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INNOBLOG

the insider's guide to innovation

Saturday, October 10th, 2009

Day 1 of World Business Forum: Innovate Through the Crisis, Innovate Your Life

Renee Hopkins

Bill GeorgeThis past week I attended the World Business Forum in New York as one of a group of bloggers. My real-time comments were posted to Twitter and can be found at search.twitter.com/wbf09. Here’s a longer post synthesizing some of the learnings from the first day.

Bill George, former Medtronic CEO and currently a Harvard Business School professor, opened with a dynamite talk on “Leadership in Times of Crisis” taken from his book, 7 Lessons for Leading in a Crisis. You can’t deal with any problem by putting Band-Aids on it, he said. You must deal with root cause of problem In crisis, set aside financial plans made before, and think about getting it right for the long term.

By looking at root causes in the current financial crisis, he said, we can find the universal lessons that are common to all crises. Some of these included: CEOs should admit their own mistakes because that gives others permission to see their mistakes and increases integrity; develop personal habits such as jogging and meditation that give you resilience; dig deep for the root cause because it allows you to question assumptions that may now be wrong; get ready for the long haul; never waste a good crisis (which he noted should not be attributed to Rahm Emanuel, as it has been lately, but to Machiavelli); be ready to take the leadership role and step up to the real problem; withstand the pressure to be someone you’re not and stay true to yourself; and don’t play defense, play offense -- execute rigorously so you will be ready to go when the time comes.

What will be your legacy? George asked. “Never doubt the power you have as an individual to make a difference. I hope you have the passion to see this crisis as an opportunity to change the world.”

Former GE executive Bill Conaty then spoke about talent, explaining the four critical elements in developing and nurturing leaders: Attract, develop, assess, retain. His pint: the majority of companies put most of their effort into attracting, when they should pay more attention to the latter elements, especially to developing and retaining leaders.

Patrick Lencioni, author of Five Dysfunctions of a Team, knocked us out with a very engaging and entertaining talk on teamwork, amply illustrated with anecdotes from his life as a father to four boys.

Most notable to me about what Lencioni presented were his comments on trust. Trust is huge problem is organizations, he said. When there’s no trust there’s no feedback. And instead of the organization being able to capitalize on people’s individuality, that individuality gets lost and brings no value.

Trust, he said, is also a key to handling conflict, which is very important: “Conflict without trust is politics. Conflict with trust is a search for the truth.”

People need to be able to disagree with ideas, because if they can’t, they will then begin to disagree with each other personally. Conflict then ferments around people and destroys relationships, and of course also destroys effectiveness and destroys innovation.

Said Lencioni: Consensus is a 4-letter word. But when people weigh in they buy in. They need to have the ability to disagree and then still commit. Great relationships built on ability to disagree, as anyone who's ever been married knows. People passively sabotage an idea or a plan when they don’t have a voice.

Lencioni offered an interesting idea: When he assembles a team to work on a problem, he gets them to share this information first: Where did you grow up, how were many in your family, what was your biggest challenge growing up? This gets people to open up and gets them to understand each other as people, so that they’ll focus on disagreeing with the ideas and not each other, avoiding the fundamental error of attributing other people’s negative behaviors to their characters, while attributing our own negative behavior to environmental issues (such as being stressed).

 


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