| The
author of this article, Dr Prasad Kaipa, is a faculty member
at the Centre for Executive Education (CEE), ISB. He coaches
and advises Fortune 500 C-suite executives on leadership,
change, innovation and personal mastery..

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Leadership
Crisis
Imagine a scenario where leaders are authentic, trustworthy
and have high integrity. They are innovative, open and flexible,
make quick and effective decisions, have passion and energy
to inspire and influence, are self confident and self-aware,
and deliver extra-ordinary results in any field that they
work, globally.
Why is this imagination? What is amiss among today’s leaders?
A recent issue of US newsmagazine has a cover story titled,
“America’s Best Leaders.” In it, a survey report based on
the second annual poll on leadership conducted for US News
(“America’s Best Leaders”; US News and World Report; October,
30, 2006) and Harvard University’s Center for Public Leadership
states: “More than half of Americans — 56% —say they’re not
proud of the country’s leaders. Two thirds and more say the
country is in a leadership crisis. Nearly three quarters say
the nation will decline without better leadership.”
This is not just an American crisis. There are thousands of
books, articles, consultants and professors offering wisdom
on developing leaders. Still, the leadership crisis continues
to escalate around the world.
Two sides of Leadership
What is leadership, and who is a leader? According
to experts and thinkers who worked on the US News special
report, “A leader is a person who motivates people to work
collaboratively to accomplish great things.” Peter Drucker
(“Peter Drucker on Leadership”; |
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http://www.forbes.com/management/
2004/11/19/cz_rk_1119drucker.html) once
said, “The only thing you can say about a leader is that a
leader is somebody who has followers. The most charismatic
leaders of the last century were called Hitler, Stalin, Mao
and Mussolini. They were mis-leaders!” There must be more
to leadership than motivating people to produce results.
I believe that there are two sides to leadership: One is about
creating value (results, innovative culture, next line of
leaders, passionate employees), and the other is about living
the values (integrity, honesty, accountability, perseverance,
self- awareness, etc). Both value creation and living the
values are important for a leader to build a successful and
sustainable organisation . Let me elaborate.
What Creates Value?
Employees who are inspired (tap into passion and commitment
resulting in taking leadership roles); able to innovate (leading
to competitiveness and sustainability); and can communicate
and collaborate (making large projects successful) are the
highest value creators in today’s globalised organisation.
In other words – employee “engagement” is critical to value
creation. But how engaged are employees today?
Employee Engagement
The Gallup Management Journal’s Index puts the percentage
of truly “engaged” employees in the US at 29%. A majority
of workers, 54%, fall into the “not engaged” category, while
17% are “actively disengaged.” |