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Peter Senge, THE FIFTH DISCIPLINE, Chapter 18

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Presentation on theme: "Peter Senge, THE FIFTH DISCIPLINE, Chapter 18"— Presentation transcript:

1 Peter Senge, THE FIFTH DISCIPLINE, Chapter 18
The Leader’s New Work Peter Senge, THE FIFTH DISCIPLINE, Chapter 18

2 Self-directed teams require a new leadership style
The traditional style of clear directions and well-intentioned manipulation doesn’t work People with a sense of their own vision and commitment would naturally reject efforts of a leader to get them committed. One leader did not know what to do, now that he had a self-directed team 2/19/00 Prepared by James R. Burns

3 Prepared by James R. Burns
Our view of leaders…. Is wrong Especially in the West, leaders are heros--great men who rise to the occasion This view reinforces a focus on events and charismatic control of those events rather than on systemic forces and collective learning 2/19/00 Prepared by James R. Burns

4 Our view of leaders, continued
At its heart, the traditional view of leadership is based on assumptions of people’s powerlessness, their lack of personal vision and inability to master the forces of change 2/19/00 Prepared by James R. Burns

5 The new view of leadership in learning organizations
Leaders are designers, stewards, and teachers Leaders build organizations where people continually expand their capacity to understand complexity, clarify vision, and improve shared mental models That is, leaders are responsible for creating a culture where learning is rewarded 2/19/00 Prepared by James R. Burns

6 Prepared by James R. Burns
Leader as Designer Suppose your org is an ocean liner and you are the leader. What is your role? The commonest answer, not surprisingly, is “the captain.” Other less common answers include the helmsman, the navigator, the social director (making sure everybody is involved, and communicating) 2/19/00 Prepared by James R. Burns

7 The neglected leadership role is …
the designer of the ship. No one has a more sweeping influence than the designer. It does no good for the captain of the ship to say turn starboard 30 deg. when the designer only allowed for 15 deg. Yet NO ONE thinks of the designer when they think of the leader’s new role!! 2/19/00 Prepared by James R. Burns

8 Why did no one thing of the designer
Lao-tzu: little credit goes to the designer The functions of design are rarely visible Consequences today are the result of work done long ago in the past Design work today will show its consequences long in the future 2/19/00 Prepared by James R. Burns

9 What must leaders design?
Policies, strategies, “systems,” organizations, specifically Selection policies Vision strategies Value systems Culture systems Measurement systems Rewards systems Criteria by which excellence will be determined 2/19/00 Prepared by James R. Burns

10 Prepared by James R. Burns
And what of Design? It is an integrative initiative All of the parts must fit together and work well together as a whole under a variety of circumstances The leader must view the firm as a “system” -- Ray Strata Corporate executives must become organizational architects -- Ed Simon 2/19/00 Prepared by James R. Burns

11 Gives rise to a new discipline: Business Design
Must loose focus on the P&L statement Look at the long term, instead Have to get away from piecemeal reactions to problems Have to integrate the five component technologies Must integrate vision, values, purpose, systems thinking, and mental models The synergy of the disciplines can propel an organization to major breakthroughs 2/19/00 Prepared by James R. Burns

12 First tasks of Business Design
Design the governing ideas--purpose, vision, and core values Building shared vision is important because it fosters a longer-term orientation and an imperative for learning Get the systems thinking going early on Get the concept of mental models and surfacing underlying assumptions going early as well 2/19/00 Prepared by James R. Burns

13 Subsequent tasks of Business Design
Design the learning processes Get personal mastery going 2/19/00 Prepared by James R. Burns

14 Prepared by James R. Burns
The Leader as Steward Leaders have a purpose story This is an overarching explanation of why they do what they do how their organizations need to evolve how that evolution is part of something larger Most gifted leaders have a “larger story” 2/19/00 Prepared by James R. Burns

15 Prepared by James R. Burns
The Leader as Teacher 2/19/00 Prepared by James R. Burns

16 Prepared by James R. Burns
Creative Tension 2/19/00 Prepared by James R. Burns

17 How can such Leaders be Developed
2/19/00 Prepared by James R. Burns

18 Prepared by James R. Burns
Time to Choose 2/19/00 Prepared by James R. Burns

19 Copyright C 2000 by James R. Burns
All rights reserved world-wide. CLEAR Project Steering Committee members have a right to use these slides in their presentations. However, they do not have the right to remove this copyright or to remove the “prepared by….” footnote that appears at the bottom of each slide. 2/19/00 Prepared by James R. Burns Prepared by James R. Burns


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