Leadership is so familiar that it's no surprise to find it a Quality Management Principle. But why is it so familiar? What is leadership, and why does it seem so hard to get along without it? Answering that raises another question: if leadership is indeed inescapable, what can it do for us? How can we use the phenomenon of leadership to advance our Quality goals?
So many questions. Let's start at the beginning.
What it is and why we need it
In any work, there are two components: first you need a picture in your mind of what to do (or you have to decide among competing alternatives), and then you have to do it. When I write this article I start by deciding what to say, and then my fingers type the words out on my keyboard. But if I don't start by making decisions about what to say, I won't get anywhere. My fingers can't type this post by themselves until I tell them what to type.*
We all know this. It's almost too obvious to have to spell it out. But the same thing applies when we work in groups. In order to work together, we have to agree what we are working on; we have to agree who does which part; and we have to agree to common decisions along the way. Do we steer left or right? Do we paint it red or green? Who will be out front pulling, and who will be in back pushing? And so on. For simple jobs and small groups we can often agree by discussing it among ourselves. But that approach cannot scale: when the group is large enough or the job is complex enough, we have to delegate someone to make these decisions for the rest of us. And that person is by definition the "leader."
Therefore leadership is an unavoidable part of working together in large (or mid-sized) groups on big (or complex) jobs. As long as we live in a complex society, where organizations of all sizes tackle a bewildering number of jobs, we will continue to see leaders everywhere.
The paradox of empowerment
Ironically, just as the complexity of our work requires leaders, it also undermines them.
As we have seen, complex work requires leaders because somebody has to decide all the questions that come up in the course of getting the job done.
But complex work undermines leaders because nobody can be an expert in everything. The CEO might have gotten his position because of his flair for marketing, say, or for finance. But that skill does not equip him to define an Internet security policy for the office, or a preventive maintenance schedule for the factory. Like it or not, he has to ask other experts to decide those questions, and mostly he has to believe what they tell him. As a result, large and even mid-sized organizations have no choice but to adopt "employee empowerment"—not as a management fad, but as a way of life. When the work is even a little complex, it becomes essential to distribute responsibilities and authorities throughout the organization in line with individual expertise, rather than concentrating all decisions at the top.**
How can leaders support Quality?
So our organization has leaders—probably several of them, at different levels. What can they do to support Quality?
There are a lot of straightforward steps that leaders can take, stemming from their role as decision-makers and from their position—especially at the higher levels—overseeing multiple areas at once.
- They can ensure that workers have the tools that they need to do the job: equipment, training, procedures, and any other needed resources.
- They can ensure that the organization's departments are working together, and not at cross-purposes.
- They can ensure that relevant communications get all the way through the organization undistorted, so that workers have the information they need.
All of these responsibilities flow pretty directly from the basic job description of "leaders."
The personality of the organization
But there's another role for leaders beyond all that, and it's harder to put into words. Maybe I can start by pointing out that every organization—every department, every group, every team—reflects the personality of its leader. It's not always a perfect reflection. Sometimes you might think it's more like a funhouse mirror. But the effect is real.
I was surprised to discover this in my first managerial role. My predecessor in that position had been good at some things and less good at others. And the department's overall reputation in the company aligned pretty well with his strengths and weaknesses. When he left the company for another opportunity, I took his place. And over time I began to realize that people treated the department differently. After a while, our collective strengths and weaknesses aligned more to my personality and less to his. I won't dive into the details, because it might sound like disrespecting my predecessor, when in fact I learned a lot from him. I will always be grateful for what he taught me. But our personalities were very different, and the department reflected them—first his, and later mine.
As an aside, there's nothing supernatural or exotic in this effect. The manager of a department hires and fires people, rewards and punishes them, promotes or fails to promote. It's only natural that behaviors which the manager thinks are important will come to predominate.
This "manager effect" on the personality of an organization puts enormous responsibility on the shoulders of leadership.
- Do you want to instill a Quality culture? That's easy: just make sure all of your leaders care passionately about Quality.
- Do you want to encourage an ethical business culture? Nothing could be simpler: just make sure your leadership are utterly incorruptible and intolerant of corruption.
- Do you want a culture of innovation and risk-taking? Let workers see their leaders take risks—including risks that fail—and get away with it.
- Do you want all of the above, all at once? That may be harder. But again, you have to start with leadership.
Just remember that all eyes are on your leaders, all the time. So if you are a leader, you cannot allow yourself to slack off. Maybe you relax when you get home—that's none of my business, and I don't need to know. But while you are at work you have to be a living, breathing example of what you want from your people. Every minute, every day. The reason is that they are going to imitate you whether you like it or not—but they will imitate the real You, the one they actually see, not the cardboard cutout you wish they saw instead. So whatever behavior you want to get from them, that's the way you have to live.***
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* Compare Aristotle's remarks on work in Pol., I, 2, §2, 1252a-b.
** It is a commonplace of political theory that centralized autocracies are less efficient, less resilient, and more fragile than decentralized free societies, because all decisions have to be approved by the autocrat. This means that important matters are delayed until he has time to attend to them. It also means that these decisions, when finally taken, are frequently wrong. In the same way it is no accident that ISO 9001:2015 requires the organization to implement employee empowerment at appropriate levels. Clause 5.1.1(j) requires top management to "[support] other relevant management roles to demonstrate their leadership as it applies to their areas of responsibility." (In other words, top management has to empower other roles to step up and take control of their areas.) And clause 5.3 requires top management to "ensure that the responsibilities and authorities for relevant roles are assigned, communicated and understood within the organization."
*** This sounds like the advice often given to the parents of young children, for good reason. Obviously your adult employees are not children! But this specific dynamic—I mean the "manager effect," where a department takes on the personality of the manager—just happens to work the same way at home or on the job.