CEOs who succeed in the
Innovator-in-Chief role are what I think of as change-savvy. The change-savvy
CEOs that I’ve worked with and observed:
- Are technically very knowledgeable about best practices in the
rapidly changing area of change planning and management, which means she
isn’t wedded to conventional planning wisdom and out-of-date approaches.
You’ll never hear a change-savvy CEO extolling the virtues of traditional
long-range (or strategic) planning as a change tool, much less catch her
fondling a ten-pound five-year plan.
- Realize that successfully bringing off out-of-the-box change
against all odds requires that she make leading the change planning and
implementation process a top-tier priority. In practice, this means that
the change-savvy CEO makes a firm commitment of time to leading change
from the top and never tries to delegate one piece or another of this
leadership role to lieutenants.
- Recognize that leading out-of-the-box change as Innovator-in-Chief
of the organization is more psychological and political in nature than
technical. Not only does the change-savvy CEO understand that fear is more
often than not at the heart of staff resistance to change, she also takes
strong, visible steps to allay that fear through the clear articulation of
vision and other motivational steps that are intended to inspire and energize
participants in the change process. The change-savvy CEO also pays close
attention to the transformation of key stakeholders into ardent change
champions.
- And command the respect of staff members and key stakeholders,
primarily by playing a very aggressive and visible change-leadership role
and practicing what she’s preaching in the change arena. A change-savvy
CEO knows that her leadership credibility depends on walking the talk,
never contradicting in practice what she’s saying publicly.
In addition to the characteristics I’ve just described,
the CEOs I’ve observed who have been most successful at accomplishing
out-of-the box change have possessed three powerful character traits: courage;
deep emotional self-awareness; and fundamental self-confidence. Being
courageous and steadfast in leading change planning and management is a
critical CEO trait. It never fails: The farther change planning moves outside
the box in your organization, the more fear, anxiety, tension, and often anger
you’re likely to see. As you’ve probably observed, fear (which feels quite
weak) is often quickly transformed into indignation (which feels far stronger),
and who’s a more convenient culprit and target of anger than the highly visible
Innovator-in-Chief who’s leading the change charge? The CEOs I’ve seen do a great job of leading
out-of-the-box change are loaded with calcium. That doesn’t mean they’re
insensitive Genghis Khans bludgeoning staff into change — quite the contrary.
But it does mean they don’t cave under pressure. They expect the resistance and
frequent anger, and they withstand it.
The absence of deep emotional self-awareness can
seriously limit the impact of a CEO in leading out-of-the-box change. I’ve seen
CEOs who couldn’t capitalize on the talents and commitment of strong women on
their executive teams because they found such strengths threatening. I’ve
observed CEOs who were unsuccessful in building critical partnerships and joint
ventures with other organizations because they saw the world as a dark and
dangerous place filled with competitors waiting to do them in. And I’ve come
across CEOs whose need for security and control made them intolerant of the
give-and-take of wide-open discussion and led them to impose on their
organizations mechanistic long-range planning processes that substituted
neatness and order for creative questioning and exploration. In these and other
cases, what has struck me over the years is how hidden, unrecognized emotions
can sabotage CEOs, causing them to see the world through an internal lens that
distorts objective reality, and, hence, leads to inappropriate behavior.
I know that this might sound like psychobabble to some
readers, but long experience has convinced me that the most effective change
leaders are emotionally so self-knowledgeable that they aren’t easily sabotaged
by deep-seated emotions they aren’t aware of. A few years ago, I worked with
just such a CEO, who headed a large and highly successful senior services
nonprofit. We were chatting one evening after getting through the first day of
an intensive 1 ½-day work session kicking off the organization’s change
planning process, when she confided that at one point in what’d been a great
day she’d felt like lashing out at two of her board members. She said that when
they’d raised some pretty pointed questions about her decision to pursue a
merger with a sister agency a couple of months earlier, she out of the blue
felt like a little girl again, being harshly judged by her parents, and the
sudden surge of anger caught her off guard. Fortunately, she didn’t lash out,
knowing that the anger — while a real emotion that she’d truly felt — was totally misplaced, having to do with a
vulnerable little girl inside, not with the strong CEO she’d become. That’s
what I mean by self-awareness.
The fundamentally self-confident CEOs I’ve worked with
and observed have embodied a character trait that I think of as true humility.
They are so secure, psychologically speaking, that they are able to celebrate —
and capitalize on — the strengths of the people around them, both board and
staff members. They’re blessed with robust, healthy egos that aren’t easily
wounded and don’t require constant protection. They are able to keep things in
perspective, seldom seeing a personal challenge, slight or even insult as a
cause celebre. Rather, they are able to take the long view, resisting the
impulse to lash out now in the interest of achieving an important objective
down the pike. They’re keenly aware that the person who’s treated them with
apparent disrespect today might very well turn out to be a valuable ally some
day if they bide their time.
Virginia
Jacko, my colleague and coauthor of our book, The Blind Visionary, is a great example of a fundamentally
self-confident CEO who’s wasted absolutely zero time defending a fragile ego.
President & CEO of the Miami Lighthouse for the Blind and Visually
Impaired, Virginia, who is blind, recounts a story in our book that vividly
demonstrates the value of a healthy ego. Not long after her appointment as the
first blind CEO of the Miami Lighthouse, Virginia learned that a prominent
Lighthouse volunteer had commented to a current Lighthouse board member,
referring to her appointment, “Can you believe the inmates are now running the
asylum?” Were Virginia’s feelings
hurt? Of course. Did she lash out in
anger? Of course not. She didn’t take
any action, and when she eventually sat down in a meeting with her detractor,
she made clear her desire to work together, letting bygones be bygones. The
upshot? The person who’d made the
derogatory comment became a close ally, even nominating Virginia for a major
community award. That’s the kind of emotional maturity that makes Virginia a
highly successful out-of-the-box leader.
Excerpt from Leading Out-of-the-Box Change (Doug
Eadie, Governance Edge Publishing, 2012) www.leadingoutoftheboxchange.com