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Developing Collaborative Leadership Styles

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Developing Collaborative Leadership Styles

With a new Australian government recently in place, it raises key questions around the impact of collaborative, autocratic or competitive leadership styles. This caused many voters, like myself, to question what leadership style might be best for our country’s future? Is it a leader who runs a presidential style campaign, operating from an “I” or a singular perspective, or is it a leadership style,  operating from “we” or from a team perspective? Whilst political polices may vary, or not, how important was it for voters to support an inclusive leadership style and a unified team? Or was it in line with global trends, appropriate to elect “the shouty guy” ?

Is it a merely a question of values, and is it also about questioning the role and importance of innovation and modernity? Also, in times of volatility, uncertainty, complexity and ambiguity, are we required to make similar observations and powerful decisions about the range of leadership styles currently demonstrated in many of our organizations? By chairpersons, boards, and CEO’s, also operating from an individual, autocratic and singular “I” centred leadership style? Or Shifting from the singular to the plural – from I to we

Shifting from the singular to the plural – from an “I” to “we” and “us” leadership style is more likely to drive responsibility and accountability. For the results they deliver, whether it is in government or in organizations. Whether the goal is to get people to work together across internal boundaries, or silos, or to create high performing, seamless and collaborative operating organisational cultures. It involves giving people the time and space, skills and techniques, to deeply connect and collectively make effective internal decisions, reduce costs and improve efficiencies, to co-create valuable products and services that customers value and cherish.  It also requires a trustworthy and dependable leadership style that establishes clarity and meaning, so that people are non-defensive and feel safe enough to take smart risks, because leaders have their back.

The outcome is an environment where people develop rapid and unstructured interactions between the different groups within the organization, and where competitive behaviour is discouraged and collaborative behaviours are rewarded.

Creating organisational cultures that cultivates these attributes involves developing:

  • An agreed clarity of purpose for working together, even if it is a short-term project, across divisions, departments, technologies and demographics, that really makes a difference to the organization or institution.
  • A set of simple clear goals and role clarity.
  • Trust and mutual respect for what everyone uniquely brings to the table.
  • A willingness to develop simple, agile processes that involve taking risks, creatively solving problems and making fast and effective decisions.
  • Permission to freely share ideas, wisdom, knowledge, information, resources, and perspectives.

Finally, it involves creating psychological safety within the organisational culture, where people have permission to constructively disagree, to use difference, discord, dissonance and conflict to build on, rather than oppose, each other’s contribution towards generate creative ideas and innovative solutions.

“Executives underestimate not only the inevitability of conflict but also—and this is key—its importance to the organization. The disagreements sparked Thinking, talking and acting differently – from directing to coaching

It’s time for leaders, whether in organisations or institutions to be willing to think, talk and act differently, in creating the future. To embrace a leadership style that intentionally shines the spotlight on the well-being others (and the organization or nation), whilst staying in the shadows themselves.

This can be achieved through effective executive coaching involving feedback and guidance in developing the mindsets, behaviours and skills involved in facilitating creative collaboration conversations:

According to Adam Grant: “Coaching is in vogue: it used to be just athletes and entertainers who had coaches, but now we have leaders taking on executive coaches and employees learning from speaking coaches. The reality, though, is that a formal coach will only see a fraction of the moments where you could benefit from feedback and guidance. It’s up to all of us to coach our employees, our colleagues, and even sometimes our bosses”.

A new world of conscious, creative and commercial possibilities

Leaders who skilfully and artfully engage their people and teams in creative collaboration conversations enables them to shift out of their business as usual conventional ways of being, thinking, talking and acting. It empowers them to step over the threshold that opens up a new world of conscious, creative and commercial possibilities and:

  • Creates containers and holding spaces in which individuals, teams, organizations and eco-systems can function and grow.
  • Taps into the wider collective intelligence (and genius) that emerges and cultivates modern, innovative organizations, leaders and teams.
  • Supports people and teams to connect, explore, see and solve problems in modern and innovative ways that people value and cherish.

Taking the first steps towards facilitating creative collaborative conversations

  1. Build your own and your people’s generative discovery skill-sets

Start Develop agreed and structured decision making and solving problems methods, coach people to apply them on the job, and make them part of day to day business activities.

  1. Enable and empower people to flow with, and learn from conflict, volatility, uncertainty, complexity, ambiguity

Embrace the new world of “business as unusual” Moving beyond collaboration between people

Whilst it is crucial to focus on harnessing your collective genius and on bringing out the best in others, this is just the beginning of the new modern era of business, politics and institutional change.  Because collaboration between people is just the beginning and is the basic foundation for creating a future where humans and machines work alongside each other, making each other smarter, to contribute towards a more sustainable future, the common good and the future of humanity.

As researched “The key to making that work is to embrace collaboration at all levels: internally, externally, and with technology itself. Collaboration is more than technological tools. It’s more than a cultural willingness to work together to come up with new ideas. You need both. And when you combine them, you unlock tremendous power. Now is the time to start turning that key”.

Find out about The Coach for Innovators Certified Program, a collaborative, intimate deep personalized learning program, supported Get the Change Planning Toolkit from Braden Kelley

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