Thursday, December 17, 2015

MANAGEMENT LEADERSHIP SPECIAL............. "Maintain a perpetual state of readiness for what comes next"

"Maintain a perpetual
 state of readiness for what
 comes next"


NIKHIL RAVAL, MD INDIA AND TONY O'DRISCOLL,
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, ASIA, DUKE CORPORATE
EDUCATION SHARE THEIR INSIGHTS ON AND
STRATEGIES FOR DEVELOPING FUTURE-READY LEADERS

How would you define the leader of today?
Nikhil Raval:
Today, leaders characterise their context as a “new normal“ of constant
disequilibrium, where the challenges they face are less predictable and the
knowledge bases they draw from are less reliable. Leaders feel like they
are navigating permanent whitewater where the volume, variety and
velocity of issues and information are creating ongoing tensions and
tradeoffs that must be addressed in real time.
To successfully navigate this permanent whitewater, leaders have recognized
 the need to develop higher order “senseabilities“ that enable them to
perceive complex situations without falling prey to the blindness of bias,
make sense of these unfamiliar situations by leveraging systemic and
integrative thinking and choreograph and catalyse action in a desired
direction by wielding influence as opposed to position power.
In order to develop these higher order sense-abilities, leaders must have
 the courage to let go of what they know, the confidence to step-up to
what they don't and the conviction to hold-on as they navigate the
whitewater of perpetual change. Courage, confidence and conviction
are the foundational attributes required by a leader today to navigate
this new normal of constant disequilibrium.

What are the key leadership challenges and trends globally
and in AsiaIndia?
Managers of large MNCs in the west are struggling with what we call
 “dual economy growth syndrome“. In many instances, in their own
geographies (for example, Europe),growth is stagnated and the focus is
 more on cost efficiencies and operational excellence, whereas the same
companies with a presence in the East (for example, India China) are facing
7-8% growth.Here the focus is on innovation, globalisation and strategy
execution.Leaders have to mature emotionally faster. Due to the skewed
proportion of the talent pool in the marketplace, leaders in Asia are
expected to grow much faster. This means, leaders are required to cultivate
a greater sense of self awareness. This requires being aware of their own
strengths and weakness and their leadership style. It also means leading a
diverse set of teams across different cultures, and often virtually  (global leadership).
Leaders have to learn skills in a fast growth environment.
This means running efficiently in the short term and also investing for the  
long term.

Given the recognised and urgent need for more capable leaders to drive
growth and prosperity,what shifts are you observing in how organisations
are building their leadership capability and capacity?
Tony O'Driscoll:
Leadership development today must place much more emphasis on what I
call the “X Factor“. To date, much of our focus and energy has been allocated
 to the content of leadership development. Moving forward, our focus must
shift from content to context. Context is where the work of leadership is  
exercised each and every day. The more connected and complex the business
situation, the more we need to develop a leader's ability to learn in real time
within that specific context. The age-old adage that “experience is the greatest
teacher“ comes to mind here.
The most advanced organisations are recognising the need to complement
and augment content-driven competency based development approaches
with context driven experiential development approaches.
We are seeing companies sending managers to “market places“ for the places
 they wish to invest and grow.
Understanding how to leverage experience to drive changes in mind-set
within a leadership team is at least as important as s building individual
competence around a new leadership tool of framework at the individual
level.Today's leading edge organisations think deeply about building both,
individual leadership competence and institutional leadership capability
and they are architect leadership development systems that integrate
classroom, coaching and work experience in a much more purposeful and
powerful way.
Yasmin Taj
TAS2DEC15



No comments: