Title: 21st Century Perspectives: Leadership for Practitioners
121st Century Perspectives Leadership for
Practitioners
- Peter Evans
- Manager, Engagement Program Management Office
(EPMO), HP Services, South Pacific and Australia - peter.evans_at_hp.com , Ph 0419 383 776
- 25 September 2007
2Topics
- Context
- What is Management?
- What is Leadership? Good leadership?
- Leadership and the Victoria Police Force
- What they do, how they do it and who they lead
- Two Managerial Models for Leadership
- How Hewlett-Packard defines leadership
- How ISR defines leadership
- Conclusions
3Topics
- Context
- What is Management?
- What is Leadership? Good leadership?
- Leadership and the Victoria Police Force
- What they do, how they do it and who they lead
- Two Managerial Models for Leadership
- How Hewlett-Packard defines leadership
- How ISR defines leadership
- Conclusions
4Classical definitionsmanagement and leadership
- Management is achieving results through others
- Managers rely on the efforts of other people and
must induce them to expend effort - Scientific management theories of the 20th
century focused on control, order and hierarchy - 21st century management theories are emphasising
empowerment, values and flexibility - Leadership is the process of influencing others
to achieve organisational goals. - Leadership power can come from
- Position (i.e., formal power as manager)
- Expertise / knowledge
- Respect or affection
- The ability to influence pay, promotion or
recognition - The ability to punish
5Some Classical Leadership Models
- Blake and Moutons Managerial Grid
- Fiedlers contingency model
- Hershey Blanchards situational leadership
theory - Path-goal theory
- Spreier, Fontaine Malloys model
6Successful Leaders
- Clarify what is important to them, especially
their own values and beliefs - Adopt the right leadership style for the
situation, organisation staff - Get their right balance between focus on task and
on people - Have functional expertise, change management
skills local knowledge - Demonstrate the courage to do what is right
despite personal risk or discomfort - Are assertive with respect
- Say no when necessary but predictably and
consistently - Take well-reasoned stands to resolve important
issues - Lead others to follow through on difficult
actions or initiatives - Generate breakthroughs by championing new ideas
and initiatives - Are willing to make bold yet well-reasoned moves
- Demonstrate inspiring leadership and courage such
that others want and choose to follow
Source Successful Managers Handbook, 7th
Edition - Personnel Decisions International
ePredix, Minneapolis 2004, pages 516-517,
558-568 (Chapter 25), 603-604
7Leaders and Followers
- Leaders cannot lead unless others are willing to
follow or be involved. In most organisations
people will not follow someone just because he or
she has the title of leader or manager. People
will follow when they share the vision, it makes
sense, and they trust a leader who is passionate
about the vision.
Source Successful Managers Handbook, 7th
Edition - Personnel Decisions International
ePredix, Minneapolis 2004, page 619
8Topics
- Context
- What is Management?
- What is Leadership? Good leadership?
- Leadership and the Victoria Police Force
- What they do, how they do it and who they lead
- Two Managerial Models for Leadership
- How Hewlett-Packard defines leadership
- How ISR defines leadership
- Conclusions
9Management Tasks
- Implement strategy, policy and position
- Manage area of responsibility within corporate
policy framework - Improve service delivery
- Seek to contribute collaboratively to corporate
goals and objectives - Leadership and development of staff
- Communicate strategy, policy and position
Source Victoria Police Organisation Chart
10Leadership Outcomes
- Objective setting
- Team harmony
- Clear thinking and better decision making
- Positive performance management
- Proactive coaching and mentoring
- Resolving conflict constructively
- Adapting to change positively
- Safer workplaces
- Lower absenteeism
- Enhanced morale
- Strengthened moral code and ethics
- A motivated, inspired and unified team
Source Victoria Police Leadership Programs
Brochure (for Airlie Leadership Development
Centre)
11Victoria Police What they do
- Victoria Police contributes to a high quality of
life for individuals in the community by ensuring
a safe and secure society and underpins the
economic, social and cultural wellbeing of
Victoria.Since Victoria Police first began
providing police services in 1853, its role has
expanded from one focused primarily on law
enforcement, to one of community assistance,
guidance and leadership. Only about 20 of police
work is directly related to fighting crime. The
larger part of our work relates to general
policing and assisting the community. Our mission
is to provide a safe, secure and orderly society
by serving the community and the law. - (Victoria Police web-site About Victoria Police
page, http//www.police.vic.gov.au/content.asp?Doc
ument_ID3)
12Victoria Police What they do
- Their core responsibilities include targeting
community needs and issues in the following
high-profile areas - Traffic and transport
- Community and family
- Victoria Police seeks to actively promote and
maintain harmonious relationships with Victoria's
diverse community. Those relationships are based
on mutual respect, tolerance and trust. - Police work with different sectors of the
community such as families, children, youth and
multicultural communities to address particular
issues. - The programs and activities that focus on
community and family issues are a very important
part of police work. They help to ensure that
people feel safe in going about their daily
activities. - Crime prevention
- Victoria Police works together with local
community and businesses to identify crime and
safety issues and establish effective solutions. - Forensic services
- (Source Victoria Police web-site Our Focus
page, http//www.police.vic.gov.au/content.asp?Doc
ument_ID9 http//www.police.vic.gov.au/content.a
sp?Document_ID270)
13Victoria Police How they do it
- intelligent, confident, community, partnership
- (Victoria Police, The Way Ahead Strategic Plan
2003-2008 and Victoria Police web-site banner) - Intelligent and confident policing focused on the
development of partnerships and a community
capacity that empowers individuals to build a
safer Victoria - (Chief Commissioners Message in Victoria Police,
The Way Ahead Strategic Plan 2003-2008, page 3
and Front cover, Victoria Police 2004-2005
Report) - Confident policing encourages innovation and
creative problem-solving. It is about a people
centred and enabling management style that aims
to create police as community leaders who are
capable, ethical and high performing - (Victoria Police, The Way Ahead Strategic Plan
2003-2008, page 7) - Partnership policing is about everyone not just
the police being responsible for tackling the
problems that affect community safety. It also
promotes community environment. - (Victoria Police, The Way Ahead Strategic Plan
2003-2008, page 17)
14Victoria PoliceWho they serve and lead
- Outcomes
- Reduced Crime Rate
- Reduced Road Toll and Road Trauma
- High Levels of Customer Satisfaction
- High Levels of Community Perceptions of Safety
- Stakeholders
- Staff
- Community
- Road Users
- Court System
- Politicians
- Media
- Victims of Crime
- Perpetrators of Crime
A Leadership Role in Developing Friendly,
Safe,Caring and ConfidentCommunities
Source Victoria Police Measuring Our
Performance, 2006-07
15Topics
- Context
- What is Management?
- What is Leadership? Good leadership?
- Leadership and the Victoria Police Force
- What they do, how they do it and who they lead
- Two Managerial Models for Leadership
- How Hewlett-Packard defines leadership
- How ISR defines leadership
- Conclusions
16HPs Leadership FrameworkAn interdependent system
Strategy
- Our corporate objectives
- Our corporate strategy
- Our value proposition
Values and behavior
Structure and processes
- Our shared values
- Our standards of conduct
Metrics, results and rewards
17ISRs Organisational Leadership Effectiveness
Framework
Effective leaders demonstrate certain behaviours
in a particular sequence
Source ISR Seminar May 2004, The Key Elements
that Differentiate Financially High Performing
Organisations
18ISRs Framework of Organisational Leadership
Effectiveness The focus of different levels and
the need for cascaded leadership
A companys leadership reaches well beyond a few
good men and women at the top. It typically
includes the 3 to 5 of employees throughout the
organisation who can deliver breakthroughs in
performance. (Tsun-yan Hsieh and Sara Yik,
Leadership as the starting point of strategy,
The McKinsey Quarterly, 2005 No. 1, p67)
19ISR As Leadership is Critical, What Do Effective
Leaders Do?
- Demonstrate certain behaviours (what) at the
right time (when) and in a specific sequence
(how). - Bring their followers along with them. Leaders
behaviour encourages employees to adopt a view of
the world similar to their leaders. - Ensure alignment with one another on the
strategy. - Understand and act on the cultural drivers that
best impact the execution of the strategic
priorities.
- Leaders pull the cultural drivers to create
the appropriate operating environment that
engenders employee engagement.
20Topics
- Context
- What is Management?
- What is Leadership? Good leadership?
- Leadership and the Victoria Police Force
- What they do, how they do it and who they lead
- Two Managerial Models for Leadership
- How Hewlett-Packard defines leadership
- How ISR defines leadership
- Conclusions
21 - When mores are sufficient, laws are unnecessary
when mores are insufficient, laws are
unenforceable. - Emile Durkheim (1858-1917), Sociologist
22 - Great things can happen when you dont care who
gets the credit. - Mark Twain
23 - It is wonderful when the people believe in the
leader - It is more wonderful when the leader believes in
the people
24 - Good leaders
- - lead themselves
- - lead others
- - lead context
- - lead change
- Tsun-yan Hsieh and Sara Yik(McKinsey Quarterly)
25 - Good leaders are one the people fear and hate.
- Great leaders, the people honour and praise.
- Greatest leaders, the people do not notice their
existence. - Lead people by walking beside them..
- And when the best leader's work is done, the
people say, - "We did it ourselves.
- Old Chinese philosophy
26 - We are the peoples police. We are here to serve.
We serve our communities, we serve our citizens,
we serve our residents, and we serve our
children. - The laws we enforce and how we enforce them are
the peoples laws. The peace we keep isnt just
the peace of the few, or the rich, or the famous,
or the powerful - we keep the peoples peace -
all the peoples peace. - Christine Nixon, Chief Commissioners
MessageVictoria Police, Business Plan 2006/07
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28Topics
- Backup
- HPs Shared Values
- HPs Corporate Objectives
- HPs Standards of Conduct
29HP Way
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31HP Way
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33HP Way
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35Victoria Police organisation values behaviours
- Flexibility
- Leadership
- Approachable and consistent when dealing with
colleagues, partners and the community - Apply fair process
- Strongly commit to the organisational values
- Guide, trust, develop and empower colleagues
- Make timely decisions that are guided both by
values evidence - Inspire participation and commitment through a
shared vision - Integrity
- Professionalism
- Respect
- Support
Victoria Police, Business Plan 2006/-7, page 16
36Ethical Decision Making
- Will the decision pass Scrutiny?
- Community, Police Force, Ombudsman, Media
- Is the decision Ethical?
- Compliance with Policies, Procedures, Practices
- Compliance with Code of Ethics and Code of
Conduct - Is the decision Lawful?
- The Law
- Regulations
- Chief Commissioners Instructions
- Other Force Rules
- Is the decision Fair?
- On the Community, Colleagues, Your Family,
Yourself
Source Victoria Police Code of Conduct and Code
of Ethics
37Blake and Moutons Managerial Grid
- The best leaders are intensely task-focused and
intensely people-focused - Their model is based on the assumption that there
are ten major emerging principles of human
behaviour critical to effective leadership - Fulfilment through participation is the
motivation that gives character to human activity
and supports productivity - Open communication is essential for the exercise
of self shared responsibility - Accepting others as capable of reaching standards
of excellence promotes trust and respect - Shared participation in problem solving and
decision making stimulates active involvement and
commitment, productivity and creative thinking - Conflicts are solved by direct confrontation of
their causes, with understanding and agreement as
the basis of cooperative effort - Mutual agreement is the strongest basis for
supervision - Effective integration between boss and
subordinate enhances synergy - Management is by objectives
- Organisation members who cooperate are
interdependent in giving mutual support - Learning from work experience is through critique
and feedback
38Blake and Moutons Managerial Grid
High
9,9Team ManagementWork accomplishment is
fromcommitted people, interdependencethrough a
common stake in organisation purpose leads
torelationships of trust and respect.
1,9Country Club ManagementThoughtful attention
to needs of peoplefor satisfying relationships
leads to acomfortable, friendly
organisationatmosphere and work tempo.
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Concern for People
5,5Middle-of-the-road ManagementAdequate
organisation performance ispossible, through
balancing the necessityto get out work with
maintainingmorale of people at a satisfactory
level
9,1Authority-ComplianceEfficiency in operations
results fromarranging conditions of work insuch
a way that human elementsinterfere to a minimum
degree.
1,1Impoverished ManagementExertion of minimum
effort to getrequired work done is
appropriateto sustain organisation membership.
Low
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9
Low Concern for Production
High
Source R.R. Blake J.S. Mouton, The Managerial
Grid III The Key to Leadership
Excellence,Houston Gulf Publishing Company,
1985, page 12
39Fiedlers Contingency Theory
- Leaders least preferred co-worker orientation
measured - Either task-oriented or relationship-oriented
- Situational factor assessed
- Leader-member relations ? support leader has from
group members - Task structure ? clarity of a tasks goals,
methods performance standards - Position power ? amount of power organisation
gives leader to get tasks done
Decreasing situational favourability/control
good
poor
Elementsofsituation
high
low
low
high
Octant
Leadercharac-teristics
Source F.E. Fiedler, A Theory of Leadership
Effectiveness,New York McGraw-Hill, 1967
40Hershey and Blanchards Situational Leadership
Theory
- Situational leadership model states leader
behaviours must change based on follower
readiness - Follower readiness
- Ability (job readiness)? ability, skill,
knowledge, experience needed for a task or way of
working - Willingness (psychological readiness)?
confidence, commitment and motivation to complete
a task
MODERATE
Source P. Hersey K.H. Blanchard, Management of
Organizational Behavior Utilizing Human
Resources,Englewood Cliffs Prentice Hall, 1988
41Hershey and Blanchards Situational Leadership
Theory
- Situational leadership model states leader
behaviours must change based on follower
readiness - Leader behaviour
- Task behaviour ? how much leader tells people
what to do how, when where to do it and who
is to do it - Relationship behaviour ? how much leader uses
two-way or multiway communication
listen/facilitate
(high)
2Explaindecisionsand provideopportunity
forclarification
3Share ideasand facilitatein
decisionmaking
High taskhigh rel.
High rel.low task
(Supportive Behaviour) RELATIONSHIP BEHAVIOUR
High tasklow. rel
Low rel.low task
4Turn overresponsibilityfor
decisionsandimplementation
1Providespecificinstructionsand
closelysuperviseperformance
(low)
(high)
TASK BEHAVIOUR(Guidance)
42Hershey and Blanchards Situational Leadership
Theory
- Leader behaviour
- Telling
- Used for low-readiness (R1)
- Give people directions on what to do how to do
it - Selling
- Used for low-moderate readiness (R2)
- Give specific directions, but support enthusiasm
- Participating
- Used for moderate-high readiness (R3)
- Supportive, participating style emphasising
communication and collaboration - Delegating
- Used for high readiness (R4)
- Little support or direction needed
(high)
2Explaindecisionsand provideopportunity
forclarification
3Share ideasand facilitatein
decisionmaking
High taskhigh rel.
High rel.low task
(Supportive Behaviour) RELATIONSHIP BEHAVIOUR
High tasklow. rel
Low rel.low task
4Turn overresponsibilityfor
decisionsandimplementation
1Providespecificinstructionsand
closelysuperviseperformance
(low)
(high)
TASK BEHAVIOUR(Guidance)
43Path-goal theory
- Explains how leader behaviour influences
subordinates motivation and job satisfaction - Leaders seek to influence subordinates
perception of work goals and paths to achieve
both work and personal goals - Based on expectancy motivation theory
- Effort-performance expectancy
- Probability that effort will lead to performance
level required - Performance-outcome expectancy
- Probability successful performance will lead to
outcomes / rewards - Valence
- Anticipated value of outcomes / rewards
Source R.H. House T.R. Mitchell, Path-Goal
Theory of Leadership, Journal of Contemporary
Business,Autumn 1974, pp 81-97
44Path-goal theory
- Considers two dimensions which can affect
path-goal - Leader behaviours (all assumed to be usable by
same leader ) - Directive ? task-oriented
- Supportive ? relationship-oriented
- Participative ? consultative
- Achievement-oriented ? challenging
- Situational factors
- Subordinate characteristics ? traits, skills,
abilities, needs - Context characteristics ? task, work group,
organisations formal authority system - The leader must consider the situational factors
to assess which leader behaviours will best
enhance subordinates path-goal motivation and
job satisfaction. Practical approach - Anticipated end result ?
- Expectancy theory element ?
- Situational factor to be changed ?
- Leader behaviour to be selected
45Six Styles of Leadership
- Directive
- Entails strong, sometimes coercive behaviour
- Visionary
- Focuses on clarity and communication
- Affiliative
- Emphasises harmony and relationships
- Participative
- Collaborative and democratic
- Pacesetting
- Characterised by personal heroics
- Coaching
- Focuses on long-term development and mentoring
Source S.W. Spreier, M.H. Fontaine, R.L. Malloy,
Leadership Run Amok The Destructive Potential of
Overachievers,Harvard Business Review, June
2006, pages 77, 80
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