Title: Developing Leaders Developing the Profession
1Developing LeadersDeveloping the Profession
- Professor Jennifer Rowley
- Department of Information and Communications
- Manchester Metropolitan University
2Themes
- Leadership and challenges in the information
profession - Becoming a leader
- The Leadership Diamond
- Leadership journeys
- Comments and discussion
3Leadership and challenges in the information
profession
4Leadership and challenges in the information
profession 1
- Three facets of leadership capacity
- Senior leaders who will set the direction and
reputation for the information profession and its
organizations, influencing key political and
community stakeholders - Dispersed leadership capacity throughout
information organizations to - promote more local innovations and change
- develop the individuals who will be the senior
leaders of the future succession planning - Superleaders who will and can develop other
leaders
5Leadership and challenges in the information
profession 2
- The Great Divide
- On one hand
- There is evidence that librarians are reluctant
to become leaders, preferring to focus on
professional library issues (Mullins, 2005,
OConnor, 2007) - Librarians lack a wider, strategic view and this
means that they are not suited to leadership
(OConnor, 2007). - On the other hand
- the challenges facing the information profession
are such that even traditional leadership theory
and practices are probably not sufficient unto
the task.
6Leadership and challenges in the information
profession 3
- What are the challenges?
- In general
- Todays leaders act in a global, complex,
uncertain and interconnected business
environment (Maak and Pless, 2006) - For LIS
- Technological change driving economic and social
change - Complexity from digitisation and mix of
resources, changing service delivery and ethos,
changes in user expectations - Less homogenous (IT and LIS and ? )and more
distributed workforce, with changing portfolio of
skills and knowledge - Uncertain political and marketplace arenas (Pugh,
2008)
7Leadership and challenges in the information
profession 4
- Some comments from Lyn Brown (Nov 2008, Update)
- public libraries need a single-minded sense of
purpose, linked to an understanding of the bigger
picture - the delivery of good projects is not leadership
it does not produce a narrative, it does not
provide advocacy - You must assert yourselves as part of your day
job - Ultimately the problem is an endemic
professional uncertainty about the role of public
libraries and just how to influence change rather
than be passive recipients of change.
8Becoming a leader
9Becoming a leader 1
- Not everyone starts out thinking I want to be a
leader - Ways in which you might find yourself being a
leader - Because you aspire to the status of leadership
(and maybe the salary of management) - Because you seek career progression
- Because you want to be a good and successful
manager - Because you get satisfaction from and enjoy
developing and inspiring other people - Because you like to be at the centre of things
- Because you want to make a difference
- Because you are impatient with others attempts at
making things happen. - And, most importantly, because you realise that
others are following and looking to you for
leadership
10Becoming a leader 2
- Taffinders (1995) leadership questionnaire
- Imposing context
- Can you stand outside your own organization and
see it as it really is? - Do you understand the context of your business
and organization? - Have you articulated the core of what matters to
your business, what you stand for? - Risk making, risk taking
- Are you serving the future of your organization
or merely guarding it past? - Are you willing to make mistakes and take the
consequences? - Do you actively take risks by seeking
opportunities?
11Becoming a leader 2
- Do you want to be a leader?
- Taffinders (1995) leadership questionnaire
- Imposing context
- Can you stand outside your own organization and
see it as it really is? - Do you understand the context of your business
and organization? - Have you articulated the core of what matters to
your business, what you stand for? - Risk making, risk taking
- Are you serving the future of your organization
or merely guarding its past? - Are you willing to make mistakes and take the
consequences? - Do you actively take risks by seeking
opportunities?
12Becoming a leader 3
- Taffinders (1995) leadership questionnaire
contd - Unpredictability
- Are you prepared to experiment?
- Do you create adventure in your organization?
- Conviction
- Do you believe in yourself?
- Are your opinions your own or someone elses?
- Do you thoroughly believe in what you are doing
in your organization? - Generating critical mass
- Can you make what you believe in happen?
- Can/have you convince(d) people of the urgency of
the need to change, to grab opportunities?
13The Leadership Diamond
14The Leadership Diamond 1
- What is a leader?
- A leader is someone who has followers
- You cant have a leader without a group
- You cant lead others if you cant lead
yourself -
- Post-it exercise Complete
- A good leader.
- Handy (1993) suggests that understanding the
nature of leadership and how it can be developed
is like the quest for the Holy Grail - There will be no easy answers!
15The Leadership Diamond 2
Our summary of what leadership is..
Personal Qualities (self-knowledge)
Vision and Direction (broader perspective)
Working with Others (relationship building)
Managing Performance and Implementation (action
and perseverance)
16The Leadership Diamond 3
- Facet 1 Personal qualities Leaders have a
range of personal qualities that will provoke
followership, and they understand their own
strengths and weaknesses. They continually seek
to develop their leadership, managerial,
professional capabilities and have a commitment
to learning and development both for themselves
and others. - Facet 2 Working with others Leaders work
effectively with others and develop successful
relationships both within teams and across the
wider organization. They motivate, inspire, and
empower others, and facilitate effective team
working. Further, they establish and embed values
and cultures and support others in developing
their capabilities and confidence for and in the
future.
17The Leadership Diamond 4
- Facet 3 Vision and direction Leaders take the
wider perspective looking to the context and the
longer term future. They scan the horizon, engage
in networking and influencing outside the
organization so that they are able to make
intelligent and well-informed decisions about
strategic direction. They encourage others to do
the same, and are able to formulate shared
visions. Leaders are prepared to formulate
visions in an often unknown and fragmented
future, and accept the personal risk that this
involves. - Facet 4 Managing performance and implementation
Leaders make sure that things happen, that
tasks get done. This facet involves quality
management day-to-day working energizing
communicating and reiterating performance
expectations making effective plans for
implementation and, attending to budgets and
resource allocation and management.
18Leadership journeys
19Leadership journeys 1
- Leaders are made not born, and how they develop
is critical for organizational change - (Rooke and Torbert, 2005)
- Your leadership journey
- Recognising and reflecting on leadership moments
- Seeking out and capitalising on leadership
opportunities - Gathering leadership experiences (some of the
best of which will involve failure)
20Leadership journeys 2
- Authentic leadership
- focuses on the experience of being a leader
- recognises that all leaders are on a leadership
journey - Authentic leadership is achieved through
self-awareness, self-acceptance, authentic
actions and relationships, and being aware of
ones own vulnerabilities. - Authentic leadership theory suggests effective
leaders work with and understand - Trigger events - events that lead to personal
growth and development - Values experienced and embedded in
self-identity - Emotions acknowledge and embrace their own and
others emotions
21Leadership journeys 3
- Seven transformations of leadership
- (Rooke and Torbert, 2005)
- Action logic how leaders interpret their
surroundings and react when their power or safety
is challenged - few leaders understand their own action logic
- few have explored the possibility of changing it.
- Opportunists, Diplomats, and Experts (55 of
sample) below average corporate performance. - Achievers (30 of sample) - better at
implementing organizational strategies. - Individualists, Strategists, Alchemists (15 of
sample) showed the consistent capacity to
innovate and to successfully transform their
organizations.
22Leadership journeys 4
23Leadership journeys 5
24Leadership journeys 6
- Some practical pointers
- Understand how you learn
- Seek out opportunities for experiential learning,
through - Work experiences
- Job shadowing
- Action learning
- Coaching and mentoring
- Identify formal leadership programmes
- Leading Modern Public Libraries programme (DCMS/
MLA/ SCL) - The Future Leaders Programme (SCONUL/ UCISA/
British Library) - Organizational leadership development programmes
25Reflections, comments, questions?
26Comments and discussion
- So, where are you on your leadership journey?
- Leadership its a habit of mind
- (borrowed from Jolly et al, Library Information
Update, Oct 2008, 36-38) - If you want to know more
- Roberts, S and Rowley, J (2008) Leadership the
challenge for the information profession. Facet.