I’m not a leadership guru by any means. In fact, having read Pfeffer’s Leadership BS, I’m more of a cynic. However, I have been learning a bit from my LDA co-director Matt Richter (as well as CEO of E9, and leadership coach, David Grad). Matt’s a fan of Keith Grint, UK Historian, who talks about how you need to make decisions differently in different situations. His approach reminds me of another, so here I’m looking at contextual leadership.
Grint talks about three situations:
- Tame: where things are known, and you just manage
- Wicked: where things are fluid, and you need to lead a team to address
- Critical: where things are urgent, and you need to make a decision
The point being that a leader needs to address each objective appropriately to the type of circumstance you’re facing. Makes sense. We know these different situations arise.
What this reminds me of is Dave Snowden’s Cynefin framework (he’s very clear not to call it a model). Again, I’m not au fait with the nuances, but I’ve been a fan of the big picture. The main thing, to me, are the different situations he posits. That includes:
- Clear means we have known solutions
- Complicated likewise, but requires certain expertise for success
- Complex systems, which require systematic exploration
- Chaotic, and here you just have to do something
As I understand it, the goal is to move things from chaotic and complex to complicated or clear. (There’s a fifth area in the framework, confusion, but again I’m focusing on the big picture versus nuances.)
So, let’s do a mapping. Here, I posit, tame equates to clear and complicated, wicked is complex, and critical is chaotic. Clearly, there’s a time element in critical that doesn’t necessarily apply in the Cynefin model. Still, despite some differences, one similarity emerges.
The important thing in both models is you can’t use the same approach to all problems. You have to recognize the type of situation, and use the appropriate approach. If it’s critical, you need to get expert advice and make a choice. If it’s not, but it’s new or uncertain, you assign (and lead) a team to investigate. This, to me, is really innovation.
The tame/clear, to me, is something that can and likely should be automated. People shouldn’t be doing rote things, that’s for machines. Increasingly, I’m seeing that we’re now getting computers to do much of the ‘complicated’ too, rightly or wrongly. We can do it right, of course, but there are times when the human pattern-matching is superior, and we always need oversight.
The interesting areas are the complex and chaotic. Those are areas where I reckon there continue to be roles for people. Perhaps that where we should be focusing our efforts. Not everyone needs to be a leader every time, but it’s quite likely that most everyone’s potentially going to be pulled into the decision-making in a wicked or complex situation. How we manage those will be critical, and that’s about managing process to obtain the best out of the group. That’s something I’ve been looking at for a long time (there’s a reason my company is called Quinnovation ;). Particularly the aspects that lead to the most effective outcomes.
So, we can automate the banal, manage the process right in innovating, and be decisive when things are time-critical. Further, we can select and/or develop people to be able to do this. This is what leadership should be, as well as, of course, creating the culture that the group will exist in. Getting the decision-making bit right, though, builds some of the trust that is necessary to accomplish that last bit. Those are my musings, what are yours?
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