Assertive, Not Aggressive: The Sweet Spot of Leadership

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Presentation transcript:

Assertive, Not Aggressive: The Sweet Spot of Leadership UIA Associations Round Table Europe 2016 Assertive, Not Aggressive: The Sweet Spot of Leadership Susan West Leadership & Change Executive Master in International Association Management Solvay Brussels School of Economics & Managment

http://www. jacquielawson. com/notecards/pickup/6344419373772 http://www.jacquielawson.com/notecards/pickup/6344419373772?source=jl999

Invitation to Think and Act Differently

Welcome to Our World

Lena’s Case Study: Volunteers MIA WHAT I THINK AND FEEL, BUT DON’T SAY HOW THE REAL CONVERSATION WILL LIKELY GO She knew this was planned for months and didn’t tell me! This happened once already. I’m so tired of these excuses; why does she not delve deeper to really understand what is going on? How can I make her see this? “Aaaaaggggh , I am getting so tired of this negativity, what is she doing here? Everything is &!#% all the time. I don’t want to get angry. We can’t wait. Claire is really good with the volunteers and always seems to pull through in the end. Pfft I am going nuts, how I can I get through to her? Is she taking advantage of me? I want to give up. Lena (me): “Claire what happened with the volunteers not showing up again for the briefing I scheduled this week? Didn’t they commit?” Claire: “ Well you know that we had some problems getting them motivated to put time into this. It’s on top of their day job.” Lena (me) : “What are the volunteers saying is their reason for not moving forward with this? Do they need more than 3 months advance notice? Aren’t they passionate about this work?“ Claire: “Well you know trying to plan ahead more than 3 months is like looking in a crystal ball. Maybe you can try again next month.” Lena (me): I have to get this briefing done first before I can move ahead with other things. It’s kind of a problem for me. Can you maybe try to reschedule in a week or two? Claire: Well you know I’m not their boss, etc., etc. Lena (me): We have to make this happen. Maybe I can send a Doodle calendar invite today so we work around their availability.

What Lena Left Out « Lost in Translation » THE IMPACT Impact on others? She thinks it’s not a big deal Lack of understanding of issue Free from her responsibility Impact on you? Don’t get what I need Pressure from my boss Frustration Weakened me in others’ eyes Impact on association? Mis-management of precious resources Delays on key initiative THE IMPACT THINKING & FEELING BEHAVIOR What did you say or do instead during the conversation? Asked questions Soft approach Offered a solution Gave in and took the work on myself What key messages or thoughts did you leave out of the conversation? “Something has to change” “She (Claire) has to change” “I am so frustrated!!!” What WAS SAID Thought & Felt BUT DID NOT SAY

Did You Know…? Over 25,000 leaders observed in organizations across the globe. What we learned: Leaders unintentionally sabotage themselves with self-limiting behaviors and patterns of thinking. Under moderate pressure, leaders fail to achieve the desired outcomes despite knowing what to do. It’s not a knowledge gap. So what is it about us humans that causes this to happen? Chris Argyris Professor Emeritus Harvard Business School

Model I – The Inherited Model Suppress negative feelings toward others Be rational, leave out your emotions Remain in unilateral control Win, don’t lose All people in all cultures exhibit Model I behaviors under pressure

Model II – A Liberating Alternative Values Suppress negative feelings toward others Be rational, leave out emotions Remain in unilateral control Maximize “winning,” minimize “losing” Model II Values Discuss the real issues, use valid information Productively express thoughts & feelings Share ownership of problems & solutions Be Open to others’ ideas Adapted from works of C Argyris, DA Schön

A Tool for the Toolbox - Productive Dialogue ASSERTIVE PASSIVE (too much listening, accommodating, not sharing your view & reasoning) AGGRESSIVE (advocate your own view, often without reasoning and then jumping to action) LISTENING Understand their views, learn POINT OF VIEW Your view or opinion “My view is…” “I’m seeing a pattern…” “I’m worried that…” REASONING Data, feelings & stakes “I say this because…” “The risk could be…” INQUIRY Open questions “What do you think?” “What’s your reaction?” Source: Cambridge Leadership Group, inspired by the work of Chris Argyris, Prof. Emeritus, Harvard Business School

3 Things to remember: Use facts and feelings. It creates learning and motivation to change. Be curious about how people reach their conclusions. Ask powerful questions. It generates better ideas and buy-in. Be as open to having your mind changed, as you want the others to be. It builds authentic relationships based on trust and understanding. When you balance advocacy and inquiry, you can be assertive without coming across as aggressive.

Thank you, hope to see you soon!