Sunday 11 July 2010

Study of Navels? We might be onto something.

Last week I spent most of the week at the Leadership Trust with my Clore Social Leadership Programme, exploring my inner navel. Whilst my navel is still very similar to the last leadership course I went on to study it... there was a little something else that caught my eye.

The Leadership Trust has a 'step' model for helping you review your strengths and areas for development as a leader, nothing new there... but what is interesting is the link they have made between trust in leaders and their ability to honestly review their own performance and act on what they find. For mere mortals the process starts with doing something successfully or failing miserably but rather than just leaping back into the next task taking time out to ask yourself how did that go? how do I know? From this point of becoming self aware about what we are doing and the impact we are having we go on to decide what we need to change and exert some self control to make those changes.

Linking this step back to transparency I wonder how many of our organisations, despite confidentially reviewing our performance are failing to take this step of really changing our behaviour as a result of what we see and hear. is this why we sometimes lack the courage to publish that critical evaluation online?? Because we can't promise it won't happen again?? It isn't easy - no change programme is -but it is an essential step before we can achieve the real value of facing up to what is good and what isn't, developing greater 'self-confidence'.

Those organisations I have seen recently that are striving to become more publicly transparent seem to making a step beyond simple organisation improvement as a result of feedback but are developing a sense of confidence about their ability to accept feedback and improve as a result. Take someone on a diet, it isn't realising your over weight or even starting the diet that makes you feel good - it is seeing the pounds come off and knowing you can.

Several CEO's have told me recently that they worry that becoming more transparent will create a culture of risk aversion in their organisations... but if you think about it, that isn't what happens when we become more confident - we actually try new things and take more risks. Innovation thrives in a confident environment.

As the confidence of the organisation grows another magical process begins to happen, 'self-realisation'. The point on the journey where you become comfortable with who you are, the ability to open yourself up, actively seeking advice, feedback, we ask for support where we are weak, gaining the respect of others. ......And these are the people we trust, these are the people we want to collaborate with, the people we want to succeed. Imaging your organisation here.



NB:
The best part of dieting (anyone that says otherwise is not transparent) is actually when some else notices - this too is self-realisation through the respect of others and also feels great!

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