As we empower
people more and more to connect with peers in different parts of the organisation,
enabling them to develop ideas and resolve issues together, we’re breaking down
all kinds of silos but we’re also unpicking more traditional modes of
management. Stowe Boyd talks about ‘leanership’:
his vision of a situation in which teams organise and manage themselves, with
everyone demonstrating elements of leadership on a day-to-day basis. Whilst
that might seem a long way off for many organisations, the direction of travel is
clear and we should be considering the implications for the way we prepare and support
managers to play a changing role.
The issue is
particularly acute because we haven’t caught up with the needs of today, let
alone tomorrow. The ever-growing canon of literature and commentary regarding
employee engagement highlights just how important a more involving and
empowering approach to management is within organisations. We know that people
will give more if they feel part of their team and their organisation, that
they have a voice in it, that they are not just recipients of instructions. Yet
survey after survey bemoans the state of our management skills, suggesting we
are not equipping or supporting managers to fulfil this role. And now we want managers to change even more? Make no mistake about it, if we’re going to make the most of ESNs, we need managers at all levels to grasp and help catalyse change. We need them to re-think what constitutes day-to-day work for their people. We need them to liberate employees to connect and communicate with others in very different areas. We need them to reshape the way they organise people and to nurture behaviours that bust silos for the greater good. And we will need them to consider implications for the way they evaluate and recognise individual contribution and performance.
This is a big change for managers – and for the organisation as a whole. Leaders will set the tone, and colleagues in Communications or IT will introduce the tools, but managers will hold the key to whether ESNs really change the way companies work or simply impact on the surface of corporate culture. Yet in my view there has not been nearly enough discussion or emphasis on how we can engage and equip them to play their part.
A theme I
shall return to in future posts!
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