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William J. Walsh

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Title: William J. Walsh


1
Optimizing Leadership Performance
  • William J. Walsh
  • Orly Ben-Yoav Nobel, Ph.D
  • LTC Sean T. Hannah, Ph.D

2
Overview
  • Program
  • Background current leadership training
  • Whats changed?
  • Methodology
  • Results
  • Where to?

3
The Program
  • This approach was taken in response to a Phase I
    SBIR program
  • Requirement define and assess dynamic leadership
    skills to fit a new model for leadership training
  • Sponsor AFRL, Human Effectiveness Directorate,
    Warfighter Readiness Research Division, Dr.
    Barbara Sorensen

4
Conceptualizing the Problem
  • Goal
  • Establish a conceptual model for leadership
  • underlie design of a scenario-based leadership
    development training program
  • aimed at preparing officers to lead effectively
    in the new asymmetric reality of joint,
    stability, support and security operations

5
The Issue
  • Battles of the future will not be fought entirely
    on battlefields
  • winning in war requires achieving desired
    political aims . . . resolving crises, winning
    conventional combat operations, and ensuring
    stability in affected areas
  • Future leaders must have an appreciation that
    success on the battlefield may only be a small
    part of the nations overall strategy

Photo Courtesy of U.S. Navy
6
Leadership Training
  • Current military leaders have been groomed to
    approach certain problems with specific tactics
  • Industrial Age militaries
  • decomposed the battlespace,
  • created layered organizations
  • divided into specializations
  • organized forces into hierarchies
  • focused on optimization of processes

7
Asymmetric Warfare
  • In the new asymmetrical reality
  • U.S. forces fight predominately in urban settings
  • enemy forces are not easily discerned from
    neutrals or non-combatants
  • damage or destruction of civilian infrastructure
    must be limited
  • Exercise restraint versus maximizing kinetic
    forms of combat power

8
The New Paradigm
  • There is a new paradigm for the force that
    evolved to fight massive kinetic warfare against
    symmetric enemy formations across the
    battlefields of Europe or Korea, or as evidenced
    in Southwest Asia during Desert Storm

Photos Courtesy of U.S. National Archives
9
Asymmetrical Paradigm
  • In this new asymmetrical paradigm, the enemy has
    set the conditions
  • U.S. forces must engage at the tactical level,
    largely reducing the role of technology in the
    fight and changing its focus to support
    information collection and sharing.
  • Leaders must understand how to hold human
    dominance over current and potential adversaries
    in addition to kinetic dominance

Photo Courtesy of U.S. Navy
10
Human Dominance
  • Requires leaders who are physiologically prepared
    to handle the stress and physical demands of
    sustained close-combat warfare
  • Cognitively advanced to engage a cunning enemy at
    the intellectual level with adaptability and
    nimbleness

Photo Courtesy of U.S. Navy
11
What is Leadership?
  • Intentional influence exerted by one person over
    others to guide, structure and facilitate
    activities and relationships in a group.
    Yukl, 2006
  • Influencing peopleby providing purpose,
    direction, and motivationwhile operating to
    accomplish the mission. FM22-100
  • Recent conceptualizationscomplex mix of
    cognitive, social and behavioral skills
    (Day Halpin, 2004 Lord Hall,
    2005 Mumford, Zaccaro, Harding, Jacobs
    Fleishman, 2000)

12
Methodology
  • Reviewed recent DOD sponsored tasks and
    competencies analyses - roles and
    responsibilities in stability and support and
    kinetic operations
  • Reviewed recently published Field Manual FM 3-24
    Counterinsurgency
  • Reviewed research focusing on leadership roles
    and responsibilities in various types of
    operations
  • Derived key roles and competencies from
    one-on-one interviews with 36 mid-level and
    junior officers.
  • Confirmatory one-on-one interviews with 10 OIF
    experienced officers

13
Results
  • Our analysis yielded ten key roles each
    associated a list of responsibilities.
  • Roles range from tactical commander to
    non-kinetic roles such as negotiating agreements
    and mediating disputes.
  • Shared goal of most roles is to encourage the
    local population to move away from hostile
    positions to support U.S. military goals and
    local governments objectives

Photo Courtesy of U.S. Army
14
Findings 10 Roles
  • Intelligence Gatherer
  • Insurgence Threat Assessor
  • Tactical Commander
  • Joint Operations Commander and Shared/Coordinated
    Situation Awareness Facilitator
  • Strategic Thinker / Diplomat
  • Negotiator, Mediator, Peace-Maker
  • Nation Builder
  • Civil Affairs Administrator / Infrastructure
    Builder
  • Adaptive and Moral Force Developer
  • Team Leader

Photo Courtesy of U.S. Army
15
Key Role - Intelligence Gatherer (example)
  • Sample Tasks
  • Assess attitudes of local population
  • Gain understanding of demographics of area
  • Question locals encountered during patrols, civil
    affairs actions
  • Monitor media and communication such as posters,
    leaflets, print, broadcast media and Internet
    posting
  • Sample Competencies
  • Guide followers to adopt consistent and
    comprehensive approach to scanning tactical and
    social environments
  • Monitor, control and correct information
    processing and perceptual biases

Photo Courtesy of U.S. Army
16
Key Role Diplomat(example)
  • Sample Tasks
  • Consider strategic implications of tactical moves
    and consequences of military actions on image of
    US forces
  • Establish rapport and develop collaborative
    relationship with local leaders during patrols or
    meetings
  • Develop familiarity with the culture, history,
    religion and language of area to ensure effective
    interaction with local population
  • Sample Competencies
  • Project and assess the physical and nonphysical
    effects as well as the intended and potential
    political collateral impact of units actions
    goals and objectives
  • Share and discuss cultural knowledge with
    followers and direct them to conform to cultural
    expectations

Photos Courtesy of U.S. Army U.S. Navy
17
Meta-Leadership Knowledge Skills
  • Knowledge and skills that enhance performance
    across all roles were drawn from interviews with
    experienced combat officers, review of military
    leadership studies and FM 3-24,
  • Key meta-leadership knowledge and skills were
    identified as central for preparing officers to
    lead effectively in security and stability
    operations

18
Meta-Leadership Knowledge Skills
  • Role modeling
  • Performance management
  • Delegating
  • Influencing
  • Problem-solving, (decision-making, strategic
    intuition)
  • Situation awareness
  • Supporting

Photo Courtesy of U.S. Army
19
Meta-Leadership Attributes
  • Meta-leadership attributes may be classified as
  • Cognitive and affective attributes
  • Cognitive complexity
  • Social complexity
  • Hardiness
  • Leadership Efficacy
  • Courage
  • Optimism
  • Self-regulation attributes
  • Meta-cognitive ability
  • Emotional control
  • Behavioral flexibility

Photo Courtesy of U.S. Army
20
Where to from Here?
  • This conceptual model can underlie design of a
    scenario-based leadership development training
    program
  • Aims to develop suite of competencies needed to
    prepare officers to lead in new asymmetric
    reality of joint, stability, and support and
    security operations

21
Potential Training Program
  • New leader preparation academic commissioning
    programs
  • traditional classroom learning environment, along
    with group exercises involving all members of the
    class
  • Leaders already on duty - dispersed group
  • course of independent study, individualized
    instruction, computer-based scenarios
  • Tutorial component to introduce key roles and
    competencies
  • Assessment
  • Judge effectiveness based on consequences of
    decisions and actions
  • interactive after action reviews

Photos Courtesy of USMA
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