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Australia’s next MasterManager

Adriano Zumbo's V8 cake: Perfect teamwork

Adriano Zumbo's V8 cake: Perfect teamwork

As a manager you have to hope your team is not going to be as hard for you to wrangle as an Adriano Zumbo creation is for an aspiring MasterChef.

Did you see that angelic-looking V8 cake on the show last night? For those of you who did not, it was eight thin layers of cake heaven (well, Adriano’s was, anyway!)… eight layers of vanilla used in different ways, with more than 140 ingredients and four hours of cooking.  The picture is to the left and the recipe link is here.

The reason the cake is such a showstopper is that each layer builds on a theme and is very different from the others, but (and it’s a big but*), they are perfectly complementary and would not work nearly so well without the others. Hang on… isn’t that how a team should be?

It really made me think… if managers (and I am one) put as much effort and passion into understanding the ingredients of their teams, how they work together and how they work as a whole, many businesses may just be in even better shape.

I certainly can’t tell you how to do that in one blog post, it takes different combinations of training, personal development, mentoring and coaching, passion and plain old hard work, for different people. But if we think of Adriano Zumbo as manager and cake as team, we can better understand how important care and attention to each element is when you are creating something greater than the sum of its parts.

* Madly trying to avoid a joke about eating too much cake here

A farmer in the office

Are you an education 'farmer'?

Are you an education 'farmer'?

And no, I’m not talking about the person sitting in the cubicle across the way sneaking in a game of FarmVille on Facebook.

I have just watched Sir Ken Robinson’s TED talk titled ‘Bring on the learning revolution!’ and I was struck with his plea for complete educational transformation. Not evolution. Revolution.

Sir Ken is discussing the way we educate our children and I couldn’t agree more.  However, I think his points apply equally well to how we cultivate talent and creativity in adults too.

I heartily recommend you watch the video link posted below. Sir Ken is both elegant and eloquent as he makes his points. But for those of you in a rush, the guts of the argument is that we need to move from systems of industrial education (the manufacturing or industrial model) where we churn people in a linear progression from Kindergarten through to university – to an agricultural model.

Agriculture. It’s a funny word when applied to education. But Sir Ken argues that human flourishing is organic. We need to cultivate the conditions under which it thrives… just like a farmer.

If you are an HR professional, you are in a prime seat to help customise education and training for the people in your organisation. You can be the company farmer. (Like me, I’m sure you’ve been called a few things in your time, but ‘farmer’ is probably a first!)

Please have a look at, and listen to, Sir Ken’s talk. I’m sure you will get something out of it. For me, it’s realising that all our efforts to deliver customised and exciting training to our students are worth it. By harnessing and directing our own passion for learning, we can effect wonderful change in people’s lives.

What does Scooby Doo have to do with leadership?

Have you had a 'Scooby Doo' moment?

Have you had a 'Scooby Doo' moment?

Probably the funniest moment of a great speech I recently heard, was when Tyrone Pitsis told an ATA NSW Chapter executive luncheon gathering about his ‘Scooby Doo’ moment. If you’re wondering what he meant by that, the look on Scooby’s face above should give you a clue! To see more, you’ll need to catch Tyrone in full flight some time… something I highly recommend.

While Tyrone was having a laugh about a hiccough along his own leadership journey, I think the overall points he was making are extremely important ones. First, great leaders – and even good ones – make mistakes, dust themselves off, learn from it and keep moving towards their personal and organisational goals. And second, often, if something is worth doing it may not come easily.

Tyrone himself has had a colourful life, filled with challenges and what you might have considered mistakes (at the time). But each of those difficult times and so-called mistakes has contributed to his happy and stimulating life and career choices.

As a result of his own experiences and also his professional research into leadership and management, Tyrone shared with us his 6 key elements of leadership. I found myself nodding all the way through. You can see them either by clicking on the link or I’ll list them at the bottom of this post.

Leadership is so personal and great leadership is hard to define. But I believe it’s one of the most important traits to strive for.  Not everyone is born a leader, but – if you want to – everyone can develop leadership skills that will smooth the way in life and in business.

I’d love to know if you agree with Tyrone and, if you don’t, what you think is instrumental to visionary leadership. How do you define good leadership?

PS – You can read all about Tyrone’s leadership journey here – his tale takes us from life as a young Greek Australian in the rough Newtown and St Marys of the 70s, all the way through to his current role as Executive Educator and Researcher at the Centre for Management & Organisation Studies at UTS.

6 key elements of leadership

  1. Lead how you would like to be led
    1. Respect others
    2. Be compassionate
    3. Be passionate, in key roles always surround yourself with passionate people and avoid the ‘yes men and women’
  2. Keep your reputation (that is the only thing in your control)
    1. We live in unparalleled conditions of uncertainty, risk and ambiguity. It’s easy to compromise your values, don’t do it, it’s not worth it. Never compromise your values
  3. Be liked, be feared but most of all be respected
    1. Create a positive environment to work
    2. Ask powerful questions
      1. Germany has a job title, ‘Director Powerful Questions’; Australia does not
        1. A question: “What service do we provide?”
        2. A powerful question: “What service do our customers want?”
        3. A really powerful question: “What services can we create with our customers both for now and the future?”
    3. Challenge common sense and the structures that lead to it
      1. Just because the world may look flat from where we are standing, it doesn’t mean it is
  4. Celebrate ideas, and most of all, people with ideas
  5. Invest in knowledge, development and education
    1. Break this Australian propensity to view academic ideas as ‘purely’ academic. The greatest organisations (especially those in Northern Europe), collaborate and involve universities and educational institutions heavily (be it Google with Stanford, Imperial College London, and so on)
    2. What’s worse in your eyes “spending money on people’s development with the risk they might leave”, or “not spending money on people’s development, and have them stay?”
    3. People are not your most important asset, talented people are
      1. The leader develops talent
  6. Network (beyond just business networks), and collaborate

How to Recognize an Effective Leader

How do you recognize an effective leader? This is a question asked over and over again, because leadership is always at the core of great historical moments. Leaders have led thousands during war, managed countries, and become heroes during times of disaster. Leaders have turned failing companies around and taken other companies to new heights of success.

But leaders are not always people performing acts recognized by the world. Instead they are often ordinary people able to motivate and inspire those around them to do their best. This is just one way you can recognize an effective leader. Many quietly do their job with self-assurance and the result is their departments, units or companies are successful through the efforts of staff working as a team.

Empowering and Inspiring

There are two kinds of power: formal and informal. Formal power is authority that has been assigned to a person. Informal power is authority which someone earns through their actions and is recognized by others but is not backed up formal authority.

In the business world, what this means is that a leader can be the designated manager or a member of a project team who has no formal power. Effective leaders can be found at every level of a staff structure. There are many common qualities and traits leaders possess innately, but they are developed and refined through training.

One of the first things you notice about a leader is their ability to empower others. An effective leader is able to motivate others to perform to the best of their abilities. A good leader understands the principles of delegation, and once a job is completed, gives the person respect for their accomplishments.

An effective leader will have most, if not all, of the following qualities.

  • Able to provide clear direction
  • Recognizes good ideas
  • Holds people accountable while providing direction
  • Able to delegate responsibility to most qualified people
  • Gives feedback and encouragement
  • Engages others in getting work done in a way they take responsibility
  • Inspires others
  • Able to handle conflict
  • Able to see short and long-term
  • Has integrity
  • Good listener
  • Able to problem solve

Long Term Leadership

It almost sounds as if an effective leader is a near perfect human being, but that’s not true. Leaders make mistakes and make wrong decisions. But the difference between a leader that has the cohesive interest of the organization in mind at all times, and a manager who worries more about personal consequences, lies in the fact a leader accepts responsibility and learns from the mistake. An effective leader then uses the mistake to teach others so they can learn to be the leaders of the future. An effective leader puts mistakes behind him or her.

Effective leadership involves several principles. A leader must be able to strategically plan. A leader must be able to handle change which is always a quality in any enterprise. And a leader must be able to adapt changes in accordance with the strategic plan. In other words, an effective leader will keep staff and operations on course for a long term successful future.

Effective leaders within a company are best developed through training. A well designed training program can prepare the true leaders within an organization for a successful future within a business.