Thursday, July 23, 2009

If you don't hula, you can't play!

According to a report from the Center for Creative Leadership, 40 percent of new executives fail within the first 18 months. The report goes on to site lack of fit within the organizational culture as a primary reason. Organization values and performance standards for most companies are communicated in every conceivable way as attempts to educate employees on what it takes to be successful here. Most likely you would not see a sign that says "if you don't hula you can't play". But, in fact, that may be the case.

According to MIT's Edgar Schein, a guru on organizational culture, primary embedded mechanisms for organization culture are the "criteria used for allocation of rewards and status. These teach people what is really valued regardless of company rhetoric", says Schein.

Examples of these mechanisms include:
  • What leaders pay attention to, measure, and control on a regular basis.
  • How leaders react to critical incidents and organizational crises.
  • Observed criteria by which leaders allocate scarce resources.
  • Observed criteria by which leaders allocate rewards and status.
  • Observed criteria by which leaders recruit, select, promote, retire, and excommunicate organizational members.

Bridge's culture assessments and leadership development solutions help leaders see the unspoken rules for what they really are. We then guide leaders to make conscious choices in leading transparently with norms that are fully disclosed. Now, your talking performance and you can save the hula skirt for your next holiday.

Contact me at jenny.whitener@bcillp.com for more information on how to create and navigate culture change.

Thursday, July 9, 2009

The Majorette Becomes President

With great excitement, I attended a civic organization's inauguration of their first female president recently. Imagine a leading civic group with a 90+ year history, appointing a female to lead. Halalua! Was it the tortoise or the hare that said "slow and steady" wins the race?

As the new female president stepped to the podium to share her acceptance speech, she opened with humility and with a humorous look at how the group may fare with a female at the helm. She had captured the heart and interest of all.

She went on to share a powerful insight on the broad strengths and talents in the room and how this group had the potential to influence the future of the community. We should all celebrate the success of this new president and stand behind her with great resolve. I'm confident her leadership will be transformational.

How do we as women leaders effectively use soft and hard power to get the job done? How do we get comfortable breaking out of the mold?

According to Harvard professor and leadership expert, Joseph Nye, Jr., the balance of soft power and hard power combines as "smart power" and generates trust and mobilizes people around forward looking agendas. Hard power is considered directive, coercion type activities. While soft power is focuses on the tools of attraction and emotional appeal.

"If you think of classic women leaders- Margaret Thatcher, Indira Gandhi, and Golda Meir- they all came up fighting the gender stereotype and emphasizing the Iron Lady aspect of their leadership", writes Nye. He goes on to site several women leaders in our age that have achieved the use of smart power, but says women still have to play "against the gender stereotype that women are soft". With the prevailing view that business is becoming flatter and more dependent on networks with less hierarchy, business leaders in the future will need to exert more soft power.

So what does this mean for women as leaders today? I say turn in your baton!! You have the natural ability to use smart power. Lead!! Lead!! Lead!! That means inspire others with a compelling vision, define an organizational strategy to achieve the vision and mobilize people to perform.. then get out of the way!! Who knows, maybe you'll have time to help your daughter practice her fencing!

For more information about our executive coaching services for women leaders, contact me at jenny.whitener@bcillp.com.

Monday, June 22, 2009

Saddle That Tiger!

With over 20 years experience in the healthcare industry, I've seen a lot of big hairy challenges appear for executives to wrestle. Most agree our health care delivery system needs some change. But the scope of change proposed in Mr. Obama's health care reform agenda is dramatic.

We will need our collective wisdom to find the right path forward to ensure quality health care at affordable costs stay within our reach. Harvard's Clayton Christensen and Micheal Overdorf present an approach for Meeting the Challenge of Disruptive Change that we should remember with challenges of this scale. The authors "suggest there are three critical factors that affect what and organization can or cannot do: its resources, its processes, and its values." My experience shows organizations often address the resources and processes to address a radical and significant change, but forget to consider the organizational values that may enhance or inhibit the move forward. Don't forget to SADDLE THAT TIGER before you ride it!!

Contact us to learn more about our Collaborative Solution Sessions where we put group wisdom to work to build bold solutions to complex and hairy problems. Email me for more info at jenny.whitener@bcillp.com.

You can pick up Christensen's full white paper online at http://www.harvardbusiness.org/.

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Aim High

The greatest waste of our natural resources is the number of people who never achieve their potential. Get out of that slow lane. Shift into the fast lane. If you think you can't you won't. If you think you can there's a good chance you will. Even making the effort will make you feel like a new person.

Reputations are made by searching for things that can't be done and doing them. Aim Low- Boring. Aim High- Soaring! - unknown.

Remember the power of positive thinking!! If you are having difficulty seeing and believing in your potential, you may want to join one of Bridge's virtual coaching sessions. Email me at jcwhitener@comcast.net and we'll get you on the path to being all you can be!

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Just Grab It!

I recently had the opportunity to hear Craig and Patsy Kent share their experiences of serving as missionaries in a rural farming community of Kenya for the past 7 years. They shared a story of how they were providing training and coaching to the chicken farmers of the area. Many of the farmers were loosing up to 50% of their flock each year. Their tradition was to allow the chickens to roam free thereby allowing the chickens to be subject to all types of harm. At first, Craig and Patsy simply shared with the farmers the need to house their livestock and to treat them for disease. These suggestions would significantly increase the farmer's potential earnings. But, no one came forward for help. It was not their tradition and many believed illness and tragedy occurred due to superstition. So, Craig and Patsy created a chicken coop for their own farm and treated their chickens for disease. Over time, the farmers noticed the Kent's were having great fortune with their livestock. The farmers began to change.

Why is it we have such a hard time letting go- even when the data and facts show it's the best path forward? Like it or not, change is difficult for most of us especially in areas where we have a depth of experience and history. If you're personally going through change, set a personal goal to "grab on" to the future. Celebrate incremental wins.. and take every opportunity to share your success. Other's will see your courage and model your behavior. Then, share your success story and the benefits of change again and again... Encourage others to follow! Success is yours. Have the courage to let go and "just grab it'!

Sunday, April 26, 2009

The Trolley Ride

I am a strategic partner for the Hunter Museum of American Art in Chattanooga, TN. On Friday, I had the opportunity to join Adrea Causey, the education curator, in an Artful Lunch session with several employees from Unum. We are using fine art as a medium to discuss issues of life and business. The painting we observed on Friday was of a Trolley Ride in the late 1800s. It was crowded and there were people on board from all walks of life. The painting centered on a couple who I'm sure were dressed in their finest, but not quite as well as the other passengers. The look this couple's faces showed how self conscious they were in the crowd. It strikes me that often we may find ourselves in unusual situations where we may be a bit different or have a point of view that is out of step. It also makes me thankful that diversity is now an essential element we strive for in business. It drives creativity and stronger teams. Celebrate your diversity and share your talents openly!

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Living your dream..

Susan Doyle's amazing performance in Britian is a wake up call that we should never stop dreaming. If' you have not seen here inspiring performance you should:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CR_N9iljeMk

To grow, we must first dream. Then, we must open our minds to new ideas, new thoughts, new experiences. Here's wishing you great results for your growth journey.

Jenny