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Leadership Development MANA 5350 Dr. Jeanne Michalski

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Presentation on theme: "Leadership Development MANA 5350 Dr. Jeanne Michalski"— Presentation transcript:

1 Leadership Development MANA 5350 Dr. Jeanne Michalski Michalski@uta.edu

2 “Leaders Matter”

3 What do we know about how leaders develop?  Corporate Executive Board  “Voice of the Leader”  Center for Creative Leadership  McKinsey & Company Research  “War for Talent”  “Performance Ethic”

4 *Corporate Executive Board “Voice of the Leader”  Sponsored by Corporate Executive Board  Designed to provide systematic evidence to help organizations make decisions on effective leadership development approaches  Web-based survey administered to over 15,000 leaders  Over 8000 Executives from 31 organizations in 6 industries responded  Using conjoint analysis, the effectiveness of leadership development activities was evaluated from the eyes of the leaders

5 What Drives Effective Leadership? Complete List of Characteristics Evaluated by Respondents Source: Corporate Executive Board 2001 Leadership Survey.

6 *Corporate Executive Board Most important attributes of effective leadership  Leaders consider people-leadership skills as the most important attributes of effective leadership, followed by strategic-leadership skills.

7 *Corporate Executive Board Most important attributes of effective leadership  People-leadership skills  Clearly communicating expectations  Recognizing and rewarding achievement  Inspiring others  Strategic-leadership skills  Identifying and articulating a long-term vision  Understanding markets, competitors, and customers  Understanding the strengths and weaknesses of the company

8 *Corporate Executive Board What leadership development activities do leaders value the most?  Feedback and relationship-based development programs are viewed as more effective than on-the-job experiences, which in turn are viewed more effective than education-based programs.  The amount of decision-making authority given to leaders, however, is the single most important factor in leadership development.

9 *Corporate Executive Board Feedback and Relationship programs  Creating Leadership development plan  Interacting with Peers  Meeting with an executive coach  Meeting with a mentor  Feedback

10 *Corporate Executive Board Most important development activities to leaders 1) Amount of decision-making authority 2) Creating a leadership development plan 3) Interacting with peers 4) Meeting with an executive coach 5) Meeting with a mentor 6) Feedback 7) Turning around a struggling business 8) People-management skills courses 9) Working in new functional areas

11 *Corporate Executive Board Greatest weakness in leaders Though considered very important to effective leadership, identifying and articulating a long-term vision is the single greatest weakness of the leadership bench (Strategic Leadership)

12 *Adapted from McKinsey & Company Bottom Line Impact  Evidence suggests that stronger leadership teams can positively affect company economic performance.  Companies that are the best at managing talent deliver far better results for their shareholders, up to 22% better  High performing employees generate:  40% more productivity from Operations performers  49% increase profits from General Management performers  67% increased revenue from Sales Representatives

13 *Adapted from McKinsey War for Talent Study “War for Talent”  McKinsey & Company groundbreaking study on Leadership Development  77 companies involved in the study at CEO level and the top 300 in the company  Top 300 people studied extensively  11 different industries represented  All 6,500 executives were asked to complete a 45-minute survey on what they have done in their career, and what drives and keeps them at their current company  Unknown to the 6,500 executives, they were split into three buckets: high potential, good performer, below average  The companies were split into quintiles by financial performance in their respective industries

14 *Adapted from Corporate Executive Board Research Findings  There is a direct link between a company’s ability to provide leaders with the development opportunities they most value and the overall strength of the leadership bench.

15 *Adapted from McKinsey War for Talent Study “War for Talent” Findings  The strongest performing companies don’t necessarily have the strongest formal leadership development processes.  They DO have a talent mindset at the top of the organization and a culture that supports candor and risk taking when discussing people

16 *Adapted from McKinsey War for Talent Study Build a talent mindset  A belief that talent impacts business results  A belief that “A” players will outperform “B” players, regardless of the challenge  Executives know what an “A” player is, and the “A” players have been identified  Executives are accountable for people leadership and development  The best will be rewarded

17 *Adapted from McKinsey War for Talent Study Culture that encourages candor and risk taking when discussing people  Executives talk about people frequently in a candid and probing way…they differentiate people on performance and potential  Take risks on people and move them into jobs before they are ready (stretch assignments)  Executives talk candidly about their own and others’ development  Executives are expected to ask for and give insightful feedback  Shared set of values around people development

18 *Adapted from McKinsey War for Talent Study Build solid leadership development processes  Performance Management  Feedback & Coaching  Education & Development  Recruiting  Assessment

19 *Adapted from McKinsey War for Talent Study “War for Talent” Findings  Need to have the culture and the talent mindset first, in order to support a strong leadership development program (are we developing a good crop of “B” players?)  High potential and high performing individuals want challenges  Stretch people and build capability through aggressive job assignments  Provide feedback and rewards to reinforce culture, performance and development  Need to have a model in place for when and why professional coaches are brought into the organization - the times when it is most critical for an employee to learn the skill, then the return on the investment will be high  Focus on people-leadership and strategic-leadership skills for all people leaders

20 *Adapted from McKinsey War for Talent Study “First Break all the Rules”  Gallup Organization’s research  80,000 managers in 400 organizations

21 “First Break all the Rules”  What the World’s Greatest Managers Do Differently…  Select the right talent  Correctly coach for the right outcomes for direct reports  Maximize strengths  Place the right person in the right job at the right time  Create heroes in every role  Reward performance  Frequent interaction regarding performance  Focus on future and the next level

22 *Adapted from McKinsey Performance Ethic Study “Performance Ethic” Study  McKinsey & Company - 6,900 managers in 56 organizations

23 *Adapted from McKinsey Performance Ethic Study “Performance Ethic” Study  These are the things high performing companies do consistently:  Mission / Inspiration  Highly aggressive short- and long-term goals  Flat, atomized, accountable organizational units  Transparent performance feedback  Consequence management  Coordination and control Levers  Motivation levers

24 *Adapted from Center for Creative Leadership Great leaders share similar backgrounds Raw Material Intellect, Character, Ability to Relate, Motivation to Achieve and Lead Experience - Variety - Intensity - Adversity - Diversity Ability & Willingness to Learn from Experience - Responsive to Feedback vs. Repeating Past Mistakes + x

25 How do leaders develop? Experience and Feedback!

26 *Adapted from Center for Creative Leadership How Do Leaders Develop?  Assignments  Full job change  Job restructure based on development needs  Special projects and assignments  Coaching and Feedback  Multi-rater feedback and evaluation  Coaching by a skilled manager  Training  Motivated self-development  Coursework (“just in time”) Descending Value


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