Leadership in Time of Crisis
The problems we face today require that every one of us embraces the mantle of leadership available to us wherever we find ourselves in the current system. How then should we lead?
The problems we face today require that every one of us embraces the mantle of leadership available to us wherever we find ourselves in the current system. How then should we lead?
The problems we face today require that every one of us embraces the mantle of leadership available to us wherever we find ourselves in the current system. How then should we lead?
Sometimes, traditional leadership approaches are the right ones. As Keith Grint notes, in critical situations -having a clear line of command - where everyone knows their role and there is no dissent - is appropriate. Similarly, in situations where you have known and predictable outcomes - the ‘simple’ or ‘complicated’ issues described in Dave Snowden’s Cynefin framework - you can manage them and know what you’re likely to get.
And some aspects of COVID-19 need these approaches. If you’re building a large field hospital, for example, though it’s complicated and logistically tremendously difficult, you’re building on a known pattern. But other situations call for different approaches to leadership. These situations are best described as complex.
We have been working with leaders at all levels in the health and social care system, between us, for over thirty years. Our focus for much of that time has been on helping leaders to develop the skills, tools and confidence to lead collaboratively – across professional, organisational and cultural boundaries – in complex systems.
Complex systems are settings in which:
Four suggestions:
“In these troubled, uncertain times, we don’t need more command and control, we need better means to engage everyone’s intelligence in solving challenges and crises as they arise”
Margaret J. Wheatley, 2005. “How Is Your Leadership Changing?