On Leadership and Bureaucracy

Bureaucracy

The Anathema of Bureaucracy: Dealing with its Fate & On Embracing its Inverse

According to Wikipedia, the word “bureaucracy” is clearly defined as this:

bu·reauc·ra·cy /byʊ rɒk rə si/

“The collective organizational structure, procedures, protocols and set of regulations in place to manage activity, usually in large  organizations and government.”

In other words, it’s a frustrating, rigid, process driven, and snail-paced institution. This shouldn’t exist in democratic countries and ought to be controlled by developing nations if they are to effortlessly succeed.

Not doing so, bureaucracy will become increasingly self-serving, complacent, and breed corruption rather than properly serve society as its intention.

Compare and Contrast

In the private sector, if people don’t work productively, their businesses will go bankrupt. But, in the public sector, seniority trumps performance regardless of employee efficiency or lack thereof.

Faceless BureacracyCompetence in an organization is directly linked with its organizational system. In bureaucracy the hierarchy is typically overy complex with many levels providing a highly differentiated structure of authority.

The faceless bureaucracy also exists in the private sector. Employees there get frustrated when they can’t perform their work in a wholesome way because of restrictive yet superfluous rules set by their organization. Add to that corporate politics and it’s not hard to see why there are high levels of employee exodus/turnover due to their  discontent.

There are organizations which thrive on their ability to allow individuals to remain faceless. It permits them to act badly which is not in the best interest of their customers.

Bureaucracy in Action (or rather… “Inaction”)

When it comes to shipping packages, I despise doing so at the post office because every time I go, their employees look for a reason not to ship my package.

I hear either “Too much tape!” or “Not enough tape!”

On the other hand, I really enjoy bring my packages to FedEx or The UPS store. The folks there have a totally different approach as they’re not looking for  a reason to say “no” but rather for an opportunity to say “yes.”

“Here’s  some tape, we’ll just add it right here…”

The obvious reason for the difference in treatment to the customer is that  the person at the post office has no incentive to make a sale. He/she knows that whether I’m well served or not this person will still collect  his/her paycheck, benefits and keep their job, likely until retirement age.

If a company or government institution is in the service domain, then its people should look for ways to say “yes” at every interaction, provided they are not doing anything illegal or losing substantial amounts of money for their employer.

Embrace Change, Not Be Paralyzed By It

Organizations with a large bureaucracy struggle making fast decisions. Bureaucracy creates a climate in which the customer is not as important as the management and the company’s other employees. It also kills the organization’s competitive spirit.

As Jack Welch, former CEO of the industrial powerhouse, GE, has stated this:

Bureaucracy is the enemy – it means waste, slow decision-making and unnecessary approvals.”

Welch felt that ridding the company of wasteful bureaucracy was everyone’s job. He urged all his employees to fight it. “Disdaining bureaucracy” became an important part of GE’s shared values.

At Google, the role of the manager is that of an aggregator of viewpoints, not the dictator of decisions.

Creative Solutions

For an organization to avoid the complacency and bureaucratic trap, it should encourage creative thinking, consider making innovation its foundation, as well as cut-out layers of the its bloated management structure for a leaner decision-making process. Innovation is what a business should be carrying-out as often as it’s required for its long-term existence.

in·no·va·tion noun \ˌi-nə-ˈvā-shən\

The term “innovation” is widely described as: “Leading to significant organizational improvements in relation to enhanced or new business products, services, or internal processes.”

This involves acting on creative ideas to make some specific and tangible difference in the domain in which the innovation occurs. The old adage that goes something like “If it isn’t broken, don’t fix it” is a model which doesn’t sit well today with forward -thinking companies that thrive on practical improvements.

Nothing wrong with change if done to enhance or replace the status quo. It’s part of collective progress.

For this to work everyone, from the top brass down to the low labor employee, must embrace continuous change, and not resist it. That may be easier said than done due to typical resistance emerging from people due to fear of the unknown. It should be up to management to persuade their subordinates of the mutual benefits of change.

Creating an Adhocracy

The following are five recommendations for managing creative employees.

1. Accommodate:

Have an open door policy and offer an element of flexibility with employee schedules

2. Stimulate:

Encourage creative thinking not simply with words but also with rewards

3. Recognize:

Reward with greater autonomy and praise in front of peers

4. Direct lightly:

Avoid micromanaging and offer feedback

5. Progressive environment:

Avert unnecessarily restrictive rules and bureaucracy within the organization

Organizational Greenhouse: Adhocracy as the accepted wisdom for organizations to flourish

Author and expert on management issues, Robert H. Waterman, Jr., defines adhocracy as “any form of organization that cuts across normal bureaucratic lines to capture opportunities, solve problems, and get results.” For Henry Mintzberg, a management guru, an adhocracy is a complex and dynamic organizational form.

An adhocracy is different from bureaucracy and considers bureaucracy a thing of the past. Mintzberg considers an adhocracy  a thing of the future since it’s very good at problem solving and innovations and it thrives in a changing environment.

That said, a company that works under a bureaucracy is very structured in its rules and hierarchy with mediocrity prevailing. Everyone knows their specific role, they specialize in that role, and know nothing, or very little, about the roles of their co-workers.

On the other hand, a company that functions as an adhocracy experiences an organic structure where hierarchy barely exists. As a result, all members of such an organization have the authority to make decisions and to take actions affecting its future.

So how would you describe the type of environment where you work? How are you contributing to its structural support? Are you more apt to gravitate toward a bureacratic approach or to a more adhocracy? Which doe you feel furthers organizational health? I would love to hear your thoughts!

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James D. Roumeliotis is Marketing & Entrepreneurial Advisor at Affluence Marketing
He helps clients increase client market presence, profile and bottom line performance
Email | LinkedIn | Web |Blog

Image Sources: infocom.elsewhere.org, us.cdn3.123rf.com,

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Know Thy Leadership Talents, Skills, and Knowledge

 

What is the difference between these three things and what are the connections between them?

Leadership Talents | Leadership Skills | Leadership Knowledge

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Leadership Talents

From the work I do developing leaders, I’d say that leadership talents are those innate traits that a person is born with but which they need to work on to develop their potentiality.

Leadership Skills

Leadership skills are learned behaviours that a person practises and hones over time.

Leadership Knowledge

Leadership knowledge is acquired learning about the methods, strategies, successes and failures of other leaders in business and in different walks of life.

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The difference is that first of the three is an intrinsic characteristic of the leader and the latter two are learned.  And an effective leader combines all three: harnessing a mixture of their natural characteristics, their learned replicable behaviours, and their mental data and learning into their own unique way of expressing themselves as a leader and agenda-setter. The most effective leaders I work with are those people who possess some degree of innate leadership talent.

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These are things like the ability to:

  • Generate follower support for shared goals
  • Inspire those followers to engage with the process of attaining those goals
  • Keep engaging with the process, despite the challenges of the journey

But, these effective leaders are also people who have worked hard over lengthy periods of time to develop a repertoire of leadership skills which turn their latent talent into useful leadership behaviour time and time again. These successful leaders recognise that their unique approach will be effective in many of the situations they handle. But that their personally adaptive approach won’t fit every issue that they are responsible for addressing.

What To Do

So, these leaders expand their horizons by feeding their minds by acquiring knowledge about the way other leaders, both contemporary and historical, conduct themselves in businesspoliticsmilitarysporting arenas, and in other fields as well.

It’s axiomatic to say that leaders need some degree of leadership talent, skills, and knowledge to be effective in their roles.  But this merits repetition.  Many, many clients I work with find themselves asked to lead without really understanding the function of a leader, without having been groomed for that position, and without the perspective they need to make their interpretation of the role safe and effective for their organisation, their followers and themselves.

So while in this new role, a varying degree of toil can take its hold on the new leader. The wear and tear on them which accrues from finding themselves in this position can be significant for some, less demanding for others.

  • But with increasing pressure being applied to leaders to create more with less, how does a leader know whether or not their interpretation of their role is fit for purpose?
  • Where does a leader go to find their bearings?
  • How do they know if they are on the right track.
  • And where do they look first for help?

Real Leadership Value

The challenge for any leader is to look inwards first: to learn about their leadership values, theircharacter, and their internal landscape. They need to understand what makes them tick as a leader. They need to identify where they can best add value, what to look for in their followers, and how these two things might be different.

Knowing themselves gives them the platform from which to make decisions about what approach to take. It also helps them understand which situations give the impact that they want to have. They get clarity with the issues on which they are dealing and with the personalities that they are handling. With a high degree of self-awareness, a leader can select and implement the most useful inter-personal tools and skills from their repertoire.

Self-awareness is priceless to a leader.

With self-awareness, leaders can make the most of what they have got; developing their innate leadership talents, cultivating effective leadership skills, and acquiring leadership knowledge which is relevant and useful to them and their people.  They can recruit, groom and work with colleagues whose strengths complement their own blind spots. And they can mitigate against the potential for them getting it wrong and mishandling a situation due to those blind spots.

The Other Side

But, without self-awareness, a leader can go off course without even realising it.  A leader can create dynamics in their key workplace relationships which are counter-productive and even toxic.  A leader can set up the very circumstances which ultimately rebound on them, their followers and their organisation while disowning their responsibility in having created these circumstances in the first place.

Leadership is a complex role to fulfil and a constantly challenging role to handle.  But, even with leadership talents, skills and knowledge, it becomes that bit more challenging a role to handle well when the leader has neglected their primary duty of learning to know themselves.

What impact does your leadership style have your followers?  What qualities and attributes do you value in your followers? In which situations does your natural leadership style work well for you?  In which situations does it prove counter-productive for you? Overall, how do you characterise your approach to leading?

Bookmark Know Thy Leadership Talents, Skills, and Knowledge

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Aryanne Oade is Director of Oade Associates
She is a Chartered Psychologist, executive coach, workshop facilitator, author & public speaker

Starting and Running a Coaching Business: The Complete Guide to Setting Up and Managing a Coaching Practice Building Influence in the Workplace: How to Gain and Retain Influence at Work Managing Workplace Bullying: How to Identify, Respond to and Manage Bullying Behaviour in the Workplace Managing Politics at Work: The Essential Toolkit for Identifying and Handling Political Behaviour in the Workplace

Image Sources: lmcuk.com, hewittassociates.com

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