Pascoe's potshots

Latest

LEADERSHIP: AVOIDING BLACK-SWAN DISEASE

published:2010-07-26 01:00:00

Nassim Nicholas Taleb, the best-selling economist and author of The Black Swan, is famous for his arresting insights. His recent postscript to The Black Swan is no exception: presenting ten lessons from the Global Financial Crisis. Above all, he recommends learning from “Mother Nature” – by making our

This Potshot has 0 comments:

Subscribe


Subscribe to RSS feed

Or receive Pascoe's Potshots weekly by email

Recent

LEADERSHIP: FOR SUCCESS – AND HAPPINESS

published:2010-07-19 01:00:00

Like Professor Clayton Christensen, I’ve faced a life threatening cancer and found it a crucible for clarifying my thinking about what’s important. The day

This Potshot has 0 comments:

LEADERSHIP: TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT - BUT HOW?

published:2010-07-13 01:00:00

Due to a backlog of new registrations to work through this Potshot has been delayed by a day. Our apology to our regular readers

This Potshot has 0 comments:

LEADERSHIP: THAT ONE KEY LESSON

published:2010-07-07 01:00:00

How do you rate yourself on the following five actions? Showing self-awareness?. Demonstrating authenticity, integrity and compassion? Understanding and engaging people as

This Potshot has 7 comments:

Search Pascoe's Potshots

LEADERSHIP: BUT, I LIKE PEOPLE LIKE ME

Seek out new, different and challenging people, ideas and approaches
Overcome group-think and stuck-in-the-rut approaches

If you were putting together a football team, would you select only people, who play the same position? Probably not. But, that’s what we often do with business teams. No, let's not ask Jenny, she's rather different, and she's not an engineer; and, Fred, he’s only interested in sales. We don’t want anyone who rocks the boat – in other words, with different or confronting views.

But diversity pays dividends. As a leader, you need people with all the relevant skills and knowledge. So, sales can be just as important as engineering - particularly if you want to sell this new product. And, often there's benefit in seeking someone, like Jenny, with a totally different background, training or style. They are less likely to be bound by industry orthodoxy or group think. The jargon for this is synergy: their input makes the team worth more than the sum of its parts.

However, diversity of skills and backgrounds has to be reinforced with tolerance for different views. Otherwise, it's tokenism: do join us, but please keep quiet!

Think about your own team. On a scale from one to ten, how would you rate both its diversity and its tolerance? Who could be added to increase synergy? And, what changes in team behaviour would be needed to make those with different views feel free to voice them? What's your responsibility in this?

As a leader, diversity can be challenging. Meetings may be more demanding. Do you feel comfortable handling dissent?

At times, as leader, you may in fact need to be the source of diversity. If discussion is stuck on one track, you may need to throw in new or challenging ideas yourself.

Try this one!

Categories for this Potshot:

Champion diversity, Establish constructive values,



Dr. Timothy Pascoe AM
PhD (Cambridge), MBA (Harvard), BE & BEc (Adelaide)
Creator, V|E|C|T|O|R Leadership®

Did you enjoy
this article?
Subscribe to
RSS feed

Please comment on this Potshot

name
the name you enter will be displayed beside your comment
email address
this must be a valid email address. It will not be displayed
Comment
Conditions of posting: please feel free to post your views, but note that any post that is defamatory, contains bad language, or is spam will be blocked and deleted.

This Potshot has no comments yet