When the Easy Button Does Not Work

“Leaders are responsible for both the big structures that serve as cornerstones of confidence, and for the human touches that shape a positive emotional climate to inspire and motivate people.” – Rosabeth Moss Kanter


How does one best bec
ome equipped for leadership when we know the context of leadership is always changing? That’s a question every organization must answer if it expects to prepare current and future leaders. It is a question each of us must answer in pursuit of our own roles that require leadership abilities.

Some organizations will look for “quick fixes”; they want to press the “Easy Button” and produce satisfactory leaders using as few resources as possible. They will establish an impressive-sounding series of workshops and run as many of their prospective and current leaders through this gauntlet of training as they deem possible, based on current resources and circumstances. Most of these training decisions will be driven by the felt need to reduce conflict among employees and their immediate supervisors, while improving their “communication skills” and political savvy in the process. The underlying belief is that “if we can fix the people we can fix the system”.

The Easy Button does not work.

“Put a good person in a bad system, and the system will win every time.” – W. Edwards Deming.

If the Easy Button worked, all you would need to do to evolve as a leader is to attend the right workshop or the right conference, read the right books and listen to the right audio-recordings. All you would need to do is DO the right things, without ever leaving the classroom! Of course, if you knew how to always do the right things, you might not need any development at all. [Stop here: if you took that last comment seriously and think, “That’s me, I don’t need any further development”, you may quite possibly be what is known in most circles as a “Lost Cause”.]

What works?
I am kicking off a corporate development program for a global manufacturer soon. I will be working with more than 30 employees during this pilot phase, each of whom holds a leadership position of some kind or has been recognized for leadership potential. From plant managers to aspiring production and administrative team leaders, our goal is to equip them for success in their Team Leadership roles.

We will work together over the course of several weekly sessions and follow-up sessions to ensure they are seeing results from their new focus as leaders, from their specific goals set during the process, and from their overall action plans that for most will involve both clarified professional and personal values, roles and goals. We will pay close attention to the current mission, goals and best practices of the company while helping individual participants develop vision, measurable goals and new attitudes and habits to excel in their personal lives and formal leadership roles.

Ultimately, our process and the participants will be measured NOT for doing the field work and participating in each session, NOT for being able to practice the “Five C’s of Conflict Resolution” or some similar rote meme, and NOT for being able to demonstrate their knowledge of project planning. They will be measured on how well they create a better context for productivity among their followers that serves customers well and makes a profit to keep the company alive and growing.

The subjects of conflict management, effective communication, time management, dealing with difficult people – all the typical “leadership modules” – will be covered in part through the curriculum I bring to the classroom, but more from issues participants bring to the discussion while we are together in a classroom. I will bring content that stimulates their thinking, but it is the intersection of agendas of the participants and the company they work for that will provide the real “materials” for the development program.

More than specific skills pulled from a list of “leadership qualities”, we will be developing in these leaders the ability to recognize the context they are in at any time and the attitudes, habits, values, knowledge, skills and goal-achievement ability to respond and lead effectively in context.

In effect, they will become better leaders, not just people who have completed leadership training.

The difference between this development process and other training programs is that we will pay as much attention to the leadership culture these people will help create in the future as we will the leadership skills they will need to create such a culture.

Ultimately, the team leaders and managers of this manufacturer will indeed lead the company to sustained success by being the architects of culture, the cornerstones of trust and confidence, and the examples of positive points-of-contact. They will shape an emotional climate which inspires employees to give their best and produces loyalty among a growing customer base.

  • How are you measured? At work? At home? In other roles?
  • How might others view you based on the culture and emotional climate you help create? How do you know?
  • How beneficial was the leadership training you’ve had in the past? How did your culture change as a result, if at all? What do the people around you say about this? How do you know?
  • Are you banking on workshops, books and tapes alone to increase your leadership influence?
  • Are the opportunities you have for leadership development based solely on competency models, skills training or discussion groups? What are the possible limitations of these programs?
  • How might a development process work for you if it helped you develop specific leadership skills, AND helped you consider new attitudes, develop new habits, achieve more goals, develop the culture around you, and help you live a more exemplary life?
  • What if we could show you a process that helped you become the leader who develops the kind of culture that attracts the best people to give their very best? Would you want to know more?
Posted in culture, development, easy button, leadership, team | Leave a comment

Stuck In The Muck

by Becky Morris

Have you ever been to a race?

My husband and I once attended the Indianapolis 500. We enjoyed all the pre-race activities almost more than the race. The bands, Jim Nabors (or Gomer Pyle for those who are old enough to remember) singing “Back Home Again in Indiana”, and the year we went there was a stealth fighter jet that hovered over the track. That alone was enough to send chills down our spines. All the build-up to the start of the race was spectacular, right up to the iconic saying, “Gentlemen, start your engines.” I suppose these days the announcer says, “Ladies and Gentlement, start your engines.” I like that.

Now imagine this: The announcer says “Gentlemen, start your engines” but none of the engines start. Instead of a loud, thunderous roar of horsepower and all the anticipation of the start of the race…there is nothing, complete silence. What a disappointment, what a letdown.

What if this really happened? What would your reaction be? Would you get upset and leave the track? Would you wait to see if the engines would start? I suspect I might have either of these reactions. Eventually, I would expect something, after all I had paid for tickets and my expectations were far from being met.

Of course, I highly doubt this will ever happen at the Indy 500. But something similar happens to many of us at different times in our lives. For some, it is the dream of starting a business, going through the process of finding the right name, getting the business legally set-up, hanging out that proverbial shingle. For others, it may be obtaining that college degree, running a marathon or taking that long desired vacation to Australia. We have a race to run, and we want to win. We need to get our engines started.

What races are you not starting? Are you excited during the pre-race only to have your engine stall? Where is your engine stalled? What dreams are you not living? What keeps you from beginning?

Most of us dream, but we lack the courage to pursue those dreams. We may be living a life of complacency, saying we really want something but never putting any actions in place to live it out.

If you started your race today, what would it take to win? What barriers might get in your way? What could you do to ensure your engine starts and you have the tires and gas to get you to the finish line?

If you acted on your dream today what would be different in your life one year from today? What muck are you stuck in? Are you living your dream?

“One can choose to go back toward safety or forward toward growth. Growth must be chosen again and again; fear must be overcome again and again.”

~Abraham Maslow

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Hello, Good-Bye and Thank You

by Becky Morris

My friend E Ann and I were having lunch one day and she was telling me about her daughter’s new boyfriend. It drove her absolutely crazy that every time he came to the house he never said hello, when leaving he never said good-bye, and if they took him to dinner or anywhere, he never said thank you. She asked me if I would consider doing a workshop on this topic. Of course we had a good laugh about this, but she had a valid point. There is an element of respect that seems to be missing in today’s society.

In her book How to ZING Your Life and Leadership Nancy Hunter Denney has a chapter on the “Rules of Respect”. She lists 7 ways to demonstrate respect. They are:

Appearance – This is a touchy subject. The more casual you dress, the harder it is for others to determine your role and the greater assumption (by others) that you might not take your role seriously. Clothes do not make the man or woman. However, if you combine respectful behaviors with appropriate appearance, you will reap the benefits.

  • How will you know when you appear appropriate for the situation?


Method of Communication – If you seriously want to improve your capacity to demonstrate respect, you must speak to others with respect. Not only does your word selection have an impact, but the noise level of your conversation also matters. Respect others by avoiding the temptation to intimidate, oppress, frighten, degrade or control.

  • How will you know your tone and demeanor demonstrate respect for those with whom you are speaking?


Word Selection and Gestures – Word selection and the content of your statements can also quickly show someone that either you respect them or you have no regard for their values, morals and diversity.

  • How will you know you are making respectful word choices?


Punctuality – Perpetual lateness is a significant (and preventable) individual detractor that subjects itself to a variety of interpretations and/or assumptions about you such as: disorganized, rude, careless, inconsiderate or having other priorities. Time is a valuable commodity and should be handled with care – not only your time, but the time of others.

  • How will you use your limited time each day to demonstrate your respect for others and their priorities?


Involvement – Another way of showing respect is by your level of involvement in your workplace or community. Respect can also be demonstrated by inviting others’ opinion and participation. Supervisors or managers who micromanage show very little trust (and thus respect) for their employees’ abilities.

  • How will you invite others into dialogue with you, encouraging their talent through participation, and engaging them in community?


Expectations – Letting others know your expectations of/for them tells them how you perceive them. Just as high expectations demonstrate high esteem, low expectations demonstrate low esteem. When you under-value, underpay and under-appreciate your workers, you simply disrespect them.

  • How will you come to believe in people to be their best and expect no less from them, rather than measure them by their weakest moment (while your own esteem rests on your best moments)?


Politeness – This is one of the best ways to demonstrate your respect for others. It may require little more than a spoken “please”, “thank-you”, “yes, sir” or “yes, ma’am”.

  • How DOES your general manner with people reflect the respect you have for them? How must you shift your attitude about people to improve your manners toward them?

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