Video Transcript: Week 10
hello class. Welcome to Module 10. So that leaves us with 10, 11, and 12. So
for those of you keeping score, you are, let's see 1/3 left. You are over 75%
done with the class. So you are doing well, I think my math on that for a 12 you
might be at 75% I think my math on that is pretty good, but I think you are over
75% so at this point, I'm not teaching you math courses for a reason, if you can't
tell. But at this point, we are now moving into really, really, really new territory,
and we're moving into adaptive leadership, which is, I'll be honest with you,
adaptive leadership is complex, and I'm actually doing a major study on
complexity right now, complex adaptive leadership, and I can tell you that this is
a theory that's kind of all over the place, and I mentioned earlier lecture, UhlBien. Mary Uhl-Bien. She is kind of leading the way in this she is my academic
hero. I she would be on my Mount Rushmore of leadership theorists. I don't
know if she would make others, but she certainly makes mine. But this one is
going to be complex, so let's buckle in and we'll try to make it as simple as
possible, and I'll try to share some of what I've been learning as I've been
studying this. But let's do what we always do, and open in a word of prayer.
Heavenly Father. Thank you so much for this class. Thank you for helping us get
to this point. Lord. You know, this is quite the accomplishment, quite the
milestone, to be in module 10 with only a couple lectures left to go. So Lord, this
is an incredibly difficult topic. Adaptive leadership is there's no consensus on it,
and Lord, just give me the ability to speak clearly and be able to present this in a
way that this class can understand and then apply it for the betterment of your
kingdom in Jesus name, Amen. So adaptive leadership that you'll sometimes
hear it called complex adaptive leadership. You'll sometimes hear it called
adaptability, which is Heifetz, is the main researcher there. You'll hear it called a
few things, but it's all about complexity and complex organizational processes.
It's closely linked to crisis leadership. That's about the closest thing. So if you've,
if you've thought about some leading through crisis, or if there's a major crisis,
and kind of the leaders, leaders, attributes that are necessary for that, that's
about the closest thing that you're going to get to it. But it's, it's quite a it's quite
a difficult undertaking, because I will be honest that the researchers that have
studied complex adaptive leadership, or complexity or adaptive leadership, have
made it as as horribly complex as possible. It's like they they try to out complex
each other in writing it, but it does break down into some very basic principles,
some of them you've heard before, like dyads. You'll remember that from an
earlier lecture, which is the follower and leader interactions. This is an
interesting theory, because it's not really a leadership theory, in a sense. It's not
about the leader and the follower. Certainly it discusses those, but it's more
about organizational values. So there's different units of measurement. So you
can look at the follower in this, the leader in this, the organization in this, you
can look at the community in this at different levels that kind of make up this
theory. So you know, to be honest with you, I think I could sit here and explain it
for about 10 hours, and we would still not really scratch the surface of it. So I'm
not saying that to intimidate you. What I guess, what I'm saying is we're going to
try and break it down into some basic concepts, just to familiarize yourself with
it. And then more. So what I want you to do is I want you to think about this
theory in in your life, and then some of the complex situations that have
occurred. So a good example of this would be covid 19. I think that provides a
great kind of launching point for understanding some of the complexity of this
and also managing through a crisis of which this is kind of part of so and then,
oh just Well, no, all right, we'll come to that later. So adaptations, that's one of
the definitions of adaptive leadership, and that those are changes that require
people to deal with changing environments. If you remember, there's going to be
internal factors that change environments, and there's going to be external
factors, right? So covid 19 is. An example of an external factor that changed an
environment and in organizations and in people within those organizations,
including leaders, had to shift immediately. So one of the things that happened
in the United States when that happened was people who made alcohol
switched to making hand sanitizer. So that was an adaptation that was forced on
the organization. And specifically on the leaders to adapt to to the changing
environment and then ways for them to survive during the covid 19 pandemic.
So this is a little bit different, because a lot of the writings have been spacing the
anecdotal or observational data rather than rigorous scientific inquiry, and the
reason why is because it's so complex that nobody has been able to come up
with an assessment to be able to assess it. In fact, we originally were trying to
come up with an assessment, and frankly, we couldn't do it, not yet, not yet. So
we are working on getting there eventually, and by the time I update this class,
maybe I can sit here and say, Hey, I was part of a research team that developed
an assessment for complex adaptive leadership and talks about the complexity.
But we're not there yet. Right now, you're just going to have to suffer through
some musings about it, without a lot of theoretical support, more anecdotal
support. So that is called prescriptive. And just remember that's going to be
prescriptive over descriptive. So rather, this theory is unique in a sense that
rather than seeing a leader as a savior who solves problems for people, the
leader is one who plays a role in assisting people kind of confront tough
problems. So that's a little bit different from some of the other leadership
theories. So the leader isn't the All Knowing one. In this instance, the leader is
part of a team that tries to solve complex problems. Like, hey, our business is
going under. We have to fire a bunch of people. Nobody's buying alcohol right
now. Is there something else we can do to make our business successful? Hey,
let's make hand sanitizer. Everybody needs it, and it doesn't require a big
change to our formula, by the way. Incidentally, one of my pet peeves is using a
bottle from a distillery and a hand sanitizer and then having that smell of like
vodka or rum or whatever alcohol on my hands all day. I really don't like that a
lot. But anyway, no, I digress. So what a leader does in these situations is he
challenges others to face the difficult situation, and then he really, or she, she
really, would give them the space or the opportunity to conceptualize ways to
deal with those problems and then to enact those behaviors. So what is the
definition of adaptive leadership? It's the practice of mobilizing people to tackle
tough challenges and thrive. There's that word thrive. Again. You remember that
from authentic and then adaptive leaders engage in activities that mobilize,
motivate, organize, orient and focus the attention of others. So they also that
also may result in the exploration of changing values. So as part of this, the
leaders will encourage people to make a change, and make that change that's
central to their lives, and then also as part of an organizational change. So what
is the catalyst for that change? Well, we can go to Lewin's organizational theory
on Freeze, refreeze, but we're going to stay away from that, and we'll just talk
about the catalyst that change can be anything, right? So it could be something
like the covid 19 impact. It could be something internal, like you have a life, life
crisis. It could be you got a promotion or a demotion. It could be any number of
things that are a catalyst for change, which cause you to have to adapt to that
change. So there's different perspectives with that. And adaptive leadership kind
of makes some assumptions from some different perspectives, and one of those
is the systems perspective, and what that says what many of the problems that
people face are complex, multifaceted and dynamically embedded in complex,
interactive systems. And to put that in plain terms, what that means is we live in
a complex world that's hyper turbulent, that has a lot going on, and there's a lot
of things that are forces that are interacting with us on a daily basis. So let me
give you an example. Right now, I am sitting in CLI headquarters, CLC
headquarters, and it is 11:47pm and I'm recording a video. And some of the
factors that I'm dealing with is I'm a little cold in here. Last time I recorded a few
months ago. Was a little hot because you couldn't turn on air conditioning. So
that's certainly a factor that that required a change. In this case, me putting on a
long sleeve shirt. There are other factors, like, mentally, I have a lot going on,
certainly with some personal priorities as well as work priorities. And I have my
screen up over here. I'm wearing a watch. I have my phone here. I have an iPad
over there. And anytime there's an alert, you know, certainly there's things that
draw my attention away from what I'm supposed to be doing, which is focusing
on you all and teaching you material. And there's stuff that's drawing me away.
There's other forces at play that are drawing me away from my primary task and
distracting me from that task. So that would be a systems perspective, in a
sense that there's a lot of competing priorities and a lot of competing forces that
are constantly on everybody. So that would be a good example of that. Well, it's
an example. I don't know if it's good biological perspective. It recognizes that
people develop and evolve, that they have to adapt to internal cues and the
external environments. So, you know, this is an evolutionary bio, biological
approach, primarily which we're not going to comment too much on this class,
given that we are creationists, but, but a great example of this is the adaptability
of humans. So as we look at the planet, and we look at melting polar ice caps,
and we look at, you know, deforestization, we look at those kind of things. And
again, this is not a political thing. This is just a reality that will result in rising sea
levels. Well, the adaptability of people is you're not going to stay on the coast
when your land is getting flooded. So we're going to find ways to adapt to that,
whether that is to move inland, whether that is to build houses higher, whether
that is to develop systems for being able to protect our family. Those are some
of the the evolution that we have to go through. And that's, and again, that's not
a that's kind of a systems perspective as well, but think of the biological is that
that's just one example of evolutions that we have to make as a people. You
know, an evolutionary biologist would say that that, and again, I don't prescribe
to this as a Christian, but an evolutionary biologist would say that we've adapted
to walking fully upright because we have found that that is the most efficient way
to whatever right. So that would be a biological perspective. A service oriented
perspective is use of expertise or authority to serve people by diagnosing
problems and helping them find solutions. So you see this a lot in many different
ways, specifically in the organizational context where people with a certain
expertise a consultant, perhaps, will come into an organization, diagnose
problem and then help people figure out how to move on in that program. Then
there's the psychotherapy perspective, which states that you understand
people's need for a supportive environment when they face difficult challenges,
and you help them distinguish between fantasy and reality, resolve those
internal conflicts and learn new attitudes and behaviors. When we talk about
adaptive leadership, we also, I also threw out the terms complexity, complexity
leadership theory, and that explains how the interplay of these forces within the
21st environment. Remember that knowledge, or information is a core
component of this. So technology plays a major factor. Certainly being able to
look up anything on Wikipedia, being able to use Google to look anything up is a
com as a comment on that where the knowledge age, which is age we're
currently in, is different from the previous age, the industrial era, where the
production of goods and services mattered. In this age and complex leadership
had to emerge because we are in a knowledge and information gathering
phase. So that sounds confusing, it is. But basically what it's saying is that,
again, with that adaptability, we had to find ways to to change and adapt,
because we are more concerned about the information and then the power of
information, as opposed to the creation of goods and services with that
becomes learning, creativity and adaptation. Okay, so there are some situational
challenges when we're talking about adaptive leadership, and there's. Technical
challenges, which is about solving problems in the workplace or in the
community or the self. These are clearly defined problems with known solutions,
so they're solvable with experts. So an example would be, say, your process,
you're you're taking 15 days to develop a plug, and really you need to do it in
two days. Well, then an efficiency expert can come in, and that person, she can
come in and solve that problem right away. And she knows what the problem is.
She knows how to articulate it, she knows how to achieve it, and she is able to
do it. And then you adapt that new process and you move on. There's also
adaptive challenges. And these problems, by the way, the person who came up
with this is named Snowden, in case you're in case you want to look him up
later. There's also adaptive challenges which are involved and Heifetz. Snowden
was part of this, and so was Heifetz. I'm sorry, don't want to give Ronald Heifetz
from Harvard University. I want to make sure he gets his credit as well. There's
adaptive challenges, so problems that are not clear cutters he did identify, and
those can't be solved by the leaders, authority or expertise. So that requires
everybody to come in and kind of define the challenge and then to implement
solutions. And that might be met with the most resistance by followers, because
they don't see the clear cut advantage to that. They don't know if it's going to
work. So they don't know if it's going to if it's going to fix it. There's also some
leadership behaviors that are very prevalent when it comes to adaptability. And
there's this turn, yeah, now we're thrilled fully in Heifetx's his wheelhouse.
There's this term of get on the balcony, which requires leaders to remove
themselves from the fray and find perspective. So sometimes when you're in the
thick of it, you don't have perspective, so you got to remove yourself and kind of
get above it, and then you can see what the problem is, what the challenges
are, how the followers are working together, what the internal and external
forces are, and how all those come together. And then that helps you solve
problems. Identification of the adaptive challenge is another very, very, very
difficult thing to do, right? So that's how you analyze and diagnose the
challenge, and then how you come up with a solution regulating distress is
maintaining consistency. So remember, anytime you're going through a change
process, whether that's a planned or an unplanned change process that comes
with a lot of anxiety, people, as human beings, tend to like the status quo, and
they don't like it when things are challenged. So you have to manage that. You
have to maintain disciplined attention. You can't be distracted. You can't ignore
you can't ignore problems. You can't blame them on others. You got to be able
to support the tough topics. You got to be able to talk about them. You got to be
able to work to a solution. Another thing is, you can't solve all these problems on
your own, so you got to lean on the people in your organization and give the
work back to them, and then you got to protect their voices from below, and you
got to make sure that the voices from below, who are on the fringe or
marginalized, that they have a they they are heard as well, because they might
have a good idea. So even though they're marginalized and they're devalued,
they might have a really good idea of how to save the organization. And then
also, as part of this, you got to maintain productive stress levels. There has to be
a safe space for people. You got to provide direction, protection, orientation,
conflict management, and maintain some level of the norms of the organization.
And then you got to acknowledge the tension without letting it overtake you and
focus you. It's a lot, right? So let's, let's keep diving into it, because this part I
actually want to spend a moment on before we get to the adaptive work
situation. So there's ways to handle all this uncertainty and stress. You can
provide direction, and that's something that you'll see a lot in crisis leadership
literature as well, where it talks about providing that direction, providing that
support, keeping that vision protection. You got to protect and rate the adaptive
change for people, so you can't overwhelm people. So you got to understand
and protect them, and remember, you're trying to protect them in the middle of a
major change initiative with a bunch of forces coming at you. I mean, that's
incredibly difficult to do orientation is to make sure that people understand their
new responsibilities and roles, and that comes with change and being able to
help them get on the path for success. And then obviously, conflict management
is a big one, where you have to manage the conflict and make sure that those
conflicts are combated effectively. And then finally, you got to establish your
productive norms, which is how the in this new reality, what is it going to look
like, and how are people going to work together? So that is another major
component of this. So remember when we're talking about adaptive work, that's
how adaptive leaders are directing their work, and they're focusing on the
intended goals. So some days it might be on organizational outcomes, other
days it might be on follower outcomes. But whatever it is, it's just this, this very
complex ever moving, a challenge for adaptive leaders to be able to adapt to the
situation in a productive way. Followers are they? They are often avoided, but in
adaptive leadership, leaders need to use their authority not to control followers,
but interact with people, help them see the importance of the adaptation, and
also to listen to input into and to have them as part of the process. So what are
some of the weaknesses of this theory? Well, the strengths are, it's very unique,
and it's very directive, and it helps deal with conflict there. The major concern
with this theory is something I've already discussed, and that is, there is not a lot
of research on this, and the research that exists does not really unify the theory,
and it's also very complex. But what's really cool is this actually is a way on a
practical application. Is it's a way to provide a framework that we constantly
need to change and pay attention to what's going on around us in this hyper,
turbulent, complex world, and how looking at the different complexities of the
world allow us to make some organizational moves that are going to protect us.
So again, going back to the covid 19 pandemic, there's a lot of organizations
that did some changes during the pandemic, and some offered streaming
services that they're in the movie industry. Some, some found alternative work
environments and arrangements you got to be able to adapt to that change. So
this a very practical theory, especially in a post covid enough in a covid slash
post covid or pandemic world, where you have to find ways to adapt in quick
ways. And I think something else that you're seeing as a result of the covid 19
pandemic, at least in the United States, is what's called the Great resignation,
where a lot of people are finding other jobs that that meet more out more me,
outcomes that are more related to what how they like to work. So that's also
something that leaders and organizations and followers and everybody else has
to adapt to. Certainly, I'm seeing that in one of my organizations, and that's
something that we have to adapt to. Okay, so remember that the adaptive
leadership approach is prescriptive. Remember that leaders and followers
mutually affect each other, making leadership a complex, interactive process
that is a strength of the theory. And then remember that archetypes are the
identification of basic patterns that can determine the difference between
adaptive and technical challenges. So hopefully that helps you, and we will
close in prayer. And then next module, we are going to move on to Leadership
Ethics, which should be a fairly quick chapter. Heavenly Father, I want to thank
you for our time together. Lord, I want to thank you for helping us learn about
this very complex topic of adaptability. Certainly, there's so much more to say
but but one of the important things is that this environment is always changing,
and that you have given us the tools as human beings to be able to adapt to
those challenges and understand those challenges and then work together for
creative solutions. There's nothing like the creative faculties of man which you
gave us and when you created us in your image. So Lord, thank you so much
for that. Thank you for time together, and I pray you will bless us as we move on
to Leadership Ethics in Jesus name we pray amen.