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Awareness,

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(Dr. Lawrence Peck, Vice President BP-Amoco Oil, USA) Page 4. Session 2. 7th Sept 2004 ... (Do you know where you're going? How to get there?) 3. Trust ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Awareness,


1
Awareness, Dialogue, Mental Models Shared
Leadership
by KURT A. APRIL FT Leadership
September 2004
2
SELF LEADERSHIP Inside-Out Success
  • Highly effective people have learned to
    integrate a localized focus with comprehensive
    awareness. They zero in on the present moment
    without losing the broader sense of their vision
    and purpose. Being deeply focused, yet
    simultaneously aware of the meaningful context of
    our lives is one of the keys to inside-out
    success
  • Kevin Cashman, CEO of LeaderSource

BEING
DOING
3
SOME DEFINITIONS ON MANAGEMENT
  • Management is more disciplined than
    leadership, more concerned with today and
    tomorrow, rather than
  • five years time

  • (Clive Hershen, ex-MD
    Foschini Group, Australia)
  • Managers are people who do things
    right and leaders are people who do the right
    thing

  • (Warren Bennis Burt
    Nanus, US Academics)
  • A manager will only manage within the
    parameters of a given situation, without aspiring
    for
  • improvement both for herself /
    himself or for those within her / his circle

  • (Roger Godwin, Apple
    Computer)
  • Leadership has to do with people,
    management has to do with systems. Leadership
    has to do with
  • defining reality, setting high
    expectations and goals for the future, and
    inspiring others to share those
  • definitions and goals. Management
    has to do with the method one uses to keep track
    of progress
  • toward the goals

  • (Dr. Lawrence Peck,
    Vice President BP-Amoco Oil, USA)

4
SOME DEFINITIONS ON LEADERSHIP
  • Leadership is authentic
    self-expression that creates value

  • (Kevin Cashman, CEO of
    LeaderSource)
  • Anyone can manage in a successful,
    well developed economy. Leadership is creating
    value for your society,
  • your community, your employees, your
    family and yourself in demerited, tough times

  • (Professor Takanaka,
    Tokyo University and ex-President of Chu San Ren)
  • Leadership requires a responsiveness
    to other people, and a willingness to see how
    they view the organisation,
  • its objectives, capabilities, and so
    on and then try and incorporate that somehow,
    because you do have to lead
  • committed people who want to follow


  • (Kate Jowell, Board
    Member of Sanlam First National Bank, South
    Africa)
  • Good leadership consists of showing
    average people how to do the work of superior
    people

  • (John D. Rockefeller,
    Rockefeller Foundation, USA)
  • Leadership is a function of context
    different individuals are likely to be leaders in
    terms of particular activities,
  • because of the nature of that
    activity, what needs to be done, what the person
    actually brings to the role, the
  • ability to get the group of people to
    proceed forward in a manner which gets toward
    achieving the objective
  • and leadership is about getting that
    to happen

5
Colin Hall Executive Chairman, Wooltru, SA
Board Member, MS, UK
  • I think that the fundamental flaw in the concept
    of management is that it assumes that you manage
    people. Now if you have a view about people
    that they are exponential, and the world we live
    in is about relationships, its systemic then
    you cant manage that. So the myth is that
    managers manage people. The only way you can
    direct humans is to lead them. You cant manage
    them they arent manageable. The moment you
    try to manage them, you reduce their capacity
    you dont enhance it. Leadership, for me, is
    when you win, or earn, the willing and
    enthusiastic followership of one other person.
  • TESTS OF LEADERSHIP
  • 1. Vision (You have an idea that is
    sufficiently captivating to attract me)
  • 2. Competence (Do you know where youre going?
    How to get there?)
  • 3. Trust (Do I trust you? How much am I
    willing to risk?)
  • 4. Courage (I think you have the courage and
    responsibility)

6
Kurt Aprils view
  • Leadership begins with the knowledge that we
    become
  • whole, when we exercise our efforts, emotions and
  • spirituality to make others powerful.
  • Leadership is thus the ability to live on
    purpose,
  • by being authentic and consciously aware
  • of oneself and others, thereby creating
  • value for yourself and others

7
METASKILLS METACOGNITION
  • METACOGNITION an individuals deep awareness of
    his or her own cognitive and emotional processes,
    and his or her ability to control these processes
    by organising, monitoring and modifying them as a
    function of environmental factors.
  • METASKILLS are the personal skills that we
    need, in order to bring about the above
    awareness. They are the skills needed to step
    back and examine ourselves, the secondary
    processes, the irrational or subconscious
    processes that influence our feelings, behaviour
    and actions, examine why we are here, how we
    operate and how we affect others and our
    environment (colleagues, family, work, community,
    the world, the universe).
  • Together, they give you the bases for
  • PERSONAL EFFECTIVENESS

8
Leadership starts with each of us
  • BEHAVIOURS
  • THINKING ( PARADIGMS / MENTAL MODELS )
  • INHERENT ENERGY

9
Systemic Leadership Learning Disabilities
  • I am my position
  • Focus on an individuals job, rather than on the
    purpose of the whole organisation.
  • The enemy is out there
  • We blame others when things go wrong. Yet, in
    here and out there are part of the same
    system.
  • Mistakes mean Incompetence
  • Risk taking is not encouraged / no learning
    culture.
  • The illusion of taking charge
  • Taking charge is often an aggressive solution
    solving a problem without considering how the
    problem has arisen, or how you may have
    contributed to the problem (in order to come up
    with a solution).

10
Systemic Leadership Learning Disabilities
  • The fixation on events
  • Focus on short-term events, means that we dont
    notice the slow gradual processes which occur
    over the long-term.
  • The parable of the boiled frog
  • Not detecting subtle changes in the environment
    until it is too late.
  • The delusion of learning from experience
  • We learn best from experience, but many of our
    important decisions impact most on others. If we
    act in isolation and fail to share our
    experiences and learnings with others, then there
    will be unintended consequences of which we
    remain ignorant.
  • The myth of the management or top team
  • Teams may appear cohesive, and function well on
    routines, but they are full of internal conflicts
    and can fall apart under pressure

11
Understanding Self
  • Person you most admire? Why?
  • What do they have that you dont have?
  • What do they have that you do have?
  • Aspect(s) that others can write about you that
    they admire?
  • To become the person you want to be, what is
    missing the gap(s)?
  • What is causing the gap(s) from (a) you, (b)
    world?
  • What is the first step(s) to remove that block?
  • Why havent you done it yet (Energy Gauges)?
  • Why are you allowing energy-takers in your space?

12
Appendix 3 Responsibility Identification
  • Complaint Pay
    Off Environment
    My


  • Would Be Choice
  • No Voice Less
    conflict Not DO
    Humane, Trust Choose to

  • rocking the boat
    Honesty do nothing

  • Not exposing oneself DONT
    Hidden about it


  • Conflicts

FACT
INTERPRETATION
CONSEQUENCES
RESPONSE
13
SUCCESS - REWARDS
  • WHAT DOES SUCCESS MEAN
  • FOR YOU AND HOW WOULD
  • YOU LIKE TO BE REWARDED
  • TO ACHIEVE THAT SUCCESS?

14
Appendix 2 Dimensions of PERSONAL VALUES
FAMILY
LEAVE A LEGACY
INDEPENDENCE
RISK
RECOGNITION
WEALTH
TIME
15
Contact Details
  • KURT A. APRIL
  • Sainsbury Fellow Academic Director (USA-SA
    CLPV)
  • Graduate School of Business (GSB), Breakwater
    Campus,
  • University of Cape Town (UCT), University Private
    Bag,
  • Rondebosch, 7701, Cape Town, South Africa
  • Telephone (Home) 27 21 794-0261
  • Telephone (UCT Office) 27 21 406-1411
  • Fax (UCT Office) 27 21 421-5510
  • Mobile / Cell Phone (SA) 27 82 780-4668
  • Mobile / Cell Phone (Holland) 31 65 054-2091
  • E-Mail aprilkur_at_gsb.uct.ac.za

  • kapril_at_iafrica.com

  • kurtapril_at_zonnet.nl
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