Every Leader Is an Artist
Creativity & Leadership
"Leadership is an actual Art, not metaphorically an Art"
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While people may disagree about the quality of a given work of art, we generally know how to communicate our experience of what we've seen or heard. And the same criteria that govern how people respond to particular artworks apply to this other art form, leadership. On the positive side, for example, leadership may be described as inspiring, consistent, creative, unique, passionate, and engaging. Alternatively, leadership may be perceived as unpleasant, phony, inept, unfocused, and pedestrian. Evaluative terms like these serve as the bases for some consensus about what constitutes greatness.
So let me suggest 12 artistic criteria for judging the art of particular leaders. To appreciate their leadership, we should ask about its ...
- Intent. Do they make an express commitment to achieve certain exceptional ends?
- Focus. Do they highlight certain features of the business environment over others to separate the important from the trivial?
- Skill. Do they demonstrate mastery or virtuosity in critical aspects of business; do they possess a foundation for understanding people, organizations, and the way work is accomplished?
- Form. Do they combine their communications, structures, policies, etc. into a unified, coherent whole?
- Representation. Do they convey meanings, in nonobvious and captivating ways, as opposed to giving simple directives and making straightforward declarations of fact?
- Imagination. Do they make surprising and unconventional departures from the ordinary that create a new sense of awareness or understanding?
- Authenticity. Do they present a stylistic distinctiveness that is an honest expression of their individuality and personal beliefs?
- Engagement. Do they offer complex and challenging information that stimulates intellectual effort and imaginative contemplation?
- Pleasure. Do they provide emotionally rewarding experiences that are shared among members of a group, promoting stronger bonds and fostering personal fulfillment?
- Human significance. Do they facilitate personal reflection about who one is, what is most important, what is culturally valuable, and what is possible?
- Context. Do they take actions that are commensurate with institutional practices, customs, demands, and norms, and communicate in a style that is understandable and appropriate?
- Criticism. Do they welcome discourse and evaluation from others regarding how well they have performed and the amount of appreciation they should be afforded?
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The 12 criteria I've outlined would allow us to differentiate the relentless cost cutter whose exploits over a three-year span dramatically increase earnings from the leader who prudently and artistically reshapes a company while minimizing the detrimental effects on its future—and makes money doing so. Where the former creates a wasteland bereft of focused, forward energy and employee engagement, the latter, the leader, shepherds people through the trials of a troubled organization while enlarging their interests and their capacities to perform.
Corporate managers will always worry about results—and especially short-term results. What is important is that we do not demote the concept of good leadership to the simple question of their attainment. The market doesn't care how leaders get results as long as they are achieved legally. Meanwhile, making money doesn't require the same skills as leadership does. It is possible to be a successful businessperson, excellent financier, and marvelous deal-maker without being a very good leader. The connection often made between leadership and bottom-line results is too facile. Making money is not an art. Leading an organization is.
MICHAEL O'MALLEY
Michael O’Malley, PhD is Vice-President of Human Capital at Sibson Consulting and the author of The Wisdom of Bees and Every Leader is an Artist (with Bill Baker).
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