Leadership - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 31
About This Presentation
Title:

Leadership

Description:

... as Nelson Mandela, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher, and others) ... speeches. Nthake Consultants cc. Local is 'Lekker' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:239
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 32
Provided by: peterd71
Category:
Tags: leadership

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Leadership


1
Leadership
  • Servant Leadership
  • Conference
  • 20th March 2006
  • Hilton College

2
Who is Ntombi Langa - Royds
  • 40 year old Black woman
  • Mother to 17 yrs old and a 5 yrs old
  • Wife, Daughter, Friend, sister etc
  • Holds 2 legal degrees
  • Holds executive and non executive directorships
    in various companies
  • Attempting to be a Entrepreneur
  • Student of Life

3
Topics to be covered
  • Background to Servant Leadership
  • Characteristics of servant leaders
  • Areas of application
  • Why Servant Leadership
  • Conclusions

4
Background
  • Robert Greenleaf proponent of Servant
    Leadership
  • Influenced by Hermann Hesse Journey to the
    East and the story of Leo, the servant
  • Lesson the great leader is seen as servant
    first, and that simple fact is the key to his
    greatness

5
Who is a leader?
  • ANGELES ARRIEN THE FOURFOLD WAY
  • Guidelines
  • SHOW UP AND BE FULLY PRESENT
  • PAY ATTENTION TO WHAT HAS HEART AND MEANING
  • TELL THE TRUTH WITHOUT BLAME OR JUDGEMENT
  • BE OPEN TO OUTCOME, BUT NOT ATTACHED TO IT

6
Leadership Characteristics
  • Peter Senge Fifth Discipline
  • SHARED VISION
  • MENTAL MODELS
  • PERSONAL MASTERY
  • TEAM LEARNING
  • SYSTEMS THINKING

7
Who is a leader?
  • Greenleaf says A leader initiates, provides
    the ideas and the structure, and takes the risk
    of failure along with the chance of success. A
    leader says I will go, follow me while knowing
    that the path is uncertain, even dangerous. One
    then trusts those who go with ones leadership
  • Begins with initiative
  • The provision of ideas in relation to the
    initiative
  • The provision of structure
  • The taking of the risk associated with the
    initiative

8
Litmus test
  • Do those served grow as persons?
  • Do they while being served become healthier,
    wiser freer, more autonomous, more likely
    themselves to become servants?
  • And what is the effect on the least privileged in
    society?
  • Will they benefit or at least not be further
    deprived?
  • Robert Greenleaf

9
Characteristics
  • Listening Lord, Grant that I may not seek so
    much as to be understood as to understand St.
    Francis of Assisi
  • Test Nothing is meaningful until it is
    related to the hearers own experience.
  • Empathy The ability to accept and recognize
    others for their unique and special skills
  • Healing Recognition of the opportunity of making
    whole those with whom one comes into contact
  • Persuasion convince rather than use coercion
  • Awareness the ability to view most situations
    from a more integrated holistic position e.g.
    Jesus saying let the one who has never sinned be
    the first to strike her with a rock .

10
Characteristics
  • Foresight the ability to understand the lessons
    of the past, the realities of the present, and
    the likely consequences of a decision on the
    future.
  • Conceptualization the ability to think beyond
    the day to day operational realities-to dream big
    dreams
  • Commitment to the growth of people activation of
    the belief that all people have intrinsic value
  • Stewardship P. Block Holding something in
    trust for another
  • Building community Greenleaf says All that is
    needed to rebuild community as a viable life form
    for large numbers of people is for enough servant
    leaders to show the way, not by mass movements,
    but by each servant leader demonstrating his/her
    unlimited liability for a quite specific
    community-related group.

11
Characteristics
  • A new one maybe
  • CALLING
  • Not yet fully defined but relates to the natural
    urge to serve others, it is deeply routed and
    value based!
  • Lynham, Taylor, Naidoo and Dooley -2005

12
Sands of TimeThe Economic Era
  • Hunter Gatherer
  • Stone age
  • Iron age
  • Industrial Age 19th century
  • Manufacturing Era 19th-20th century
  • Technology Era 20th century
  • Relational Era 21st century

13
World of Work
  • World of Work Characteristics
  • Physical strength, Speed, agility, optimal
    utilization of resources, low storage.
  • Higher storage requirement, strong arms,
    resilience, longer lasting products, rudimentary
    tools, basic planning
  • Tools, heavier products so needed storage and
    transportation capacity
  • Economic Era
  • Hunter Gatherer
  • Stone Age
  • Iron Age

14
World of Work
  • Economic Era
  • Industrial Age 19th century
  • Manufacturing Era 19th-20th century
  • Technology Era 20th century
  • Relational Era 21st century
  • World of Work Characteristics
  • Heavy machinery, lots of hands and people to work
    machines, pattern of work similar, growth of
    worker rights
  • Manufacturing emphasis on the capability of
    machine, reduction of labour intensity,
    separation of categories of work and workers
  • Reliance telecommunications abilities and
    convergence of the capability
  • EQ, Influencing skills, Servant Leadership
    characteristics.

15
Generational Theory
  • Silent Generation were born before and during the
    Great Depression and World War II. They are
    conservative, hard-working and structured,
    preferring rules, order and formal hierarchies.
    They are founts of great wisdom, having lived
    through some of humanitys most profound
    change-moments in the last 8 decades.
  • Baby Boomers are the postwar generation, the
    drugs, sex, rock n roll set who grew up during
    a time of grand visions. They invented Thank
    God, its Monday! and the 60-hour (plus)
    workweek. Boomers are passionately concerned
    about participation in the workplace, motivated
    by vision and strategy, and care about creating a
    fair and level playing field for all.

16
Generational Theory
  • Generation Xers grew up as latchkey kids during
    the era of crises (from Watergate to June 16,
    1976 from the energy crisis to the collapse of
    communism). They need options and flexibility
    they dislike close supervision, preferring
    freedom and an outputs-driven system. They love
    change so much they actually need it. Xers strive
    for balance in their lives - They work to have a
    life they dont live to work.
  • Millennial kids are the upcoming optimists,
    willing to co-operate, work and learn. They value
    diversity often not even noticing it. They are
    confident almost arrogantly so. They seem
    destined to become good scouts. Bill Strauss
    and Neil Howe, authors of Generations, predict
    they will inherit the mantle of patriotism and
    self-sacrifice personified by the GI generation
    (the generation who came before the Silents,
    represented by such people as Nelson Mandela,
    Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher,
    and others).

17
Woman of the Millenium 4cs
  • This womans Choice is shaped by her feelings
    about
  • Career- which one?
  • Cash- How much to target?
  • Children- how many and how ?
  • Article World of women

18
What about the women in organizations then?
  • This is not an article about getting more women
    into organisations although I believe that this
    is necessary Creating feminine values is not
    about women. It is about those behaviours which
    will drive the cultures and strategies required
    in the current and emerging competitive
    environment in South Africa.
  • To view in favour of creating more feminine
    values is based on two key premises
  • The emerging competitive paradigm will demand a
    set of values and behaviours which emphasise more
    of the so-called feminine attributes
  • Traditional masculine values have a number of
    limitations when applied to the task of
    leadership in modern organisations.The Wits
    Business School Journal, November 2004. It was
    written by Norman Chorn, Visiting Professor in
    Strategy at WBS from Sydney, Australia.

19
More from Norman Chorn
  • Feminine values are more suited to the task of
    integrating the various processes into strategic
    capabilities. Because they emphasize
    collaboration, exploration and interdependence,
    they promote behaviors which allow the
    organization to develop these integrated
    capabilities.

20
Chorn concludes
  • In order to develop the feminine values, he
    emphasises the role of leadership throughout the
    organisation. The role model of leaders is
    obviously critical, but in addition to that he
    recommends a few steps that can be taken share
    your vision and principals generously, engage
    your people, argue strongly with your colleagues
    about the things you believe in, know when to be
    a follower, accept failure in tragedy as part of
    the route to success, and seek time out and learn
    about other cultures
  • This will require a new style of leadership. One
    that is open, sharing and supportive, and that is
    engaging in ongoing learning from continual
    experimentation and innovation. We are not
    suggesting that all the traditional masculine
    values should be swept aside. Far from it. They
    have contributed much to the success of our
    organisations, but going forward, they need to be
    complemented by another set of values that have
    so much to offer the future.

21
Servant leadership atorganizational level
  • Appropriate to the dominant economic era!
  • Teamwork and community
  • Involvement in decision making
  • Ethical and Caring (including tough love!)
  • Enhancing people growth
  • Improving caring and quality of institutions
    visibly
  • Strategically operative and conscious Board/
    Trustee participation

22
Peter Senge Leadership
  • A leaders story, sense of purpose, values and
    vision establishes the direction and target.
  • His relentless commitment to the truth and to
    inquiry into the forces underlying current
    reality continually highlight the gaps between
    reality and the vision.
  • Leaders generate and manage this creative
    tension -not just in themselves but in an entire
    organization. This is how they energize an
    organization.
  • That is their basic job. That is why they
    exist.
  • (From The Fifth Discipline)

23
Local is Lekker
  • Ruth Tearle
  • Ride the Wild Tiger
  • Lovemore Mbigi
  • Ubuntu
  • Albert Koopman
  • Corporate governance
  • Nelson Mandela
  • Various works
  • speeches

24
Local is Lekker
  • According to Lynham, Taylor, Naidoo and Dooley
    Corporate leadership for economic, social, and
    political change lessons from south Africa ( in
    press)
  • Business leadership has taken many forms in the
    last decades. It is our belief that the business
    leaders in this study closely patterns that
    espoused by servant leadership
  • the participant interview data bear a striking
    resemblance to the above characteristics.. the
    findings can be easily related to the
    characteristics of Servant leadership. those
    particularly reflective of the value-centered and
    servant type nature of this business leadership
    experience..

25
Servant Leadership in South Africa
  • Ubuntu
  • Motho ke motho ka batho
  • Pre-colonial role of
  • SERITI / ISITHUNZI
  • African Workgroup
  • Moral emotional elements VALUES
  • UMHLANGANO/KGOTLA
  • Open Space Technology
  • Adapted from African general meeting techniques

26
Areas of Application
  • Institutional philosophy and model profit and
    non-profit organizations
  • Trustee education boards of directors
  • Community Leadership development arena
  • Experiential learning schools and universities
    etc.
  • Leadership Education and training particularly
    in programs like continuous improvement,
    community building programs etc.
  • Personal and spiritual growth programs links in
    to work done by Scott Peck, Parker Palmer,
    Margaret Wheatley and Peter Senge.

27
Why servant leadership?
  • Our history requires us to adopt a much more
    inclusive leadership style
  • The legislative environment encourages us to use
    these principles- OBE, Industry Charters, BEE,
    LRA, SDA and EE etc.
  • The Relationship Economic Era or connection
    Era requires the use of these competencies
  • Cannot lose anything for trying

28
Food for thought??Next steps
  • Awareness and Education on the subject is
    essential, create more servant leaders
  • Familiarize ourselves with the writings of R.
    Greenleaf
  • Go out and be disciples of the teachings
  • Customization to SA model
  • Fortunately, this is not a new way it is
    perhaps an elaboration of what we know and maybe
    could have also decided as people not to
    acknowledge and practice?

29
LET YOUR LIGHT SHINE!! Our deepest fear is not
that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that
we are powerful beyond measure! It is our Light,
not our darkness, that frightens us. We ask
ourselves, who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous,
talented and fabulous? Actually, who are you not
to be? You are a child of God. Your playing small
doesn't serve the world. There's nothing
enlightened about shrinking so that other people
won't feel insecure around you. We are born to
make manifest the Glory of God that is within
us. It's not just in some of us. It's in
everyone. And as we let our own Light shine, We
unconsciously give other people permission to do
the same. As we are liberated from our fears, Our
presence automatically liberates others. --
Marianne Williamson (in her book "A Return to
Love" ) 1992
30
Acknowledgements
  • Robert Greenleaf The Servant as Leader
  • Lance Bloch and Associates
  • Various articles from Tomorrowtodaybiz
  • Greenleaf Centre for Servant Leadership USA and
    SA
  • Michael E. Porter Competitive Advantage
  • Jacqui Loewen The power of strategy
  • Lynham, Taylor, Naidoo and Dooley (in press)
  • Corporate leadership for economic, social and
    political change Lessons from South Africa

31
Thank you for your attention
  • Questions and Remarks
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com