« Book for Control Freaks?? | Main | Alignment Through Planning »

January 05, 2006

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341bf6f553ef00d8349eb63d69e2

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Owners Not Groaners:

Comments

Lisa,

Part of the problem lies, I believe, in the common peception that leadership=control. To stay "in control," leaders are almost forced to take personal charge of everything important, reducing their staff to childlike followers.

If we could change people's ideas so they see leadership as providing direction, it would be easier. The person organizing the direction to be followed (I say organizing, becuse the leader doesn't have to provide all the direction personally) can then delegate implementation fully to others -- creating owners, as you say in your post.

One of the basic principles of Slow Leadership is taking the time needed to be clear about direction. When you rush around in a frenzy of haste, the natural temptation is to do everything yourself. It feels as if it will take too long to explain to others; and you don't quite trust them to meet your deadlines, either. But time spent now clarifying direction, and explaining it concisely to others, usually means far more time saved later, because all those other people can assist you in reaching your goal. The old adage "Many Hands Make Light Work" only works if those hands know how best to help.


Adrian Savage is a writer, speaker and founder of the "Slow Leadership" movement, dedicated to restoring the full pleasure and flavor to the task of leading any group of people.
http://www.slowleadership.org
http://www.adriansavage.com

Adrian - I agree that this is a fundamental problem and it is a self perpetuating one. Yes, we want leaders who are comfortable making a decision and can show strength and assertiveness - but not ALL of the time or even MOST of the time, and we don't want leaders who are control freaks. It was Socrates who felt that true wisdom begins only when we see and know our own ignorance. Leaders who assume they know more than they do and are comfortable making decisions about things they know $%@# about are dangerous to the organization and surely breed GROANERS.

Actually I found in the research for "It's Not The Big that Eat the Small... It's the FAST that Eat the Slow" that letting go of decision-making controls and using guiding principles to direct teams to make their own decisions actually speeds a business way up.

Laurence - Letting go of decision making controls seems to be the most difficult for many leaders, especially those prone to being control freaks. But when they do, they see things in a whole new way and begin to see what real owners can do.

The topic of owners vs groaners is very relevant to the growth of Agile development practices. A key principle of XP, and IMO of Agile development in general, is the notion of collective ownership combined with individual accountability. Management practices that encourage a sense of ownership among team members should be preferred over traditional management styles. Adrian's observation that many people think leadership=control is right on the mark.

Adrian and Laurence raise another interesting point, even if indirectly. They are talking about leadership. In reality, most project managers are not leaders, but managers. A leader understands a problem in context and motivates others to take ownership of it and solve it. A manager tracks a team's progress against a predefined set of procedural steps. For Agile development teams, I see the role of the project manager as concerned with motivating and enabling the team members, providing them with the tools and resources they need to get the job done, and running interference with the rest of the organization so that team members are not bogged down or discouraged with administrivia. This is very different from the PM's role on traditional projects. It is closer to leadership than to management.

Enablement is key to success with Agile projects. Assuming you have the right sort of people on board in the first place, you have to understand leadership != control, believe it, and live it. An example I like to give is the US military exercise known as Millennium Challenge 02. IMO it dramatically illustrates the power of real enablement and the myth that leadership=control. See http://www.davenicolette.net/agile/index.blog?entry_id=1311190

Dave:

Thanks for the information, perspective and link. I do think that creating ownership takes some leadership and that even project managers must be good leaders. Work is so complex and personal - effective technique alone is not enough.

Dave is right. I am (always) directly and indirectly talking about leadership.

It's about job security actually. Any manager can be replaced or eliminated (and many are). No company (though) can afford to lose any leaders. And if you can "lead" instead of just manage a team at any level... you are in the high demand.

The proof is in the interivews I did for my book on driving the follow through and making sure that half of all projects stop failing at your company.

Laurence - I love the way you said this - "It's about job security actually. Any manager can be replaced or eliminated (and many are). No company (though) can afford to lose any leaders." I could not agree more, even though I also see a shortage of solid management skills.

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Working...
Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been posted. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

Working...

Post a comment

Blogroll

The Forbes.com Blog Network

  • Forbes.com
Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 08/2004

Google Analytics