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May, 2008,
Volume 12, Number
7
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Wharton Leadership Conference:
Emerging Trends in the Search for Leadership

The annual Wharton Leadership Conference is one of
the gatherings most appealing to, and most beneficial for, corporate
leaders, according to a recent report by public relations firm Weber
Shandwick entitled
Five-Star Executive Conferences. An article by
Forbes.com writer Matthew Kirdahy on the report notes that
the Wharton Leadership Conference is second only to the Fortune
Innovation/iMeme conference in the number of C-level speaker
participants.
This year’s speakers include
Peter Cappelli, Wharton professor whose new book on talent management is
excerpted below; William Weldon, CEO of Johnson&Johnson; Colleen
Barrett, president of Southwest Airlines; David Gergen, director of
Harvard’s Center for Public Leadership; Captain
Wei Jiafu, CEO of
Chinese-government-owned COSCO Group, one of the world’s largest
shipping and logistics service providers; and S.A. Ibrahim,
chief executive officer of Radian Group Inc., a global credit
risk management company headquartered in Philadelphia. See
here for a complete list of speakers.
Register now for the 12th annual Wharton Leadership
Conference on June 18.
New Business
Case: Learning from WorldCom’s 2002 CEO Search
This new business case by Aneesha Capur and Michael
Useem with Dennis Carey considers the selection of a new CEO for
WorldCom in 2002, which was one of the highest-profile CEO searches in
the history of telecommunications.
By September 2002, WorldCom, Inc. had been set back
by bankruptcy, a multi-billion dollar accounting restatement of its
expenses, and a major downturn in the telecom market. Its shares had
also been delisted by the National Association of Securities Dealers
Automated Quotations (NASDAQ). However, current management believed the
company could move quickly to put its financial house in order. WorldCom
was already reorganizing under Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and
restructuring its debt with creditors. By spring of 2003, WorldCom
intended to emerge from Chapter 11 with a new CEO, financial game plan,
and a re-invigorated stock. The company also intended to re-emerge as
MCI, Inc.; WorldCom acquired MCI Communications (MCI) in 1998, which was
one of history’s biggest merger and acquisition deals.
WorldCom’s board and creditors were dedicated
partners in hiring a CEO from outside the company who could command the
successful re-emergence of the entire company, including its finances,
business operations, strategy, and branding. This case puts the reader
in the position of selecting the new CEO. Four candidates have been
shortlisted. The finalist selected as WorldCom’s new leader has the
potential to emerge as one of the most important corporate leaders in
the United States.
To obtain permission to teach or review a copy of
this case, please contact
coursematerials@wharton.upenn.edu.
Authors’ Note: Aneesha Capur is Associate
Director of The Wharton School’s Course Materials Platform. Michael
Useem, a Wharton management professor, edits the Wharton Leadership
Digest. Dennis Carey, senior client partner at Korn Ferry and leader of
the WorldCom search, assisted with this case.
Beyond Organization Man:
Talent Management for the 21st Century
By
Peter Cappelli
As a management professor and director of the Wharton School’s Center
for Human Resources,
Peter Cappelli is an expert on human resources. It may come as a
surprise, then, that in his new book,
Talent on Demand: Managing Talent in an Age of Uncertainty
(Harvard Business School Press: April, 2008), Cappelli calls on
companies to think about talent management not in terms of human
resources but in terms of business objectives. In this excerpt from
chapter one of his book, Cappelli demonstrates how talent-development
practices today largely derive from outdated, 1950s-era ideas, and why
companies need fresh thinking, borrowed in some cases from supply-chain
management, to manage talent supply and demand.
We
need a new way of thinking about the challenge of talent management. The
first step is to be clear about the goal. Talent management is not an
end in itself. It is not about developing employees or creating
succession plans. Nor is it about achieving specific benchmarks such as
limiting turnover to 5 percent, having the most educated workforce, or
gaining any other tactical outcome. Rather, the goal of talent
management is the more general and important task of helping the
organization achieve its overall objectives. In the business world, that
objective is to make money. And making money requires that you
understand the costs as well as the benefits associated with your talent
management choices.
Helping the organization achieve its goals begins with recognizing that
the most important problem faced by virtually all employers is the need
to respond quickly to changes in competitive environments. Employers now
change strategies, structures, and operations quickly and repeatedly in
response to customer demands, competitor innovations, regulatory
changes, and other outside factors. The developments driving these
responses are difficult to predict, and mistakes in responding – waiting
too long to change or planning for circumstances that fail to pan out –
are costly.
In
this context, the fundamental problem for organizations is to manage
risk, which we can think of as the costs associated with events that
are uncertain or at least difficult to predict. Business risk, driven
especially by uncertainty about business demands, translates directly
into risk for talent management. The greatest risks in talent management
are, first, the costs of a mismatch in employees and skills (not enough
to meet business demands or too much, leading to layoffs) and, second,
the costs of losing your talent development investments through the
failure to retain employees. These risks stand in the way of the ability
of your organization to meet its goals.
The
new way of thinking about talent management is neither the bureaucratic
models of planning from the 1950s nor the free agency model of the 1980s
and 1990s, both of which were rooted in unique and transient
circumstances. This new approach represents a balancing of interests –
between internal development and outside hiring, between the interests
of employees and those of the organization. Fundamental to this new
model is acknowledging the uncertainty that appears to be a permanent
part of the business world and being able to respond and adapt to it.
That acknowledgment means that you cannot rely on the assumption that
drove the old models of workforce planning and talent management – the
assumption that you can forecast away the uncertainty and plan years or
decades into the future.
Fortunately, you do not have to invent a set of new practices for
responding to uncertainty and risk. Many of the challenges in
contemporary talent management are analogous to problems already
analyzed in the field of operations research. For example, the issues in
managing an internal talent pipeline – the ways employees advance
through development jobs and experiences – are remarkably similar to
those involved in moving products through a supply chain. In both cases,
the significant challenges are to reduce bottlenecks that block
advancement, to speed processing time, and to improve forecasts of need
and thereby avoid mismatches. Other techniques from economics allow you
to better manage the return on your investments in development,
especially in an environment where employees have a market for their
skills and your key concern becomes retention.
One
of the great conundrums in business is that even though executives
acknowledge the importance of employees in theory – “people are our most
important asset, and we really mean that” – in practice they often
disparage, or at least ignore, the management of people. It has been
difficult for them to see how most human resource practices relate to
the issues on which they focus: the business strategy challenges that
define the direction of organizations and the ways they compete.
Traditionally, internal talent development practices have been so
long-term in their orientation that they are disconnected from the
immediacy of contemporary business strategy decisions; the outside
hiring model is reactive (after problems occur), becoming an execution
issue that often disappoints not only because
of its costs but also because it lags the need for talent.
This new way of thinking about talent management connects it directly to
business decisions. In virtually every organization, people are the
biggest component of costs and the source of the most important
competencies, so it is crucial to adopt approaches to manage the risks
associated with talent issues in helping your organization manage
overall business risk. The ability to get the right people with the
right skills into the right jobs in a cost-effective way makes it
possible for an organization to adjust and respond in the strategy
arena.
This approach to talent is strategic in the two most important uses of
that term in business: it involves choices or strategies about managing
human capital that must be made based on each organization’s needs, and
those choices also relate directly to business strategy. If done
correctly, talent management feeds into the process of strategy
formation by outlining the possibilities for those who are making
business decisions.
The Current State of Talent
Management
A
recent survey reported that roughly two-thirds of U.S. employers do no
planning for their talent needs. For such organizations, every new need
for talent presents a serious disruption. Every employee who quits
represents a calamity, and every new demand for skills represents a
crisis. A company that does no planning – does not manage its talent –
basically waits for a need to develop or current employees to leave and
then hunts for a solution.
A
good illustration of the consequences of not managing talent is the
apparent panic under way in many parts of the business community at the
idea that the baby boom generation will begin to retire soon and its
skills, knowledge, and competencies will be lost. Surely nothing was
more predictable than the fact that a generation of individuals is
growing older and will eventually stop working. Employees had been
retiring from companies for generations without causing as much as a
ripple in corporate planning. The reason for the panic now is that many
organizations have just begun to realize that they have no arrangements
for replacing these retiring workers, because outside hiring does not
work for company-specific and legacy skills of the kind many of these
older workers possess.
The
only good news is that most employers are essentially facing the talent
management challenge with a clean slate: they have little idea how to
address the challenge. Unfortunately, the advice they are getting is to
return to the practices of the 1950s. Foremost among these practices are
long-term succession plans, which attempt to identify which individuals
will move into what jobs, mapping out careers years into the future.
That approach is a mistake. The practices of the 1950s, including
detailed talent pipelines and succession plans, no longer work because
the business environment to which they were tailored no longer exists.
The older models were based on the assumption that one could plan the
future of an organization years or even decades in advance with
reasonable certainty. Its human capital requirements could then be
predicted with some certainty. A second crucial assumption was that a
company’s internal pipelines of talent, through which individuals
advanced in roles and responsibilities, did not leak and that the supply
of talent being developed would be available when it was needed. The
title of William H. Whyte’s classic book The Organization Man
reflected the historically distinctive relationship between these
candidates and their employers. They were tied to the organization over
a lifetime in a way previously associated only with military or
religious service.
Developing talent internally was an imperative in this earlier period
because there was no alternative. Competitors used the same internal
development approach, rewarding success with promotions and pay
increases. Even if another employer wanted to hire talent from the
outside, only those candidates who were failing to advance in their
current organizations were interested in changing employers. This was a
classic adverse selection problem, as they had
to start in other companies at a much lower level. Because the failure
to develop talent meant not having the players needed to run the
organization, the costs of internal development were largely irrelevant,
although internal accounting systems were so poor that it would have
been difficult to assess the true costs of arrangements as complicated
as developing employees in any case. Development practices, such as
rotational job assignments, were so deeply embedded in the operating
models of business that their costs were rarely questioned.
The
current environment for talent management is fundamentally different
because the two basic assumptions that underpinned the Organization Man
model no longer hold. First, product markets are no longer predictable.
The rise of deregulation of product markets in the late 1970s, increases
in foreign competition in the 1980s, and changes in consumer tastes mean
that it is now much more difficult to predict what will sell or,
in the not-for-profit world, what constituents will demand.
Customer demands change much more rapidly as new products from a larger
group of competitors come onstream more quickly. The idea that a company
can predict accurately what it will be making ten years from now –
something that was common in industries as diverse as
telecommunications, transportation, consumer goods, and financial
services until the 1970s – has disappeared. The demand for talent
follows directly from business and operating demands. So as business
forecasts and plans have shrunk from ten years to five years to, in most
cases, one year, the ability to predict the talent those plans demand
also must be scaled back. Years-long programs for developing talent
create a false sense of accuracy and no longer make sense.
Second, the supply of internal talent is no longer easily predictable.
The period of managerial layoffs beginning in the early 1980s made jobs
insecure from the employee’s perspective, but from an individual
employer’s perspective, the internal supply of talent was still
reasonably predictable until labor markets tightened in the 1990s. Then
more companies began outside hiring, and one employer’s outside
candidate became another’s retention
challenge. Talent pipelines hemorrhaged as employees embraced the
overtures of executive search firms and other employers. It became
difficult to predict what percentage of candidates who began a
development program would remain when it ended. A company that has a 10
percent turnover rate among its managerial ranks – not an unusual level
– will lose half the candidates in its management pipeline within five
years. Does it still make sense to call that arrangement a pipeline, or
is it better thought of as a sieve? Some
number of employees will make it through to the end, but it is not clear
exactly how many will drop out and when they will do so.
As
if these two complications were not enough, another important change has
occurred: pressure exists to show that there is a financial return
associated with every set of practices. Internal accounting systems have
gotten better at estimating costs, and the arrangements associated with
earlier models of talent management, such as maintaining jobs for
developmental purposes, proved to be costly following the reengineering
trend. There is no trick to developing talent if you don’t care how much
money it costs. Because outside hiring provides an alternative to
internal development, the latter must demonstrate its value just as does
every other practice and form of investment.
At
this point, if you’re a thoughtful executive you throw up your hands:
developing employees is too expensive and uncertain, and outside hiring
has also become expensive and cannot meet unique organizational needs.
What can you do? That is why you need to approach the problem in a
different way.
As
noted earlier, talent management should be about helping a business make
money, finding the most cost-effective ways of meeting the
organization’s needs for talent. And the big challenge is uncertainty.
The type of talent management that makes sense in this economic context
does not pretend that it can eliminate uncertainty through better
forecasting and planning. Talent forecasting cannot be any more accurate
than the business forecasts on which it is based, and the latter are not
very accurate. Because every plan involves commitments and commitments
come with costs, long-term plans end up being expensive because they are
often wrong. Rather than pretend to eliminate uncertainty, the better
approach is to find ways to manage it.
Note: The above passage
was excerpted from
Talent on Demand: Managing Talent in an Age of Uncertainty by
Peter Cappelli. Copyright © 2008 Harvard Business School Publishing
Corporation; All Rights Reserved.
NEWS FROM WHARTON EXECUTIVE EDUCATION:
Leadership Program for Philadelphia City Leaders
By Wendy Parsons
When
Mayor Michael Nutter assumed leadership of Philadelphia in 2008, the
task before him was formidable. The City of Brotherly Love had become
infamous for its homicides, including the slaying of police officers.
Children were dropping out of high school at an alarming rate. The
citizens had become disheartened by a government that no longer seemed
to be of, for, and by the people. And then came Michael Nutter. With a
vision of government shaped by his passion for public service and his
business background as a Wharton alum, Nutter has set about changing the
very culture of the city.
Driven to breathe new life and
hope into the beleaguered city, Nutter set about transforming the way
city government operates in Philadelphia. He views the city as a $4
billion business that must deliver outstanding service to its customers
and stakeholders – the people of Philadelphia. To prepare for this task,
he reached out to his alma mater to prepare his top city leaders for
what lay ahead of them. One hundred of his key administrators
attended a two-day leadership program on April 10–11, 2008, delivered by
the University of Pennsylvania’s Fels Institute of Government, the
Leadership Center at the Wharton School of the University of
Pennsylvania, and Wharton’s Aresty Institute of Executive Education.
“I realized a long time ago that
most governments don’t think of themselves as a business,” Nutter
remarks. “Because there is no real business-based training in
government, I have long thought that governments should send people to
professional development training. The leadership program at Wharton was
exactly what I envisioned.”
The program focused on building
leadership strengths from an interdisciplinary approach, integrating
leadership from Wharton’s business perspective with legislative and
policy insights from the Fels Institute. The program represents a
launching pad for an ongoing collaborative relationship between Wharton
and the city, according to Tom Colligan, vice dean of executive
education. “This program is the first outcome of a close working
partnership between the mayor’s office and Wharton,” Colligan says.
Academic co-director and Wharton professor Michael Useem helped design
the program to support the mayor’s vision for improving
education, expanding jobs, improving health, enhancing ethics, reducing
crime, and strengthening services.
“In terms of bringing the
mayor’s vision into reality, the leadership of the mayor and his team
will make all the difference,” Useem explains. “And to that end, the
Fels Institute and the Wharton School worked with the city to help his
top team sharpen and strengthen its leadership – an essential ingredient
for achieving the mayor’s vision during the months ahead.”
Academic co-director Don Kettl,
director of the Fels Institute, says that the
program represents a unique collaboration of Wharton’s best faculty with
cutting-edge ideas from Fels for improving government performance. “This
signifies the very best of interdisciplinary partnerships, in service of
one of the most important urban transformations under way in the
country.”
The
mayor visited on the second day of the program to address his team.
“We’ve set the bar high, and people want us to be successful,” Nutter
told city leaders. “The driving force behind what we do is to deliver
higher-quality service. Your obligation to the public is to provide
the leadership the city needs. You are here because you care, and I
could not be more proud of you.”
The mayor views the city as a
24-hour-a-day business with a million and a half shareholders – the
people of Philadelphia – who expect a return on their investment. Nutter
has dedicated his efforts to reshaping the city’s culture for both
immediate and long-term benefits. “We have to move beyond thinking in
the short term, because we won’t have long-term impact. It’s not about
who gets the credit,” the mayor says of his plan for improving the city.
“It’s about what the results will be 20, 30, or 40 years from now.”
The change in the city’s culture
is one that his managing director, Dr. Camille Barnett, expects to be
one of the greatest organizational and city transformations ever. “Our
partnership with the Fels Institute and Wharton allows us to benefit
from best practices in both the public and business sectors. This
program gives our people the tools they need to execute our five-year
plan in six key areas,” she says. “Our two days at Wharton have given us
a common experience and a common language. But most importantly, this
program imbues us with courage and hope, the leadership values that are
essential to accomplishing what lays ahead of us.”
The six areas of Mayor Nutter’s
plan for Philadelphia include the following immediate and long-term
goals:
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Transform Philadelphia into the safest
large city in the country and reduce the homicide rate by 25 percent
in 2008.
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Make Philadelphia one of the country’s
premier education cities, reducing the high-school dropout rate by
50 percent in five to seven years and doubling the number of
Philadelphians with a bachelor’s degree in five to 10 years.
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Increase jobs, raise incomes, and add
75,000 people to the population in five to 10 years.
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Foster vibrant neighborhoods, decrease
litter, and increase recycling.
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Maintain the highest standards for ethics
and increase the number of citizens who trust in their government.
- Become a national
customer-service leader, meeting customer-service standards for all
city services as measured by citizen surveys.
The
Wharton/Fels program covered subjects such as reengineering government,
successes and failures in city governance, and developing strategic
leadership skills. The experience gave attendees a more in-depth
understanding of how they could actively work toward implementing the
mayor’s ambitious goals.
“Michael Nutter's vision for
Philadelphia requires city leaders to think very differently about the
organization and its mission. This program gave them the focus and
opportunity to think of themselves as inspirational leaders and change
managers as they steer their teams through this transition period,” says
Sandhya Karpe, Wharton Executive Education senior program director.
The program also gave city
leaders who attended the time to reflect on their roles and process what
they learned, according to Deputy Mayor
Everett Gillison. “We don’t get that kind of time on the job. The
faculty understood the culture we’re working in, and gave us tools we
could put to use immediately.”
Anuj Gupta, one of the mayor’s
“Team Performance” leaders who attended the program, says that the
experience at Wharton represents a great step in what the mayor hopes
will be an ongoing relationship with the university. “It is vital for
the administration to work with civic institutions like the University
of Pennsylvania to achieve results for the city.”
The
future of the city hinges on the success of the mayor’s plan. Dedicated
to making the city the “crown jewel of the east,” the mayor is convinced
that a new approach to leadership, a new culture for the city, will make
Philadelphia a magnet for business and new residents. “If we deliver,
people will come back. If we don’t, they will leave. People vote with
their feet. If we do the job right, people will come back to
Philadelphia.”
Note: Wendy Parsons is
Director of Marketing Communications
for the Wharton School’s Aresty Institute of Executive Education.
She can be reached at
parsonsw@wharton.upenn.edu.
Undergraduate Leadership
Conferences: Leading Diversity and Leading under Pressure
By Chris Maxwell
It’s a question all leaders
grapple with: How to build and maintain an organization that achieves
its goals while still valuing and promoting the potential of each
member. The U.S. Naval Academy’s annual leadership conference, held in
early February, acknowledged both the importance and challenges of
promoting diversity in organizations, as reflected in the conference
title, “Leading Beyond Barriers.”
Addressing an audience of over
4,000 military cadets and civilian university students, diversity
consultant
Samuel Betances urged listeners to develop cultural competencies,
cross barriers, and think outside of the box. “Equal opportunity
isn’t enough,” he said. “It’s about freedom; the freedom to pursue
passions, to make a contribution.” Citing a U.S. Army study that
found a lack of diversity in its higher ranks, Betances offered a key
insight for leaders concerned with diversity: “It’s not about
representation, it’s about utilization. Give good assignments, really
challenging assignments, that can lead to promotion.”
Focused on these challenging
questions, conference participants continued the discussion in small
groups of military and civilian university students. Rahul Parikh,
an undergraduate at the Wharton School, said, “The main question in our
discussion groups was, ‘What actions do leaders need to take now and in
the future to promote or support diversity?’” Although his group
didn’t arrive at a definitive answer, he said, “The idea of destroying
stereotypes was a popular response. I learned how harmful a racist joke
can be.”
Richard Hillen, a senior at the
Wharton School who served as a panelist at the conference said, “It is
necessary to explain why diversity is important, and how it can help not
only individuals, but also the group as a whole. The question is: How to
deliver that message? Leadership, we concluded, is key: The leader not
only explains the need for diversity within the organization, but also
sets the tone with his or her actions, so that everyone sees the issue
should be taken seriously.”
Colonel Arthur Athens, director of the
Stockdale Center for Ethical Leadership at the Naval Academy,
wrapped up the three-day conference on leadership and diversity with
three take-away points:
- Reflect
inwardly when someone points out something about our behavior
that we may not recognize;
- Set the example
by articulating standards and confronting bad behavior; and
- Set the tone
with peers and superiors by having the courage to speak up when
something is wrong.
Leaders can effectively promote
diversity in organizations and make a difference, Athens said, but they
must deal with their own “unbalanced” views and those of others.
Success in a Fast-Paced World
The
joint learning between Wharton and the U.S. Naval Academy continued at a
conference in late February focused on crisis leadership. The one-day
event, “Leading Under Pressure: Success in a Fast-Paced World,” brought
together 70 participants, including an invited group of U.S. Naval
Academy midshipmen and faculty, who heard strategic perspectives from
leaders with a wide range of backgrounds.
C. William Schwab, chief of Trauma and Surgical Critical Care at the
Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, discussed how his team of
trauma surgeons has developed systems to both improve outcomes for
victims of urban violence and develop leadership skills in resident
surgeons and trauma nurses. As part of this new system, all
resuscitations – 3,000 per year at HUP’s Trauma Center – are now
video-taped and reviewed, and resident surgeons review their performance
within 24 hours. At the conference, Schwab showed two videos of
real-life resuscitations. In the first, participants saw a surgeon,
easily identifiable in a red surgical cap, calmly but firmly giving
commands to her team. In the second video, the team leader did not wear
a red cap or exert authority; the scene was chaotic and the examination
progressed almost randomly.
Schwab outlined several
strategies for success in crisis leadership that are applicable to both
the trauma room and to business: Control yourself, control the team,
control the environment, have a plan, take action, and be flexible. The
leader must be open to input but also willing to make decisions.
Pre-assigned team roles and procedures are critical to success in
crisis. Schwab demands that trauma center surgeons take action and set a
clear course in each case they deal with, even though that course may
change rapidly, because inertia under pressure can lead to chaos.
Finally, Schwab said listening to contrarian viewpoints and asking “How
can we do things better?” are key leadership skills both inside the
trauma center and out.
Evan Wittenberg, a senior
manager at Google, Inc. and former director of Wharton’s Graduate
Leadership Program, focused on the leadership challenges at the rapidly
growing Mountain View, Calif.-based firm, which has been doubling its
number of employees each year. In contrast to the
command-and-control structure of Schwab’s trauma room, Google favors a
rapid product launch and development cycle in which end users provide
feedback for product improvement. Employees operate within a largely
non-hierarchical structure, and Google leaders ask employees to act on
their knowledge rather than waiting for instructions from above.
Besides encouraging leadership
at all levels, the organizational culture at Google favors displays of
humility (senior leaders wait in line and hunt for parking spaces like
everyone else), clearing roadblocks so teams can get needed resources,
and focusing on self-development.
Despite the wide differences in
environment, culture, and structure in these two organizations,
conference participants found some key similarities for leading under
pressure. First, both organizations ask leaders to take action
before inertia sets in – in the trauma room to save lives, and at Google
to get new products out to be used and improved. Second, both
organizations invest in the development of leaders at all levels.
Finally, as trauma surgeons must listen to contrarian viewpoints and
Google executives must forgo some trappings of high office, leaders in
both cases are called upon to lead with humility.
Author’s Note: Chris
Maxwell is Associate Director of the Undergraduate Leadership Program at
the Wharton School. He can be reached at
maxwellc@wharton.upenn.edu.
The Politics of Smiling:
Leadership Pointers from the Campaign Trail
By John Baldoni
Most commentators seemed to
agree that Barack Obama was “off his game” in the presidential debate
held the week before the Pennsylvania primary in late April. The
senator’s demeanor ranged from rattled to bored, disengaged to
lethargic. Mark Shields commenting on PBS’s NewsHour noted
something else: Obama did not smile. John Kennedy, noted Shields, would
have smiled. For a politician with Obama’s gift for connecting to
audiences, his failure to leaven his performance with a smile was
striking. It may be unrealistic to expect someone who is being
criticized and critiqued on live television to smile, but when you are
running for president you need to radiate confidence.
Smiling is a visible form of
confidence. Voters want to know that the person they may elect for the
highest office in the land is someone who knows how to take a punch
while remaining in control, someone who is unfazed when things are not
going according to plan, someone who can remain positive in the face of
intimidating odds.
For the past century or so,
Americans have always gone for a president who smiles. Teddy Roosevelt
bounded across the American stage with a larger-than-life personality
and a radiant smile that seemed to echo the age, as America, an emerging
international power, was just beginning to exert itself on the global
stage. Franklin Roosevelt used his smile to radiate calm and uplift a
nation in the throws of the Great Depression.
Dwight Eisenhower’s expansive
grin provided a sense of home and comfort to GIs fighting a tough and
bloody war first in North Africa and later Italy, France and ultimately
Germany. Ike’s successor in the White House, John Kennedy, conveyed the
hopes of a new generation with his sense of style and of course a
radiant smile.
Jimmy Carter’s toothy grin, much
beloved by political cartoonists, served as an antidote to the scandals
of the Nixon era. His smile punctuated his promise: “I will never lie to
you.” Carter’s successor outdid him in the smile department. Ronald
Reagan knew how to smile for the cameras in ways that seemed totally
genuine. As a former actor, he possessed that self-controlled demeanor,
but it also helped that by nature Reagan was as cheerful off stage as he
was on.
A smile is no guarantee of
success, of course. Carter ran into difficulties with the economy and
Iran that no smile would cure. Harry Truman boasted a dynamite smile,
but after FDR he would always seem diminished by comparison. Richard
Nixon smiled prolifically, but voters never seemed to buy his sincerity.
Poor Lyndon Johnson never seemed to put on a smile in public, though in
private he was a born charmer and preternaturally gifted persuader.
The day after the debate in
Philadelphia Obama seemed to regain his poise. Addressing a friendly
crowd, he beamed like a newly crowned Miss America. He also laughed and
joked with the audience as he distanced himself from his subpar
performance the night before. Obama was back on his game.
Smiling may be an act, but it is
an act that people want to see in their presidents and their leaders.
Author’s Note:
John Baldoni is a leadership and communications consultant
and speaker, and author of the book,
How Great Leaders Get Great Results (McGraw-Hill, December
2005). He can be reached at
john@johnbaldoni.com
The
Leadership Landscape Perspective:
Reframing Leadership
By Tom
Cummings and James P. Keen
Why
do some leaders have an ability to integrate the landscapes of their
work and lives while others do not? How do some leaders possess the
composure to stay in balance yet adapt to changing circumstances? How
does one build and sustain an integrated leadership practice that can
both respond and adapt to the most urgent challenges while weaving
actions into a coherent framework? Our study of leadership has
been oriented around these questions, and years of research on and work
with leaders have led us to craft a new approach to leadership, which we
detail in our new book,
Leadership Landscapes.
There are two main, interrelated
pillars that lie at the heart of the Leadership Landscapes approach. The
first is an image of a landscape. Imagine you
are perched on a vista (“your job”) looking out across the peaks and
valleys. What you might notice first is the big picture, or the
macro-business landscape, which reveals how you and your
organization relate to society and the world at large. Typical focal
points here are sustainability, emerging technologies, political
systems, non-governmental organizations, the broader regulatory
environment, social responsibility, environmental concerns, social (im)balances,
and so on. Increasingly these macro-factors include the global economy
and the planetary environment, and these mountains in the background
will have a tremendous business impact, yet are often less immediate
than the sharper peaks and valleys of the industry and markets
landscape. Here we find challenges that relate to our direct
external business context, such as demanding customers, changing
markets, shifting competition, and our most direct stakeholders (e.g.
investor relations).
Yet according to our
research, few leaders dwell long on the lofty heights, because they are
pulled into the morass of the organization landscape. This
landscape mainly deals with issues of organizational concern, such as
how we govern, how we attract and distribute resources, how we org-chart
our people, how we setup, maintain, and live our culture and values, and
how we keep the organization aligned and informed. Subsequently, there
are bands of brothers and sisters on the team landscape who
require our attention. This is where we manage the team, steer it, chair
meetings, do appraisals, oversee recruitment and personal development,
and improve team performance. Finally, we come to the nearest
environment, the individual landscape, which involves the time
spent on our own development and learning, reflection, coaching,
meditation, and other activities that help maintain and strengthen our
physical and mental health.
These five
landscapes cover the areas where “leadership attention” is typically
spent. Most leaders falter by concentrating on a single landscape, often
the organizational landscape, at the expense of others. Worse yet,
leaders are often taught only to understand a single landscape, denying
them the ability to see the wealth of factors and interconnections that
could underpin their decision making. The Leadership Landscape Approach
is different because it encourages sensitivity to the entire landscape.
Our first pillar, the Leadership
Landscapes Perspective, allows you to look across all the leadership
levels simultaneously and expand your relational field of vision. It
creates a context for decision making. Yet a backdrop is worthless if it
is not accompanied by an attitude, a state of equanimity. In other
words, a leader needs to maintain a state of dynamic balance.
The equanimity
shift, the second pillar of the Leadership Landscapes Perspective,
represents a comprehensive view on an attitude of mind. It is an
attitude that can be developed, nurtured, and practiced. It is the idea
of equanimity – an approach that underpins all we advocate in
Leadership Landscapes. It may at first seem like an abstract or
vague notion, and it is in some sense elusive, but we have found it to
be the key to optimal leadership.
Equanimity, or
dynamic balance, can be described in at least five aspects. These
aspects form an integrated set, in which none is as powerful alone as
when connected to the others. Everyone possesses some measure of
equanimity, and that measure can be increased through practice. Like a
muscle in the body, equanimity gains strength through a combination of
everyday use, exertion in meeting challenging circumstances, and
practices directly targeted at its development. Just as muscles work in
sets, so equanimity can be seen as a bundle of attributes with multiple
applications. The five attributes of equanimity are: An Eye for
Possibility; Reframing; Presence; Recovery; and Commitment. Through
mastery of these five areas, leaders learn to maintain balance while
applying these tools to decision-making, inspirational leadership, and
peak performance.
When the Leadership
Landscapes perspective and the equanimity shift are used in tandem, they
form a powerful tool for any leader desiring mastery of his or her
craft. In our book we offer tools, such as inquiry and scenario mapping,
that show how to apply the Leadership Landscapes perspective to emergent
problems and how to develop sustained practices that hone your abilities
as a leader.
Authors’ Note:
A former leadership executive at global firms including Unilever and ABN
AMRO Bank,
Tom Cummings is founder of the
Executive Learning Partnership, an
alliance of executive development professionals.
Jim Keen is an executive coach, leadership development advisor and a
professor at Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio. For more
information about the book and its approach, visit
www.leadershiplandscapes.com.
Copyright 1996-2008, Wharton Center for
Leadership and Change Management
University of Pennsylvania |