330 week ago — 6 min read
Summary: History is replete with great leaders who have inspired their people to overcome preconceived limitations and achieve growth. Rajeev Peshawaria asserts that an essential quality of a truly great business leader, must be his/her ability to ‘forgive’. In today’s day and age, when organisations need to be agile, a non-forgiving leader may actually stifle innovation. Read on to learn more about this fascinating point of view.
You would think, with almost $80 million dollars spent each year on improving business leadership, that we would be overloaded with amazing leaders. That they would be easily found in every sector of every economy, that each and every company worldwide would have dozen of strong, effective people taking the reins and build businesses to powerful and predictable successes.
But that doesn’t really seem to be the case, does it?
Do you ever wonder why? Is it just that true leaders are truly unique people, and only a miniscule subset of the population is born with the innate qualities of a leader? Or is it that something vital is missing in our leadership creation processes?
These aren’t easy questions to answer. And I want to further complicate the answer by suggesting that, perhaps, it isn’t a question of talent at birth, or our chosen processes of training that creates a lack of quality leaders. It’s that we don’t really understand what a great leader is.
In my view, I think we often fail to see the full dimensionality of leaders. We tend to pick a few qualities, in a few situations, valorize those, while ignoring the other essential characteristics that also have to present in order for a leader to be great.
Which brings me to the idea of “forgiveness.” Forgiveness isn’t usually associated with the image of the strong business leader. In fact, it’s far more likely that the business leader is valorized for an almost assassin-like cold-heartedness. We seem to believe in the toughness of leaders, in their ability to make hard decisions even when some people will suffer because of that decision.
Where does forgiveness fit into that idea of a great leader?
I believe forgiveness fits quite well for a modern leader in our current culture. And not only because forgiveness is a generally laudable human quality, but it is also vital for truly dimensional leadership.
Our evolution as a world culture has brought us to a place where our businesses must be nimble, adaptable, and constantly innovative. And one thing you have to give to people striving to innovate is permission to fail.
A nimble organization requires an environment where suggesting something new –even if it is not fully tested, even if it is just an idea — is not only “somewhat allowed,” but is actively praised and rewarded. You need a workforce that is empowered to bring forward their innovative urges, to explore what can be achieved in new approaches to old problems.
Let me give you a reverse example, of a famous business leader who, perhaps, would have been even more successful with a dose of forgiveness in his style. Steve Jobs. Famous for his iron-fistedness on creativity and quality control, so much so that there are scenes in popular movies showing him dismissing people in front of entire departments for not meeting his standards.
And, yes, perhaps he was pruning those who were underperforming, or unwilling to go along with his vision. But it’s also just as likely that he lacked a well-developed ability to forgive. And without that ability, he often took the path of least forgiveness.
Which, in the full dimensionality view of a leader, may have cost him far more than it needed to. Every act of non-forgiveness has the clear potential to create fear in your remaining employees. Does this “motivate” them to do better, work harder, make sure they’re on their game? Or does it create a climate of fear, of only doing what you know will be approved, and never, ever sticking your neck out to suggest different ideas?
It does both. Which means that the non-forgiving boss is always partially creating an environment that suppresses innovation. While the boss who can accurately and wisely know when to forgive avoids the problem of scaring off innovative employees.
Modern organisations cannot survive without people who yearn to take risks. Knowing that your leader understands the shakiness of new ideas, and will forgive unsuccessful but earnest attempts at innovation, means you become risk-confident instead of risk-averse. Not that your employees now have an open door to sloppy work and poorly considered ideas, but that they know there is a strong and reliable policy in place that will protect them as they seek to innovate and improve.
In this way, forgiveness moves beyond being thought of as a “soft” human emotion — thus a detriment to strong leadership — and becomes a powerful tool that the 21st century leader can use to attract and guide innovative employees in the worldwide gig economy.
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Article source: https://iclif.org/articles/forgiveness-secret-innovation/
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views, official policy or position of GlobalLinker.
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