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Great leaders must show their human side

Cast your mind back. From rock stars to roy­al­ty, the alpha dog at school to the ath­letes who inspired us; grow­ing up, our lead­ers always seemed to be born rather than made – and they were also some­what out of reach.

But the rose-tint­ed lens­es are cast aside as our worlds become more inter­con­nect­ed; we are bet­ter informed, more empow­ered and chal­leng­ing, demand­ing two-way dia­logue from those in charge.

Hon­esty, lis­ten­ing, empa­thy, humil­i­ty and flex­i­bil­i­ty are seen as essen­tial traits in today’s lead­ers, as impor­tant as courage, con­fi­dence and deci­sive­ness have always been

Organ­i­sa­tion­al hier­ar­chies are less fixed, less about com­mand and con­trol as they become more flu­id and mul­ti­fac­eted. Our emo­tion­al quo­tient or EQ is now revered as much as our IQ.

Hon­esty, lis­ten­ing, empa­thy, humil­i­ty and flex­i­bil­i­ty are seen as essen­tial traits in today’s lead­ers, as impor­tant as courage, con­fi­dence and deci­sive­ness have always been.

Jut­ta Tobias of Cran­field Uni­ver­si­ty School of Man­age­ment says the role of leader is evolv­ing as the busi­ness envi­ron­ment becomes more com­plex.

The evolving leader

“It is no longer about the lone male, John Wayne-style, big-jawed hero receiv­ing applause for solv­ing everyone’s prob­lems,” says Dr Tobias.

“Lead­ers need to allow those around them to shine, stop being fear­ful of say­ing ‘I don’t know’, and allow dif­fer­ent voic­es and opin­ions to be heard.”

leadership qualities

No longer reliant on exter­nal­ly dri­ven fear or admi­ra­tion, tomorrow’s lead­ers need to derive their sat­is­fac­tion from com­plete­ly dif­fer­ent sources, look­ing inwards rather than out­wards.

Dr Tobias says: “They are not only lead­ing more com­plex dynam­ics, but doing so more pub­licly. Are they man­ag­ing their emo­tions well enough? Are they respect­ed? Are they being respect­ful?”

Mod­ern lead­ers need to become trust­ed enablers of cre­ativ­i­ty and inno­va­tion for those they lead, and show­ing a well-regard­ed weak­ness or vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty seems to be cri­te­ria for gar­ner­ing that trust.

In Why Should Any­one Be Led by You? authors Rob Gof­fee and Gareth Jones cite busi­ness­man and some­time nation­al trea­sure Sir Richard Bran­son as exem­pli­fy­ing this, in turn cement­ing his authen­tic­i­ty.

“Bran­son is par­tic­u­lar­ly effec­tive at com­mu­ni­cat­ing his vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty,” they write. “He is ill at ease and fum­bles inces­sant­ly when inter­viewed in pub­lic. It’s a weak­ness, but it’s Richard Bran­son.”

Driving employee engagement

Tra­di­tion­al­ists might view these more sen­so­ry char­ac­ter­is­tics as more at home in funky, youth-filled Lon­don cre­ative agen­cies, all beer and bean bags, than the more “pro­fes­sion­al” sec­tor, but Mag­gie Stil­well, man­ag­ing part­ner for tal­ent at EY, dis­agrees.

She says the intro­duc­tion of flex­i­ble work­ing three years ago has trans­formed the busi­ness.

“It used to be about fol­low­ing the moth­er ship of the office with­out think­ing ‘is that the right place for me to be to get the out­put I need today?’”

Are these soft­er, more touchy-feely approach­es com­ing at a cost to the bot­tom line?

“No. We have seen a sig­nif­i­cant halo effect from doing some­thing that is effec­tive­ly logis­ti­cal, a much big­ger pay­back. We’ve realised if we dri­ve engage­ment lev­els we also dri­ve more growth, prof­its and high­er staff reten­tion,” says Ms Stil­well.

So why bring our men­tors and man­agers under such scruti­ny? Are cer­tain sec­tors dar­ing to review their exec­u­tive mod­els and win­ning in doing so?

First and fore­most, the busi­ness world is respond­ing to a tal­ent war. Ini­tial­ly iden­ti­fied by McK­in­sey in the 1990s before falling away dur­ing the finan­cial cri­sis, Jeff Grout, busi­ness speak­er, con­sul­tant and coach, says the tal­ent war is back with a vengeance as we wit­ness “the tough­est recruit­ment mar­ket in a decade”.

He says: “In order to attract the best can­di­dates, com­pa­nies need to change the way they are doing things. Can­di­dates are no longer con­cerned with their role and report­ing lines. They are more inter­est­ed in how deci­sions are made, to what extent do they feel a sense of involve­ment. How it feels to work there is of utmost impor­tance.”

Responding to change

While cer­tain pro­fes­sions – health, legal, accoun­tan­cy and finance – gen­er­al­ly demon­strate more resis­tance to change, the fast-mov­ing con­sumer goods and retail sec­tors come across as more enlight­ened, he says.

Rather than being sec­tor-focused, the size of the com­pa­ny is a more like­ly dif­fer­en­tia­tor; small­er com­pa­nies can be more nim­ble and try things out, while flat­ter struc­tures are often more effec­tive with few­er mov­ing parts.

Helena Morrissey, Newton Investment Management chief executive, featured in Fortune magazine’s list of the World’s 50 Greatest Leaders

Hele­na Mor­ris­sey, New­ton Invest­ment Man­age­ment chief exec­u­tive, fea­tured in For­tune magazine’s list of the World’s 50 Great­est Lead­ers

Arguably, if every­one is an ideas per­son with ambi­tions of lead­ing, it might lead to top-heavy organ­i­sa­tion­al struc­tures with too few fol­low­ing. Do we risk mak­ing our work­er bees redun­dant?

“In the UK we hard­ly man­u­fac­ture any­thing any­more. We are a nation full of peo­ple with ideas and it is this intel­lec­tu­al cap­i­tal that will be most impor­tant to the UK econ­o­my,” adds Mr Grout.

He fore­sees a world in which the core func­tions still exist, but will grav­i­tate towards out­sourced ser­vices as com­pa­nies employ more con­trac­tors and port­fo­lio careerists become the norm.

In terms of remote work­ing, the multi­na­tion­al oppor­tu­ni­ty that sits hand in glove with that and infor­ma­tion over­load, tech­nol­o­gy is behind much of this progress.

Chief exec­u­tive of New­ton Invest­ment Man­age­ment Hele­na Mor­ris­sey calls it the “game chang­er”.

She is also chair­woman of UK asset man­age­ment trade body the Invest­ment Asso­ci­a­tion, found­ed the 30% Club in 2010 with the objec­tive of redress­ing the gen­der imbal­ance on FTSE 100 boards, is a moth­er of nine and recent­ly appeared in For­tune magazine’s list of the World’s 50 Great­est Lead­ers.

The future leader

Ms Mor­risey agrees the con­cept of lead­er­ship has changed sig­nif­i­cant­ly from one rely­ing on com­mand and con­trol to being more about influ­ence and per­sua­sion.

“Soci­ety and busi­ness­es are much less hier­ar­chi­cal and def­er­en­tial – you don’t get respect through a job title, but through what you do,” she says.

“The uni­ver­sal access to infor­ma­tion along with the abil­i­ty to con­tribute to opin­ion, thanks to the inter­net and rise of social media, has been the game chang­er here. Lead­er­ship needs to feel local and per­son­al, even if in prac­ti­cal terms that can­not always be the case, if the leader is to be trust­ed.”

This comes back to Mssrs Gof­fee and Jones’ idea of lead­ers man­ag­ing their authen­tic­i­ty. Being seen to lis­ten, com­mu­ni­cate and empathise is instru­men­tal in help­ing that cause.

Tak­ing his local and per­son­al lead­er­ship style more lit­er­al­ly was for­mer BBC direc­tor-gen­er­al Greg Dyke, who ran the cor­po­ra­tion from 2000 to 2004.

Hav­ing inter­viewed Greg Dyke on more than one occa­sion, Mr Grout says: “He took the view that lead­ers must first lis­ten to earn the right to be heard.”

Step­ping into the shoes of John Birt, whose rep­u­ta­tion for being auto­crat­ic and Lon­don-cen­tric pre­ced­ed him, Mr Dyke took him­self in a dif­fer­ent direc­tion. Or rather, sev­er­al dif­fer­ent direc­tions out­side the M25.

“Dur­ing his first 100 days in the post, he trav­elled to loca­tions no direc­tor-gen­er­al had ever been to before. He avoid­ed the exec­u­tive din­ing room, queued up with a tray at lunchtime and asked every­one the same two ques­tions – name one thing we could do to improve our ser­vice to our audi­ence and sec­ond, tell me one thing I can do to improve your life at work.”

With­in six months he report­ed­ly had every­one in the organ­i­sa­tion on side. “Very few lead­ers can say that,” con­cludes Mr Grout.