Leadership - What Really Matters: A Handbook on Systemic Leadership (Management for Professionals)

(C. Jardin) #1

  1. Specialization versus generalization
    In order to assess the performance of his or her staff properly and in order to put
    the people and their skills in the right place, a manager needs to have expertise
    and detailed knowledge. Too much detail orientation can be dangerous because
    it leads us to lose sight of the big picture and the ability to integrate. Moreover,
    this can also leave little time for our actual management tasks.

  2. Overall responsibility versus individual responsibility
    For the sake of themselves and their staff, managers should and must delegate –
    not only tasks, but also the associated responsibilities. In practice, however,
    the boss is blamed for any mistake made by his or her subordinates, because
    everyone expects them to feel responsible for everything done by those they
    lead.

  3. Preservation or change
    Leadership is a constant balancing act between maintaining the necessary
    structures, values and rules and the need to adapt to changes in the environ-
    ment. Constancy, stability and tradition create security and transparency.
    But deadlock endangers the existence and the development of the company.
    The manager must at the same time – even in the face of resistance – suggest
    and implement changes and provide the security and orientation that the
    employees need for their daily work.

  4. Competition versus cooperation
    Competition is an engine of growth. Conflicts lead to new solutions, and
    competition leads to performance. In our competitive economy, always strug-
    gling for scarce resources, especially the Olympic motto of “faster, higher,
    farther” is what counts. But for the survival and performance of an organization
    whose main resource is the people who work for it, “soft” factors such as
    kindness, patience, helpfulness, empathy and modesty are also important.
    The ideal leader would be a “cooperative tiger.”

  5. Being active or stepping back
    Leadership means activity. Leaders are “movers”; they keep people and
    projects in motion. However, leaders should not only supervise but should
    also be able to let go, because good staff members do not have to be pushed;
    they gain the necessary motivation from their activity (intrinsic motivation).
    Executives must be able to withdraw in order to let others become active,
    intervening only when it is truly necessary.

  6. Internal orientation versus external orientation
    Managers have to establish and maintain relationships, both internally and
    externally: they must be present and available for their people and simulta-
    neously maintain networks outside the company. Networking in the entire
    system and in the environment is important in order to acquire information
    and resources; however, it also takes time and energy from maintaining internal
    relations and weakens the manager’s support in his or her own team.

  7. Goal orientation or process orientation
    This dilemma involves two other opposed pairs: trust versus mistrust and
    supervision versus autonomy. Goal orientation means that the manager trusts


3.2 Leading with Your Head and Heart 159

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