Reading: Strategic Leadership
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Strategic Leadership
Article in School Leadership and Management February 2004
DOI: 10.1080/1363243042000172804
2 authors, including:
Brent Davies
University of Hull
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Strategic leadership
Brent Davies and Barbara J. Davies
This chapter considers:
1. What is strategic leadership.
2. What strategic leaders do.
3. Characteristics strategic leaders display.
4. A model for strategic leadership.
Introduction
Strategic leadership is a critical component in the effective
development of schools. The key foci for those who led schools in the
last two decades, in many countries, have been school effectiveness
and school improvement. These foci are set against an agenda of
centralized curriculum and assessment frameworks with a primacy
given to test results. While these developments may be welcomed or
criticized, they probably have an inherent conceptual flaw in that they
are attempting to improve current patterns of schooling within the
existing paradigm of education. Even if such attempts at improvement
are successful, the question that should be asked is, are they
sustainable? This chapter puts forward the view that renewed
attention needs to be paid to the strategic dimension of leadership to
ensure this sustainability. Much of the orthodox perspective of
leadership development suggests that new leaders tend first to address
current administrative and managerial issues to build confidence and
organizational ability before moving to a more strategic and futures
activity. We argue that what is needed is a concurrent or parallel view
of leadership development in which leaders not only improve on the
Chapter 1
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‘now’ of school improvement but concurrently build strategic
capability within the school.
This chapter draws on insights gained from the National College for
School Leadership (NCSL) research project, ‘Success and Sustainability:
developing the strategically focused school’, which was based on detailed
case studies of leaders in primary (elementary), secondary (high) and special
schools to analyse their strategic processes, approaches and
leadership. Our analysis of strategic leadership will be supported by the
‘leadership voices’ of the participants in the research project. The project
identified, through initial survey data, inspection and evaluation reports,
schools that were strategically led and sustainable for a detailed case
study analysis. The focus was on the features of strategic leaders, in terms
of what they did and what characteristics they displayed.
What do we understand by strategic leadership? Strategic leadership
is not a new categorization or type of leadership such as transformational
leadership or learning-centred leadership. Rather it is best
considered as the strategic element within the broader leadership paradigm.
Initially, a definition of strategy can make use of five concepts.
First, it is concerned with the idea of direction-setting. To decide on the
direction for the institution, it is necessary to understand its history
and its current situation. This is articulated by Garratt (2003: 2) who
gives an excellent definition of strategic thinking:
‘Strategic Thinking’ is the process by which an organisation’s directiongivers
can rise above the daily managerial processes and crises to gain
different perspectives of the internal and external dynamics causing
change in their environment and thereby giving more effective direction
to their organisation. Such perspectives should be both future-oriented
and historically understood. Strategic thinkers must have the skills of
looking both forwards and backwards while knowing where their organisation
is now, so that wise risks can be taken by the direction-givers to
achieve their organisation’s purpose, or political will, while avoiding
having to repeat the mistakes of the past.
Second, strategy, while very often associated with planning in traditional
definitions (Fidler, 1996) might better be thought of as a
perspective, as a holistic way of looking at things. Third, strategy does
not get involved in the detailed day-to-day activities but is concerned
with the broad major dimensions of the organization. Fourth, a mediumto
longer-term time framework is useful when considering strategy. A
final useful concept is that strategy can be used as a template against
which to set shorter-term planning and activities.
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Defining leadership presents a challenge owing to the expanding
amount of literature in the field from which to draw. The forms of
leadership are extensive and other chapters in this book consider
symbolic leadership, transformational leadership, learning-centred
leadership, constructionalist leadership, emotional leadership, ethical
leadership, distributed leadership, invitational leadership,
entrepreneurial leadership and sustainable leadership. So where to
start? Bush and Glover (2003: 10), in their review of the leadership
literature for the NCSL, define leadership as ‘a process of influence
leading to the achievement of desired purposes. It involves inspiring
and supporting others towards the achievement of a vision for the
school which is based on clear personal and professional values’.
Building on this generic definition of leadership, Davies and Davies
(2004) use a nine-point model of strategic leadership which combines
five organizational abilities and four individual characteristics of
strategic leaders. Using this model as a reference point this chapter is
split into three parts:
1. What strategic leaders do.
2. Characteristics that strategic leaders display.
3. A model for strategic leadership.
What strategic leaders do
We put forward the view that strategic leaders involve themselves in
five key activities:
direction setting
translating strategy into action
aligning the people and the organization to the strategy
determining effective intervention points
developing strategic capabilities.
Direction-setting
Strategic leaders are concerned with not just managing the now but setting
up a framework of where the organization needs to be in the
future, setting a direction for the organization. The function of strategy
is to translate the moral purpose and vision into reality. A useful way
to picture this is illustrated in Figure 1.1.
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Figure 1.1 The function of strategy
School leaders articulate the definition of the organization’s moral purpose
which can be considered as ‘why we do what we do’. The values
that underpin this moral purpose are linked to the vision considering
‘where we want to be and what sort of organization we want to be in
the future’. Strategy is the means of linking this broad activity to
shorter-term operational planning, thereby imbuing the responses to
immediate events with elements of the cultural and value system.
Strategy is defining that medium-term sense of direction. School
leaders in the NCSL study characterized it as:
It’s talking about marshalling your resources and looking with a future
perspective in order to achieve the maximum potential in an organization.
Your strategy is how you are going to get there, what kind of structures
you put in place in the school, what measures you take to make things
happen, how you use the money – all these things build up a strategy to
getting where you want to get to.
A strategy to me is a plan of action, a conscious plan of action, that’s
taken in the light of various information that I have available at the
time but the strategy takes various forms.
Strategy for me is about where you are going and why you are going.
Strategy, therefore, is translating the vision and moral purpose into
action. It is a delivery mechanism for building the direction and the
capacity for the organization to achieve that directional shift or
change. This translation requires a proactive transformational mindset
which strives for something better rather than the maintenance
approach of transactional leadership.
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Translating strategy into action – develop strategic and
organizational processes
Davies, B. (2002) suggests a four-stage ABCD approach of translating
strategy into action as shown in Figure 1.2.
Figure 1.2 The ABCD approach
Source: Davies, B. (2002: 204).
First the articulation of the strategy can take place in three ways; oral,
written and structural. Oral articulation is the way leaders communicate,
through strategic conversations, the strategic purpose and
direction of the organization. This concept will be further developed in
considering strategic conversations. Written articulations are the formal
statements and plans that are clearly distinguishable from
operational short-term plans. Structural articulation refers to the organizational
infrastructure that supports and develops the strategic
approach, for example, setting up futures or strategy meetings separate
from the cycle of operational meetings. These three elements are
reflected in the following school leader responses in the NCSL study:
I am constantly talking to the staff about where we are going and how
they can contribute. I think it’s really, really critical that you find a way
to communicate the basic organizational goals to the largest number of
people possible.
We separate out our school development plan and our corporate longerterm
strategic plan.
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The operational management team looks after the here and now, the
school development plan team looks at the duration of the plan and
the research and development team actually looks a bit further into the
future, outside of this.
Second, it is necessary to build a common understanding of what is possible
through shared experiences and images. This building stage entails
envisioning a clear and understandable picture of what this new way of
operating would look like. This involves awakening the people in the
school to alternative perspectives and experiences, and building an
agreement within the school that a continuation of the current way of
working is inadequate if the school wants to be effective in the future.
Third, the leadership needs to create through dialogue a shared conceptual
or mental map of the future. What strategic leaders are able to
do is step back and articulate the main features of the current organization,
which might be called the strategic architecture (Kaplan and
Norton, 1996; 2001) of the school, and lead others to define what the
future of the school and the new architecture will be. This may involve
the process, described by Davies, B. (2003), of enhancing participation
and motivation to understand the necessity for change, through strategic
conversations. Significantly it draws on high-quality information
both from within and outside the organization which is part of the
strategic analysis that underpins the dialogue.
Fourth, the leadership needs to define desired outcomes and the
stages of achieving those outcomes. This will establish a clear picture of
the new strategic architecture of the school. Tichy and Sharman (1993)
identify this stage as involving the identification of a series of projects
that need to be undertaken to move the organization from its current
to its future state. The significance of this approach is that stage 4 can
be embedded in the organizational culture only if time is taken to work
through stages 2 and 3.
Aligning the people and the organization to the strategy
Wilson (1997: 1) states ‘organisational change has two principal aspects
– change in mission and strategy and change in culture and behaviour’.
We believe that it is impossible fundamentally to change mission and
strategy without changing culture and behaviour. Key to this is changing
the mindset and the behaviour of the people within the
organization. The importance of aligning the people is recognized by
Grundy (1998) and Gratton (2000). The research interviewees articu-
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lated a process based on strategic conversations which built participation
and motivation within their school to improve strategic capability.
These alignment processes work in an iterative way as in Figure 1.3.
Figure 1.3 The iterative nature of alignment and capability
Strategic conversations: developing strategic conversations and dialogue
involves discussions about holistic whole-school issues and the trends
that face the school over the next few years, as described by Hirschhorn,
(1997: 123–4), Van der Heijden (1996: 41–2) and Davies, B. (2002: 21).
These conversations enable people to develop a strategic perspective of
what the school might become. Without such conversations, however
tentative they might be at first, the future will, literally, not be articulated.
As one school leader in the study put it: ‘We are constantly talking,
large groups, small groups, individuals, a constant feast of two-way conversations
bringing people in line with where we are going.’
Strategic participation: by definition, the conversations lead to greater
knowledge and participation in discussions. It can be a difficult and
slow process from the previous state of being concerned only with the
short term to the new state of being involved in the broader and
longer-term strategic issues. It can be a process of reculturing the organization
(Fullan, 1993; Hargreaves, 1994; Stoll et al., 2002). The process
of greater awareness and participation in discussion is a key way which
develops the ability of the organization to build leadership in depth.
The significant ability here is to build involvement in the longer-term
development of the school. Strategic organizations use the abilities and
talents of wider staff groupings to involve all in building and committing
to the strategic direction of the school. This was expressed by a
school leader in the study as: ‘Because of the high level of participation,
Strategic
capability
Strategic
conversations
Participation
Motivation
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because so much of it is ours, we feel much more in control of the
agenda. I think that’s where the strength of the school has come from.’
Strategic motivation: developing a strategic cause in which individuals
are motivated to contribute leads to an improved commitment and
effort. Gratton (2000: 19–20) advocates developing ‘emotional capabilities’,
‘trust-building capabilities’ and capabilities to build a
‘psychological contract’ as the means of engaging and motivating staff.
Building a commitment to values and long-term ambitions provides
individuals with a vision and sense of direction that allows them to put
short-term problems and challenges into context. Involvement is more
significant than documentation. As one school leader expressed it:
‘Documentation is not as important as what people believe in and what
people do, and it’s all very well to say we have this, this and this and
you can have amazing documentation but it is actually not a plan if
people don’t follow the actions through.’
Building capability: the strategic conversation and enhanced participation
build greater personal and organizational capability and capacity.
Given that the major resource of any organization is the quality of its
human capital, then enhancing that quality should be a major organizational
focus. It is useful to differentiate between capability and capacity.
Capacity can be considered the resource level that is available at any
given moment to achieve an objective. Capability is that mix of skills
and competencies possessed by the people in the organization which is
needed to achieve the task. The right number of people may not, at a particular
juncture, have the right skills. However, when they do, it can be
said that both capacity and capability are present. Boisot (1998: 5) states
that ‘we shall use the term capability to depict a strategic skill in the
application and integration of competencies’. This idea was seen by a
school leader as: ‘the ability to work at challenges together to bring skills
of other people to bear so the organization can learn to solve problems
and not just rely on simplistic external solutions’.
Determining effective intervention points – the right things at
the right time
The leadership challenge of when to make a significant strategic change
is as critical to success as choosing what strategic change to make. The
issue of timing can rest on leadership intuition (Parikh, 1994) as much
as on rational analysis. When individuals in the organization are ready
for change, when the organization needs the change and when the
external constraints and conditions force the change, all have to be
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balanced one against the other. Such judgement is manifested in not
only knowing what and knowing how but also knowing when (Boal and
Hooijberg, 2001) and, as important, knowing what not to do (Kaplan and
Norton, 2001). Therefore we could add to this list knowing what to give
up or abandon in order to create capacity to undertake the new activity.
This was illustrated by two school leaders responding in the project:
I wrote a paper and that basically argued that the climate was right for
change, there are some issues that need to be changed but if we are going
to do it, then it needs to be part of a coherent programme rather than
piecemeal. But the challenge for me personally is this idea of abandonment,
that if we take on these initiatives and new things come on, I
know I have to give some things up.
The strategic timing is absolutely important. It can make or break a
school. If you try and do it at the wrong time it could be disastrous.
Several of the school leaders in the study talked about the critical issue of
strategic timing, of getting the time right for change for themselves and
others in the school. School leaders also talked about this timing being
intuitive: ‘I think from my own point of view a lot goes on fairly intuitively
… I know I can’t go down that road because I’m not ready or they
are not ready. So timing is so critical.’ Choosing the right time and saying
‘No’ if it was not the right time was critical for strategic leaders in the
study. Getting the timing right for the school community was about
being able to choose which external initiatives to implement that would
complement the schools’ own agendas for improvement. This was
clearly illustrated by one respondent: ‘I think you get better at being a
strategic leader the further you go along, because there comes a point
when you actually develop the capacity to say “No we are not going to
do that” or “No it’s irrelevant. We are not going to do it”.’ Strategic timing
affects all the people in the school community. If the strategic timing
is wrong it can have devastating effects on the school. People will be
divided, and realizing the strategy will therefore be impossible.
As we have said, in addition to the critical skill of strategic timing is
that of strategic abandonment. If a school adopts a new way of doing
things or adopts a new strategic priority, how that fits into an already
crowded agenda has to be considered. The result is that leaders have to
downgrade the importance or abandon existing strategies not because
they are wrong in themselves but because they have become less significant
in comparison to new factors. As one school leader said:
I see abandonment as being two different issues. One is the abandonment
of things that are not working and actually taking people’s time and
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energy. That’s easy to do. The other side of it was to actually say OK this
is working well and we are really comfortable with it and it is getting the
results we want, but actually there is another strategy here that takes us
onto the next stage but we can’t run them both together. This has to be
suspended or abandoned in order to give the other one time to grow.
This concept of strategic abandonment is a very powerful one. The difficult
aspect of strategic abandonment occurs where the school has to
give up acceptable current practice to make capacity available for future
improved practice.
Developing strategic capabilities
Prahalad and Hamel (1990) use the term ‘core competencies’ while
Stalk et al. (1992) use the term ‘strategic capabilities’. These can be illustrated
by the analogy of a tree, where the branches represent the
short-term abilities and the roots are the underpinning fundamental
capabilities of the school. If the school is to develop and be sustainable
in the longer term, then it needs to develop strategic capabilities.
Examples of these would be the fundamental understanding of teaching
and learning rather than the ability to deliver the latest curriculum
innovation; a problem-solving culture rather than a blame culture for
the staff; and assessment for learning rather than assessment of learning.
Creativity in problem-solving and teamworking are necessary to
give the school deep-seated strategic capabilities or abilities. The pressure
to deliver short-term targets can lead to the postponement of
longer-term more significant developments. Davies, B.J. (2004: 1)
argues that:
it seemed to me that the challenge was to continue the necessary shortterm
improvements in standards, while at the same time, developing a
commitment to the ‘bigger picture’. It was important to put in place
organisational structures and processes for developing thinking, which
would in the longer term, sustain high standards and provide more effective
learning experiences. There would be no unsustainable ‘quick fixes’.
These parallel developments needed a strategy. Some developments we
could easily plan for but for most we needed to build capability.
School leaders in the study commented:
The staff are very good ‘knowers’ but not very good ‘learners.’ We have
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to change that over the longer term to build a learning community.
The more long-term things are those that you know where you want to
get to but you are not quite sure yet how you are going to do it so you
need to build some kind of capability within people – so for instance
developing a learning focus school. Now that requires a lot of people to
change and to do that you need more time so people need to go on
courses, need to do some reading, need to build them some coaching and
all that takes much longer. Once people learn how to do that they have
their own views about what learning focus in schools is so then we have
to come together and talk about it.
I think the new capability which I’m trying to work on more than anything
else is to develop the reflective practice because … if my staff can
reflect on what they are doing, if they can be life-long learners whatever
the strategic intent may be … whatever it is we are adopting; if they can
be learners rather than knowers I think that’s absolutely vital. And we
are not there yet.
This capability-building approach is a central factor in a strategically
focused school and is one of the key activities of a strategic leader.
Deploying a repertoire of strategic approaches in their schools
Strategy is often equated with strategic planning when in effect strategic
planning is only one of a number of approaches to strategy. A
valuable classification of strategic approaches is provided by Boisot
(2003). He considers there are four approaches to implement. These
are:
strategic planning
emergent strategy
intrapreneurship or decentralized strategy
strategic intent.
Strategic planning is a rational, linear approach whereby a coherent set
of objectives can be achieved by undertaking a predetermined number
of steps and activities. It can be summarized as ‘You know where you
want to go, you know how to get there and you know how to recognize
it when you have arrived’. While this may fit some of the
organization’s activities, other activities may not be so predictable. It is
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associated with detailed, written plans.
Emergent strategy can be considered to be one that results from learning
from current activities. When an organization responds to new
challenges, certain responses will be more successful than others. As the
organization replicates the successful activities and does not replicate the
less successful ones, it builds a strategic framework to guide future action.
Initially this is a reactive strategy, a response to external changes, but it
subsequently builds a strategic framework for future action.
Intrapreneurship as Boisot (2003) calls it, or decentralized strategy as it
is more usually known, occurs when organizations find difficulty coping
with the detail of strategic direction and planning in a complex and
ever-changing environment. Therefore they decide to come to terms
with the turmoil by deploying a decentralized approach. Thus the centre
of the organization will lay down core values and key strategic
directions but will give the subunits in the organization the freedom to
work out the detail of this strategy.
Strategic intent is a framework in which the organization sets key strategic
goals which ‘stretch’ the organization to new levels of performance.
While the organization knows where it wants to go and what it wants to
achieve, it does not know how to achieve it. The organization engages in
a series of capability-building measures to establish the capacity to
achieve its objectives. So the organization moves towards the future by
building a series of strategic intents and the capabilities that are necessary
to achieve them (Davies and Ellison, 2003).
One key factor that emerged from the NCSL research was that the
strategic leaders in the study used different strategic approaches in
different situations. They used a portfolio of approaches in a
sophisticated way to meet complex needs. So, in areas where it was
possible to have a clear plan, they used a rational, linear strategic plan.
At the same time many found the concept of strategic intent a very
useful approach:
Strategic intent is a wonderful way of unifying and clarifying positions,
particularly in times of great turbulence and change. It’s not a detailed
vision where we would see where we are going, with all t’s crossed and
i’s dotted … it’s a feeling of where we may be heading, which brings
everybody along with you.
The use of decentralized strategy was evidenced in secondary (high)
schools and not in primary (elementary) schools. Interestingly, emergent
strategy was often used for developing information technology
(IT) capability in the school.
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Characteristics strategic leaders display
The NCSL research established significant characteristics of strategic
leaders in schools:
Strategic leaders have a dissatisfaction or restlessness with the present.
Strategic leaders prioritize their own strategic thinking and learning.
Strategic leaders create mental models to frame their own understanding
and practice.
Strategic leaders have powerful personal and professional networks.
Strategic leaders have a dissatisfaction or restlessness with the
present
This restlessness involves what Senge (1990) describes as ‘creative tension’
which emerges from seeing clearly where one wishes to be, one’s
vision and facing the truth about one’s current reality. Strategic leaders
are able to envision the ‘strategic leap’ that an organization needs to
make and act as passionate advocates for change. Strategic leaders have
the ability to live with the reality that the organizational culture may
not be as forward thinking as they wish. It is the ability to live with the
ambiguity of not being able to change the organization fast enough,
together with the ability to maintain the restlessness for change and
improvement. Individuals who have these abilities, challenge ideas and
processes to seek better ideas and processes. This is shown in the following
responses from two school leaders:
Everyone, whether you have an open mind or not is frustrated at times and
it can be for very positive reasons and it can be for very negative reasons.
It’s probably about sifting through those levels of anxiety, worry, concern,
frustration and actually turning them into something more positive.
One of the things that drives me is that I am never satisfied.
Strategic leaders prioritize their own strategic thinking and
learning
A very significant number of the school leaders participating in the
study referred to their own learning and stressed the importance of new
knowledge to promote the strategic direction for the school. A good
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example of this is a school leader who learnt about new thinking
related to children’s learning, which prompted him to take the school
in a new direction:
We were invited onto a school improvement programme some years ago
and it’s the first time I’d heard about Howard Gardner and ‘Multiple Intelligences’
and that really did fire me up because it brought it home to me
what kind of learner I was and why I had succeeded in some parts of the
curriculum and failed fairly miserably in others … so I did a lot of personal
research. I felt this is the school I want, this is how I see learning
going … and then other ideas come to you … accelerated learning, emotional
intelligence and the work of Csikszentmihalyi – all of that was kind
of burning inside. This is this type of school I want for these children.
Another school leader referred to the necessity of understanding strategy
before being able to develop it in school; introducing strategy in
school had been as a consequence of ‘my own awakening to strategic
understanding’. The school leader also stressed that: ‘In order to do
that I have to break it down in my own head first.’ Self-learning was
vital for this school leader and promoted the development of others.
The need to reflect or think was often highlighted:
I often sit down and just brainstorm – just when I’m on my own,
because that is my thinking time.
Thursday is my thinking time and my reading time … so every Thursday
I won’t see anyone, I don’t talk to anyone; unless it’s a parent who
is making a complaint in which case I deal with it immediately. But
Thursday is my time just to think, to read and to reflect and that’s what
I do. You know to be realistic it doesn’t happen every single Thursday
and sometimes when you walk through that door you don’t know what
is going to hit you, but my plan on a Thursday is that’s when I do my
thinking and reading time. Reading may be about what is happening in
school or it might be actually reading some of the children’s work but
Thursday is my thinking and reflecting time.
We can have a free discussion about the direction that we want to go.
Often I am leading that conversation because again that is part of the
privilege that I have through my reading. I am getting lots of really good
ideas and testing them out.
If we are to develop creative schools, then the importance we attach
to thinking and learning needs to start with the leader if that
individual is going to both model and develop creative thinking in the
wider group of staff and students in the school.
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Strategic leaders create mental models to frame their own
understanding and practice
One of the ways that school leaders can make sense of complexity is to
create mental models and frameworks to aid their understanding. In
the study, a number of the school leaders stressed the importance of
having a theoretical model to support strategic developments and the
importance of sharing that model with others in the organization, as
reflected by two respondents:
I went into this process of school development planning splitting it into
operational targets and setting strategic planning and futures thinking.
There is usually quite often a bit of theoretical underpinning so that if
we are going to do something in terms of changing the management
structures or management styles or whatever, we will do a little bit of the
theory … so that people understand why we are actually going down this
route and why we are making the changes.
One school leader articulated well her model of an approach to
strategy, stressing the importance of initiating a new way of thinking:
‘I am working on my own model of strategic change … through a
process which I call awakening, articulation and alignment.’ This
school leader felt that the mental model enabled her to lead change.
She had taken a strategic approach to the problem of complacent staff
and she had used new ideas to challenge colleagues to think in
different ways. While the focus of this change was the school’s
approach to teaching, the example underpins school leaders’
approach to strategy.
Strategic leaders have powerful personal and professional
networks
Strategic leaders constantly scan their environment locally, regionally and
internationally. They seek both to develop new ideas and to benchmark
current practice in their own schools with those of colleagues in the wider
educational community. The ability to develop personal and professional
networks that provide alternative perspectives from those prevalent in their
immediate educational environment is a key skill of strategic leaders.
This has become possible on a global basis with the rapid expansion
of technological communication. The significance of these networks
for developing strategic ideas was highlighted in the study:
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We are focused on opening out our networks because then you get all the
ideas from everywhere and then you can’t be hidebound. We are in that
world, we have to work with that world, so get out there and get in it.
You need an imagination and to feed that imagination you have got to
go on visits to lots of different places, to be more creative to see how
things are possible.
I do have a huge network of colleagues. It’s because I am out and looking
at things that I can see things from different perspectives. I don’t
think a lot of people in the schools do the strategic stuff, I don’t think a
lot of people talk and look outside.
It can be seen that strategic leaders place a high importance on networks
and networking to draw in ideas and inspiration for strategic
change and development. This is a very important personal characteristic
of strategic leaders.
A model for strategic leadership
This chapter has established a number of elements, which contribute
to the development of a strategic leadership. While any single leader
may not display or deploy every single element, the strategic leaders in
our study displayed many of them. In providing insights for leaders
wishing to review their strategic role, a model can now be established
to support them in their self-reflection.
It is imperative that a school leader is strategically focused. Strategic
leaders need to drive the strategy formation in their schools; without
their interest, enthusiasm and understanding the school would not be
strategically focused. Therefore, the model we propose focuses on the
school leader. If school leaders are also to be strategic leaders they need
to understand themselves, their school and others in the school
community and the wider community. They need to be contextfocused.
Strategic leaders need to care about others in order to want to
involve them and need self-confidence in order to involve them. They
need to be people-focused. Individuals can make a difference but
strength comes from staff working together to achieve the same goals
(Barth, 1990). If people are working together, decisions and
implementation of decisions will tend to be better as there will be a
higher level of trust and morale. Finally, they need to both understand
and lead the processes and approaches that contribute to a strategic
approach.
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A significant perspective can be drawn from Gardner’s (1999) notion
of multiple intelligences, and schools should consider a range of collective
capacities to foster and develop the use of experience, skill and
understanding to develop strategic intelligence. Our definition of
strategic leadership would be based on a conceptualization of strategic
intelligence which could be summarized (Davies, B.J. 2004) as three
types of wisdom:
a people wisdom
a contextual wisdom
a procedural wisdom.
This is illustrated in the model in Figure 1.4.
People wisdom
The people wisdom part of the model is illustrated in Figure 1.5.
Senge (1996: 45) suggests that: ‘We are coming to believe that
leaders are the people who ‘walk ahead’, people who are genuinely
committed to deep change in themselves and their organisations.
They lead through developing new skills, capabilities and
understandings. And they come from many places within their
organisation.’ There is little purpose in having a future view for a
school or setting priorities which require action, if these are not
shared. As Korac-Kakabadse and Kakabadse (1998: 1) suggest: ‘It could
be argued that executives always had visions for their organisations,
but whether these visions were shared is another matter.’ If it does not
affect the people within the organization, it will not be implemented.
Having people wisdom to involve and energize staff to deliver the
strategy is crucially important.
Visioning, or foresight, as a process requires an interpersonal intelligence
(Gardner, 1999). The strategic leader must identify the concerns
and feelings of the people in the organization; involving those people
and enabling them to participate is key to the strategic process. People
wisdom is essential in order to understand what motivates people and
how to work co-operatively with them. As Mintzberg (1994) suggested,
strategic planning by the top of an organization can ignore the realities
of planning experienced by those doing the job. Many of these ideas
are, it seems, influenced by the context and the culture of the school
and by the experiences of the strategic leader, which is why ‘people’ is
one of the three wisdoms at the centre of the model.
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Figure 1.4 A model for strategic leadership
Source: Davies, B.J., (2004: 167).
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All the leaders in the project expressed the necessity of involving
others in the strategic process, in both the creation of ideas and in the
decision-making process. While people would be involved at different
levels and to different degrees, it is important that all in the school
community – staff, parents, children and local community – are
involved. De Pree (1993: 99) argues for ‘lavish communication’, which
can occur in an organizational culture which promotes truth and
which does not limit the distribution of information, an organization
where people are the centre of all that happens. This capacity is seen
through the empowerment of the people and their ability to take part
in strategic thinking and action.
Figure 1.5 The people wisdom element of the model
Contextual wisdom
If a clear sense of purpose is to be set, the strategic leader must understand
both the history of the school and the current living experiences
of those in the organization. Strategic intelligence needs to have what
Davies, B.J. (2004) calls a contextual wisdom (Figure 1.6), the capacity
to see the school in relationship to the wider community and the educational
world in which it belongs. This wisdom is a response to new
ideas and events, the ability to listen to others; it is an understanding
of the uniqueness of a particular school environment. This means that
there can be no quick fixes, no transferable blueprints for a strategic
leader to take from one successful school to create a similarly successful
school. Solutions have to come from within the unique context,
through understanding the culture, and sharing beliefs and values.
The relentless pace of life in school often prevents strategic leaders
from being reflective, which is one reason why networking is important.
Similarly, isolation may prevent school leaders from being
exposed to new ideas. Long-term aims for school improvement should
be kept under review and revised in the light of new contextual infor-
People wisdom
Participation
Creative thinking
Shared information
Motivation
Capability
Competencies
Strategic leadership 31
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mation. Strategic intelligence uses the knowledge of the environment.
It is about seeing the big picture, about being able to create the right
agenda for the school by knowing what examples of excellence exist
and what is appropriate for their unique environment.
Figure 1.6 The contextual wisdom element of the model
Procedural wisdom
Procedural wisdom focuses on a strategic learning cycle, which enables
the appropriate choice of strategic approach and appropriate choice of
strategic processes.
The strategic learning cycle part of the model highlights strategic leaders
having the ability to harness the abilities of others; to have the
inner courage to drive the organization forward to the desired future.
The model highlights the need to have the people heading in the same
direction sharing the same values, beliefs and future view. The motion
forward is driven by the restless cycle of learning, aligning, timing and
acting. The learning cycle (Figure 1.7) is driven by dissatisfaction, by
leaders thinking that different and better scenarios are possible, and by
leaders encouraging others to think in different ways.
Figure 1.7 The strategic learning cycle element of the model
The strategic approaches and strategic processes centre on this cycle
of learning from experiences, of evaluating actions, of aligning the people
with the decisions, of choosing the right time to act and of taking
action. The cycle is continuous.
LEARNING
ACTION ALIGNMENT
TIMING
Contextual wisdom
Understanding and developing culture
Sharing values
Sharing beliefs
Developing networks
Understanding the external environment
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The strategic approaches part of the model outlines that strategy formation
can take four different approaches depending on the context
and circumstances. In schools, strategy may involve an integrated
approach of four elements: strategic planning, strategic intent, decentralized
strategy and emergent strategy (Figure 1.8), each being
appropriate given the context, the level of understanding and the time
frame in which the organization is operating.
Figure 1.8 The strategic approaches element of the model
Traditional strategic planning by itself is an inadequate approach. It is
clear that there is more than one approach to strategy and that schools
find the mix of strategic approaches which is best for them. There is
little to be gained from writing a plan in isolation. There is everything
to be gained from the process that lies behind the plan and the action
that follows on from it. The focus needs to be on creative thinking and
strategic conversations rather than filling in documents. If schools are
about learning, then the notion of strategic intent, of building
capability within people and allowing thinking time to develop the
intentions, and of taking an emergent approach, of learning by doing,
are vital to support the plan and critical to school success.
The strategic processes part of the model are highlighted in Figure 1.9.
These processes are the key to procedural wisdom but also depend on
people involvement and on an understanding of the context.
Figure 1.9 The strategic processes element of the model
Strategic processes
Reflection
Creating a common language
Conversation
Developing mental models
Analysis
Articulation
Strategic approaches
Strategic planning
Strategic intent
Emergent strategy
Decentralized strategy
Strategic leadership 33
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It is important that the leader should take time to understand theoretical
models in order to develop a common understanding and a
common language for the school community. This facilitates the alignment
of everyone to a common cause in order for a school to continue
to improve. Participants in the project stressed the importance of
analysis, in terms of self-evaluation of effectiveness, and reviewing the
whole process of strategy through involving others. The findings of the
research also stressed the necessity of having both oral and written
articulations of the strategy, which could be shared with others. This
reinforces the importance of strategic conversations for building capability
and motivating others and the necessity of people owning the
plan and being committed to it.
Conclusion
The driving force within the model (Figure 1.4) comes from the effort of trying
to understand, interpret and act on change. The challenge is in
enabling everyone in the school to make their own contribution towards
creating the shared, desired future. The model demonstrates that change
for a strategically focused school has to be in its people, through the way
those people relate to each other, in the context, through shared beliefs
and values, and in the procedures established to focus on the future.
Achieving the future view is not merely a matter of spending more time
on planning or writing more elaborate plans. Rather, it is a matter of changing
the way we understand strategy. What is important is improving the
involvement and therefore the processes for action in order to link the present
action with the desired future. This model is based on the notion that if
we change the processes, the mindset and values will also change. If we
involve the people in every aspect of an integrated approach, then a strategically
focused school is possible. The learning, which feeds the context and
people wisdoms, and therefore the strategic intelligence, is constantly reinforced
by choosing the right time, by strategic conversations to align the
people and by taking action.
The strategic leader has a key role in creating urgency and momentum
for organizational learning, thinking broadly and imaginatively, and working
with others to help them to think about how to use models to support
improvement. It is difficult to imagine that a school can find a way forward
without the school leader being strategically intelligent.
34 The Essentials of School Leadership
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Suggested further reading
Davies, B. (2006) Leading the strategically focused school, London: Sage.
Davies, B., and Ellison, L. (2003) The New Strategic Direction and Development
of the School. London: RoutledgeFalmer.
Garratt, B. (2003) Developing Strategic Thought. London: McGraw-Hill.
Hughes, R.L. & Beatty, K.C. Becoming a Strategic Leader, San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass.
Acknowledgements
This chapter was developed as a result of the National College for
School Leadership (England) funded research project on developing
strategy and strategic leadership in schools. This project aims at exploring
in primary (elementary) and secondary (high) schools and special
schools the strategic sustainability and leadership aspects of educational
organizations.
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