a strong relationship between leadership
    and learning.
  • Hire the right person, dont try to train someone
    to be.
  • It comes from getting responsibility early, being
    exposed to different business functions, learning
    from mistakes, being mentored, and having a high
    EQ and a work-life balance.

28
Authentizotic Organizations
  • Translates from two Greek words that translate to
    authentic and vital to life.
  • This type of organization spreads
    decision-making, has shared values, and develops
    its entire staff.
  • Work is not stressful in this situation. It is
    an anchor of psychological well-being that
    provides a means of identity and self-esteem.
  • These organizations run contrary to bottom-line
    business practice and make concerns for their
    people a priority.

29
deVries psychiatric perspective on leadership
brings about a different perspective but an
important one. Can anyone really disagree that a
well brought up, self-confident and rounded
individual wouldnt be an effective leader?
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