Title: Family Business Leadership Bringing Out Your Best
1Family Business Leadership Bringing Out Your Best
- USC Family Business Program
- September 4 5, 2002
- Ed Cox, Ph.D.
2Bringing Out Your Best
- You are in a leadership role
- Good leadership makes the difference between a
great company and an ordinary one - You can choose which leadership style to use
3INHERITING THE BUSINESS FROM YOU MAKES ME A BORN
LEADER, RIGHT, DAD?
4We will cover
- The five key tasks of a family business leader
- Why family businesses are different
- Common dilemmas of leadership
- Your best styles of leadership
- When to use what style
5What are the qualities of a good leader in a
family business?
6A Short Quiz on Leadership Behavior
- From Kouzes and Posner, The Leadership
Challenge How to Get Extraordinary Things Done
in Organizations. (1987)
7What is Leadership?
-
- "In essence, leadership appears to be the art
of getting others to want to do something you are
convinced should be done." -
- --Vance Packard, The Pyramid Climbers. (1962)
8What is Leadership?
-
-
- "Leadership is the process whereby an
individual influences the behavior of people in a
way that makes them more likely to achieve
organizational goals. - --Eric G. Flamholtz, Growing Pains. (1990)
9Managers vs. Leaders
- Managers
- Help make things work well.
- Get other people to do.
- Leaders
- Help make things change. (Albert V. Casey)
- Get other people to want to do. (Kouzes Posner)
10Leadership Styles Continuum
- Autocratic
- Benevolent Autocratic
- Consultative
- Participative
- Team (consensus)
- Laissez-faire
- --(Eric Flamholtz, Growing Pains. (2000)
11The Juiciness Factor in Family Businesses
12Triangling, De-Triangling
You
A
B
13Power of theNon-Anxious Presence
- Your non-anxious presence will reduce the anxiety
in the system. - Remember, you influence all members of a system,
directly or indirectly. - If you are connected with people and an issue and
remain calm, you will help others to function.
14Five Factors of Well-DefinedPersonal Leadership
15 - 1. The capacity to notice and reduce your own
reactivity. -
- To look at your own part in the process, how you
may have become vulnerable to the system.
16 - 2. Having clear life goals.
-
- Knowing what you believe, where you stand, what
is or is not negotiable.
17 - 3. The capacity to take your own position in
relation to others. - An important part of leadership is staying
connected to the people in the system and to the
issue. - Taking a position and making it public reduces
anxiety in a system.
18 - 4. The ability to deal with issues of opposition
(the natural function of a system). - Be prepared for reactivity, be prepared to
decrease your anxiety during it. Get playful.
19 - 5. The resolve to stay on course when others get
reactive. - Behave according to your beliefs rather than
explaining what and why (being defensive).
20Characteristics of Superior Leaders
21Characteristics of Superior Leaders
- (Santa Clara Univ. Survey. N 2615)
- CHARACTERISTIC Ranking of Managers Selecting
- Honest 1 83
- Competent 2 67
- Forward-Looking 3 62
- Inspiring 4 58
- Intelligent 5 43
- Fair-Minded 6 40
- Broad-minded 7 37
- Straightforward 8 34
- Imaginative 9 34
- Dependable 10 33
- Supportive 11 32
- Courageous 12 27
- Caring 13 26
- Cooperative 14 25
- Mature 15 23
22Credibility
- Taken together, the first four characteristics
comprise what some communications experts call
Credibility. - Honest
- Competent
- Forward-Looking
- Inspiring
23Six Key Tasks of an Effective Family Business
Leader
- Challenge the Process
- Inspire a Shared Vision
- Enable Others to Act
- Model the Way
- Encourage the Heart
- Manage the Hat Collection
- (--Adapted from Kouzes Posner 1987 1995)
241. Challenge the Process
- Search out challenging opportunities to change,
grow, innovate, and improve. - Experiment, take risks, and learn from the
accompanying mistakes.
252. Inspire a Shared Vision
- Envision an uplifting and ennobling future for
the business and the family - Enlist others in a common vision by appealing to
their values, interests, hopes, and dreams.
263. Enable Others to Act
- Foster collaboration by promoting cooperative
goals and building trust. - Strengthen people by sharing information and
power and by increasing their discretion and
visibility.
274. Model the Way
- Set an example for others by behaving in ways
that are consistent with your stated values. - Plan small wins that promote consistent progress
and build commitment.
285. Encourage the Heart
- Recognize individual contributions to the success
of every project. - Celebrate team accomplishments regularly.
296. Manage the Hat Collection
- Understand the need for boundaries between family
and business. - Make sure you wear the proper hat for each
discussion/decision.
30What are Your Strongest Leadership Traits?
31Employee Continuum
Dedicated
Compliant
Disgruntled
32Leadership That Gets Results
33Leadership SkillsRate Yourself
34Topics to Consider
- Emotional Intelligence
- Impact of Leadership Styles on Organizational
Climate - Leadership Styles
- Your Leadership Style
- A Worksheet for Improvement
35Emotional Intelligence
- Self-Awareness
- Self-Management
- Social Awareness
- Social Skill
36Self-Awareness
- Emotional self-awareness
- Accurate self-assessment
- Self-confidence
37Self-Management
- Self-control
- Trustworthiness
- Conscientiousness
- Adaptability
- Achievement orientation
- Initiative
38Social Awareness
- Empathy
- Organizational awareness
- Service orientation
39Social Skill
- Visionary leadership
- Influence
- Developing others
- Communication
- Change catalyst
- Conflict management
- Building bonds
- Teamwork and collaboration
40The Climate in your Business
41Organizational Climate
- FlexibilityHow free employees feel to innovate
(without red tape) - ResponsibilitySense of responsibility to the
organization - StandardsThe level of standards people set and
expect
42Organizational Climate
- RewardsAre apt and accurate
- ClarityAbout mission, purpose and values
- CommitmentLevel of commitment to a common purpose
43Six Styles
- Coercive
- Authoritative
- Affiliative
- Democratic
- Pacesetting
- Coaching
44Analyze Each Style by
- The leaders modus operandi (M.O.)
- The style in a phrase (Phrase)
- Underlying emotional intelligence competencies (E
Q) - When the style works best (When best)
- Overall impact on climate (Climate)
45Coercive
- M.O.Demands immediate compliance
- PhraseDo what I tell you.
- EQDrive to achieve, initiative, self-control
- BestIn a crisis, turnaround, problem employees
- Climate--Negative
46Authoritative
- M.O.Mobilizes people toward a vision
- PhraseCome with me.
- EQSelf-confidence, empathy, change catalyst
- BestNew vision, clear direction
- ClimateMost strongly positive
47Affiliative
- M.O.Creates harmony builds emotional bonds
- PhrasePeople come first.
- EQEmpathy, building relationships, communication
- BestHeal rifts, motivate during stress
- ClimatePositive
48Democratic
- M.O.Forges consensus through participation
- PhraseWhat do you think?
- EQCollaboration, team leadership, communication
- BestBuild buy-in, consensus, gain input from
valued employees - ClimatePositive
49Pacesetting
- M.O.Sets high standards for performance
- PhraseDo as I do, now.
- EQConscientiousness, drive to achieve,
initiative - BestGet quick results from highly motivated,
competent team - ClimateNegative
50Coaching
- M.O.Develops people for the future
- PhraseTry this.
- EQDeveloping others, empathy, self-awareness
- BestHelp employee improve performance or develop
L.T. strengths - ClimatePositive
51Six Styles Impact on Climate
- Authoritative .54
- Affiliative .46
- Democratic .43
- Coaching .42
- Pacesetting -.25
- Coercive -.26
52Your Styles
53 - The wicked leader is one who the people despise.
- The good leader is one who the people revere.
- The GREAT leader is the one who people say We
did it ourselves. -
- --Lao Tsu (Sixth Century, B.C.)
54Ed Cox, Ph.D. DoudHausnerVistar 100 N. Brand
Blvd., Sixth Floor Glendale, CA
91203 818-539-2267 edcox_at_dhvadvisors.com