I loved this article and would like to
just lift is as is for this week’s blog. I need not say anything about it. Here
is the link to the article https://www.forbes.com/sites/terinaallen/2018/10/09/what-is-the-difference-between-management-and-leadership/#6443bfcd74d6
The article made me do it.
I
didn't plan to write this article. I didn't want to write yet another thing
about the definition, value and distinctions of management and leadership. I
thought we were passed this (by “we” I refer to the collective group of
executives, managers, consultants and leaders out here). But after reading yet
another article this morning that kept encouraging managers and directors to
“better manage” their people, I realized that we are not. This was an article
published by a highly reputable institution advising managers to manage other
people. They got it so wrong.
If
you currently are or have ever been one of my colleagues, clients, students or
in any of my leadership workshops, you have surely already heard this. I ask
you to bear with me. One of the articles I read this morning made me do it.
The
mindset caused me to cringe inside.
I
cringed inside because the more I read, the more I realized that this was not
just semantics and a difference on word choice. No. It was an outright mindset
that really pushed forward the theory that we – people – could ever actually
manage other people and do it effectively.
That
mindset is a problem for me since most people cannot even effectively manage
themselves, their own lives, their families, etc. How can one possibly be
expected to manage another person or a group of people? Add to this that
today’s employees are expected to (at least in theory) actually, make great
contributions to their organizations and make their supervisors look good. The
more I read, the more I realized how far we still have to go with
distinguishing these two key competencies.
Leadership
and management are both necessary, but they are different.
Leadership
and management are both necessary competencies that add institutional value.
Neither is superior or inferior to the other; they are just different. We manage things
such as programs, budgets, contracts, projects and processes, but we should be
leading people. The idea of ‘managing’ people just sounds demeaning in the 21st
century. Many of us wear both hats, but we need to understand the difference so
that we appropriately flex within and between the two roles.
Has
your boss or supervisor ever said any of this to you – I am your manager; I am
managing you, or I manage ten people? What did it make you think? How did this
make you feel?
In
business school and graduate school, I learned that management is the act or
skill of directing, controlling, handling, deciding, overseeing, etc. Not even
one of these words fits in with anything I want another person doing to me or
for me. How about you? I also learned that leadership is about influencing,
developing, coaching, guiding, mentoring or supervising people. So we need to
be leading people and managing all that other stuff. The distinction is real
and it matters.
If
the ‘experts’ in the field keep getting this wrong how can we expect mid-level
managers and executives to get this right? The perpetual lack of understanding
with these concepts is holding people back in their careers, and it is
negatively impacting organizational success.
There
are people who are great leaders but horrible managers, and there are people
who are great managers and horrible leaders. How can this be? Because these two
competencies require different skillsets. Too often hiring managers want to
hire someone to lead but they focus the entire job analysis and interview on
management and vice versa.
If
you want to hire a manager, define the competencies for that role based on what
management is all about. If you want to hire a leader, define the competencies
for that role based on what leadership is all about. If you want to hire
someone who will be competent in both, be sure to outline what that looks like
then create an appropriate position description and ask the right questions
during the interview.
Management
is typically reflected via one’s title, but leadership isn’t.
One
can hold the title of manager and never actually have staff or employees under
his direction because he is (shall I say it again) ‘managing’ a program, a
budget, a project or an enterprise that he actually has control over and needs
to direct, handle and oversee effectively.
Management
happens with one or more decision makers for a particular
unit/department/division/organization where there exists a ‘thing’ to be
managed, controlled, handled, directed or overseen. The unit/department/division/organization
has a budget, program, service, contract or process (a thing) to be managed.
However, the people within the respective section need to be (and I assert they
prefer to be) led.
To
be a leader one needs others whom he can influence or impact in some way (some
people call these followers). It is not a requirement that these people be
under his direct span of control in the normal supervisory lines, but they must
be within his circle of influence. Leaders can – and do – lead down, across and
up. We lead (influence) subordinates, colleagues, team members and even our
superiors. This is why we now understand that leadership
can and does happen at every level within an organization.
Leadership
is about helping ordinary people get extraordinary results. It is about
developing critical thinking, problem-solving and process improvement skills in
others and giving them the opportunity to apply these skills and have input on
decisions. Leaders are charged to ask the questions that compel others (at
every level) to consider choices, actually, think and then provide
recommendations to others.
Leadership
is not about titles. It is not about seniority. It is not about status, and it
is not about management. Leadership is about power and the ability to know when
and how to use it to influence the people around you to do and become
more! Transformational
leadership is
about using your actions to elevate others and put them on their path to
greatness.
You
can be a leader and never actually formally supervise employees, and you can be a
manager and never actually have formal authority over a staff or team. It is
important to note, however, that one's position title is not a reflection of
whether he is capable of doing either (leading or managing) very well.
The
wrap up: Manage things and lead people.
Manage
things, even manage yourself, but when it comes to other people, we prefer
words like lead, supervise, coach, guide, mentor, etc. It keeps the perspective
away from trying to handle, oversee, direct or worse - control - other
individuals. That would not be appropriate (except in extreme circumstances -
safety, etc.).
I
educate students, facilitate workshops for professionals at all levels and
provide consulting and executive coaching, and one thing I have been pushing
against for 20 years is this notion that we would ever actually be able to
effectively ‘manage’ anyone. Individual people have their own minds, and
they get to make their own choices. We can try to influence and shape those
choices and behaviours through leadership, but it is not appropriate to attempt
to direct and control them – this is what management is supposed to be doing
with “things.”
The
whole notion of an ever-increasing knowledge
workforce where
people are being hired and paid to think strategically, align themselves with
organizational missions and then deliver meaningful outcomes for internal and
external stakeholders are predicated on the idea (and hopefully practice) of
really having leaders develop other leaders and pull from the talent all around
them (above, across and beneath their own positions of authority).
Remember
when you attempt to ‘manage’ other people, you are in effect limiting or
removing their choices – their power. And when you do this, you end up losing
everything (all the experience, education, training and brilliance that you
hired them for in the first place). Manage the things you need to manage, but
lead the people you are supposed to lead.
Terina Allen is a strategist,
consultant, international speaker and the CEO of ARVis
Institute, a management consulting and
executive/leadership development firm.
No comments:
Post a Comment