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Looking Ahead - Preparing for an Indefinite Return to Work

2/10/2020

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Until last week, many of our conversations with clients were focusing on how to support people back to the workplace: many seemed reluctant to return. These concerns have now been exacerbated by the more recent development of extended lockdown, possibly until March.

Throughout the summer we have been running regular surveys tapping into the thoughts and feelings of those working from home. When we asked how they felt about returning to the workplace we found quite a mixed response. Around 50% were apprehensive and not sure what to expect, a quarter were looking forward to it, and the remainder were resistant. The principal concern (of 66% of people) was having to adjust to new working practices due to Covid-19. A third of people indicated general anxiety about contracting Covid-19 at work or on their commute and another third indicated a general reluctance to return, mentioning that they had enjoyed working from home.


Where some people had previously been indicating some reluctance to go back, most were preparing for a couple of days in the office by December with a fuller (but not complete) return in the new year. Now this has been thrown in the air again. The feedback we have received suggests that many people are now in low spirits about the situation, particularly since the light at the end of the tunnel, which had been adding some structure to people's working lives, now seems dimmed.

Laying the groundwork

For managers and HR professionals this is an opportunity to lay some groundwork for the return, whenever it happens:
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  • focus on the community nature of work - what might be done further to support people connect socially, ideally in person? Even with the "rule of 6", people can get together in-person, for a walk, coffee, etc, while maintaining social distancing and hygiene precautions 
  • ensure managers have regular calls and meetings with team members, at least once a week
  • hold group planning sessions so that everyone can start to think about the obstacles to returning to work and how they will overcome them
  • encourage people to focus on the things they can change or influence and to be accepting of those things they can't control
  • continue to watch for colleagues who might not be coping well in the current situation and provide appropriate support where needed​

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This is a great time to be reminded of Stoicism, a philosophy from the ancient world which is as valuable and relevant to us today as it was then. A key feature of Stoic philosophy is to understand which aspects of your current life you can control and which aspects you cannot. Focusing on just those areas which are under your control makes for happier, healthier and more effective approaches to difficult situations.  ​It will also give you an advantage over those who are fighting unwinnable battles. 

Managing Change provide development and well-being coaching for the workplace. Do get in touch if you'd like to know more about we can help you and your teams. Email us on enquiries@managingchange.org.uk or call 01223 655667.

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Leading the transition back to work after the lockdown

1/6/2020

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After a challenging ten weeks of lockdown all four nations within the UK are now setting out plans to return to the “new normal”.

During this time people have had widely different experiences: carrying on attending work in very different environments, working from home, being furloughed or being made redundant. For the last group, their transition to find a new role is likely to be the most difficult and challenging. For the others, the transitional period presents a new path to navigate.

As a leader your responsibility to facilitate that journey back is key. What should you be considering when you think about people leadership?

People will respond differently to the new situation just as they have responded differently to the lockdown itself and the associated changes to their work environments. Accordingly, they will have different needs and will respond to different levels and types of engagement. Some people are desperate to get back to normal and others are reluctant.

For example, many people are concerned about:
  • the health and well-being of their families and themselves (if these are major concerns, they will be distracted and possibly anxious)
  • job security (will the business or organisation survive or contract?)
  • changes to working practices (will there be more constraints or processes? Will their role have changed materially? Will the workload or team have changed?)
  • leaving the ‘safety bubble’ of being home for an extended period of time
  • the safety of commuting to work and general travel
  • going back to work before the children can go back to school

For others, this period has been a positive one. Many people have recognised or developed new strengths and attributes during this period which they have put to good use. Others have found working from home to be highly productive. They are likely to want to maintain these changes.  How can you ensure these are valued and supported?

In other words, in leading people back to work, effective leaders will recognise that people are different; they have had different experiences and have different needs. Understanding these, and responding appropriately to them, will lead to greater trust and engagement in you.

Communication therefore, as always, is key. Start by listening and understanding to gauge where your people are now. By starting where they are, you can shape more responsive and relevant communication to them.

Initiate dialogue and discussion: what has changed for your people? What are their concerns, hopes and challenges? What reassurance do they need?

Talking about what has changed, both within the organisation and for your people, is a good starting point. How are your people responding to these recent changes? This will have been a period of strong personal growth for some and major stress for others. Giving people an opportunity to be heard and to shape the ‘new normal’ is likely to lead to a productive transition. In our recent survey around 55% of people wanted to hear more frequently from their leaders - ideally a weekly communication. Weekly virtual check-ins and updates are an easy win and hugely valued where they happen. They are also an excellent opportunity for further engagement.

So, a valuable exercise to start now is to reflect on the changes, understand where your people are in their experience of it, and collaborate with them to create the new workplace. Even if your teams will be working at home or furloughed for some time yet, creating the new picture of the future will enhance your leadership effectiveness and the security and motivation of your people.

 
In a recent survey we asked people who have been working from home what the challenges have been. To see the summary results click here. If you are in a leadership role and would value a sounding board for these (or other) matters, do get in touch. Call us or email: enquiries@managingchange.org.uk

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Working under lockdown #Covid-19

27/5/2020

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The last nine weeks have been a challenging time of uncertainty, isolation and anxiety. We have all had to adjust to new ways of living and working without knowing when this will all end and what life post-coronavirus will look like. 

For a lot of people, this means now working from home. This brings a different set of challenges, and we were curious about how people have experienced this situation and keen to understand how to best shape our coaching and support to help. A couple of weeks ago we asked people to tell us about their experience of working at home during the pandemic. 

What we found most interesting in the responses was that people were not overly challenged by technology or the logistics of working from home. What they did find particularly challenging were the more emotional aspects. We asked what respondents found to be the top 3 biggest challenges in working from home. Just 9% included poor internet connectivity as a problem. The top challenges were:
            1: general anxiety about the impact of coronavirus on my life (54% mentioned this)
            2: difficulties communicating with co-workers (45%)
          =3: social isolation (36%)
          =3: being motivated to keep a regular schedule (36%)

Others included:
  • too many distractions at home
  • childcare
  • fear of the return to work
Interestingly, despite these being listed as common challenges, 91% of people considered that they could continue comfortably working from home with their current arrangements for three months or more. Given that the most commonly given concerns were job security, redundancy and the return to work, this is a curious finding. One possible interpretation is that the current lockdown situation has created a sense of psychological safety for people which might, for some, postpone having to confront the reality of the post-coronavirus world.  This is an area we'll be looking at further.

These have been fascinating insights for us to consider as we continue to develop our programmes to support people in the workplace. Specifically, we have shaped a new resilience programme to incorporate these findings, which we are particularly excited about.  The new programme will help people find strategies to bolster social connection, develop their realistic optimism responses and manage effective transitions to the world, post-coronavirus.
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You can see the results of our survey here.
​Managing Change provide specialist coaching and development programmes in resilience and well-being throughout the UK. For more information about how we can help you support your people, do get in touch - e: enquiries@managingchange.org.uk or call us.

​If you would like to take part in the ongoing survey series or wish to share it, the link is here.  And we're always interested in your experiences, so please do leave your comments below.
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Approaches to Strategic Thinking

6/3/2020

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In much of our coaching work, newly promoted or emerging leaders tell us that they have been asked to "develop their strategic thinking skills", or to "think more strategically", etc. Once they have recognised the need to make time to think (see our earlier #NewLeaders article Making Time For Leadership) many get stuck knowing what this really means and how to approach it. If this applies to you too these five points might be helpful: 

1. Be clear about what strategic thinking is. It involves developing a long term vision about where you want your organisation/department/team to be. This is not simply a creative, wishful thinking exercise. You need to take into account future trends, opportunities, challenges, etc that you know about or can forecast. The strategic thinking process involves steps to analyse and consider each of these aspects. It also requires you to assess where your organisation or department is now in order that you can define the best path to take to realise that future vision and define the steps required to achieve it.

2. Create space and time in which to think and plan. This should be a priority activity and to ensure it happens should be allocated diary time. Ideally this time should blocked out on a regular basis (e.g. fortnightly). See our earlier article Making Time for Leadership.

3. Assess and Appraise: As an initial strategic thinking activity it can be helpful to take stock and ask questions which will refresh/renew your knowledge of your organisation/department/team. For example:
  • How does the work really get done around here?
  • What works well? Why?
  • What doesn't work well? Why?
  • Do we know what our colleagues/partners/clients (etc) really think about us?
  • What values are displayed most often? How do these reflect our intentions?
  • Do staff/the team understand our goals/mission/strategic priorities and connect them meaningfully to what they do?

To do this you can observe, join meetings, walk around and talk to people, and listen. It is useful to detach yourself and attempt to see the organisation/department objectively, as if it is new to you. It can be helpful to consider three main areas - people, process, tools/technology.

Get different ideas, views and perspectives and allow these to challenge your views. Expand your horizons and your networks and try to stay curious and questioning. For example:
  • What else is possible here?
  • What does success look like in year #? and year #?
  • What needs to happen to achieve that? (who? when? how? where?)
  • What might get in the way?
  • What will early signs of success and failure look like?
  • What does the team need to know and what resources will be required to support this?
  • Would the achievement of this support the organisation's wider goals?
  • What's my core purpose and agenda here?
  • How should I/am I communicating that?
  • How might I improve that?

Be sure to recognise - and accept - what you don't know as well as what you do. What are the questions you need to ask? A useful technique can be to connect what you know with what you need to know, for example:

"I know....                           I'd like to know...               Therefore my strategy = I need to..."
 
4. Thinking Tools: There are numerous tools and techniques that will help you to structure your strategic thinking. The following three are readily accessible and straightforward:
  • Zoom In/Zoom Out: Developed by Rosabeth Moss Kanter this is based on alternate use of divergent and convergent thinking. See the HBR summary here.
 
  • Develop your 'T': based upon the notion that rounded and well developed leaders are well developed along both the vertical line (|) i.e. they have a depth of understanding and expertise in a particular business area, and along the horizontal line ( ¯ ) i.e. indicating breadth of understanding across the organisation or business. "The whole “T” represents both deep functional expertise and broad business knowledge and acumen. To be more strategic, ask, “What other experiences/perspectives do I need to be more T-shaped?” By developing the top of your “T” the opportunity and ability to borrow and mash ideas increases, resulting in new strategies" (Tawny Lees, CEO.com).
 
  • SWOT analysis: a widely known and used technique (see here for further guidance)
 
5. Ensure you continually Plan, Monitor and Evaluate your progress

When you are faced with a chunk of time newly carved out in your calendar, it can help prompt your thinking and shape the time, if you develop a framework to work to, or even a light 'agenda' that will guide your thinking time and define outcomes. The more productive you become with the time and the more value you derive from it, the easier it becomes for this to become a key habit in your leadership career.

In a future article in this series we'll look at how you can create the mindset or head-space with which to be most creative and effective with your thinking time. 

#NewLeaders
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If you'd like to discuss our work in executive coaching and leadership development, get in touch - enquiries@managingchange.org.uk or call 01223 655667.
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The Characteristics of Good Leaders

7/6/2019

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Leadership development is notoriously difficult to get right. For years consultants, business school gurus and other experts have created new trends as they have attempted to define what makes a good leader and how those characteristics can be developed. 

These trends have included authentic leadership, transformational leadership and emotionally intelligent leadership among others. Whilst it is likely that there is value in all of these there is no evidence at all to suggest that high authenticity or emotional intelligence for example, will cause a person to be a better leader. (Most of us probably know poor leaders who are very authentic or highly emotionally intelligent. If we are very unlucky we have also worked for one!) 

John Antonakis*, Professor of Organisational Behaviour at the University of Lausanne, describes this as the classic problem when experts mix up correlation with causation. Most experts examine the top performing companies and then look to see what their CEOs have in common. They then determine that these are the essential characteristics of success and go on to promote developing those features in others.  Antonakis illustrates the problem: "it’s like studying the top CEOs in Switzerland and saying their names are Hans, Ulrich, Juergen, Joerg, and what have you. What do they have in common? They’re male. If the top 10 performing companies have a male with a Germanic name as CEO, does it mean that you need to have a Swiss German male to run a top performing company? No. Because the bottom performing companies probably also have Swiss German male CEOs running them". 

A very firm advocate of evidence-based practice, Antonakis outlines what the characteristics known to be important in good leaders are:
  • personality traits such as emotional stability, extraversion, conscientiousness and open-mindedness
  • intelligence - to be effective a leader must be smarter than the average in the group BUT not too much smarter as that risks the group not understanding or being left behind
  • task-oriented leadership - having a good grasp of the system, the organisation and the strategy 
Once these essentials are in place, people and communication skills come to the fore (but without these essentials will remain ineffective). Other characteristics may well prove to be important, but the evidence isn't there yet. 

Good, effective assessments for these characteristics are readily available and can form a robust basis for selection and promotion decisions as well as underpinning leadership development programmes.  

To discuss how we can help you with these approaches for development and assessment, or our leadership development programmes generally, do get in touch.

* For the full article go to https://scienceforwork.com/blog/john-antonakis-leadership/
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Building a feedback culture

5/5/2017

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Giving feedback on another's performance and behaviour at work - both positive and negative - is probably the most simple and cost effective means of improving performance. Yet commonly L&D professionals report a reluctance in management and staff to engage in feedback. At the same time UK employees report not receiving enough of it. We know that giving feedback should not be restricted to the annual performance appraisal meeting. In high performance company cultures, giving and receiving feedback constructively is a normal part of the working day. So how can managers and teams be encouraged to do more of it? 


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Attracting and retaining great lawyers - what does it take?

30/1/2017

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The challenge for all businesses to be able to attract and retain the best people they can is well known and much talked about. Many firms turn to their relatively low staff turnover or the number of applicants to their recruitment initiatives and conclude that all is well. But is this right?

Not infrequently we work with people on development programmes and workshops who, to put it charitably, are not exactly 'on fire' with enthusiasm for their job or their firm. Most of them are not doing a poor job but they are not performing anywhere near as well as they could be - meaning that both firm and lawyer suffer. They frequently feel stuck and undervalued in the role and would prefer to be doing something different – or differently. This is not where optimal performance or job satisfaction comes from. From the wider business perspective this also creates vulnerability; the risk of good people being poached by other firms - always a concern - becomes greater.
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What does it take to attract and retain good people who are committed and perform well? 


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Leadership development - uniting 'doing' and 'being'

13/1/2017

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Leadership development continues to be a problem area in UK businesses. Whilst it is consistently regarded as inadequately or even poorly done, the majority of leaders (over 74%) consider that enhancing leadership capability would improve an organisation's prospects. (See our earlier article At the Helm of Unbalanced Ships).

Leadership development programmes in the UK, Europe and US, tend to focus on developing skills (such as managing people, strategic management, etc), those we think of as DOING skills OR, less frequently, to developing the  individual leader's personal strengths and capacities (such as developing EQ, authenticity, etc), the BEING skills. It is rare that these are addressed together in an integrated way. 
54% of those polled considered that leadership development in their organisation was ineffective and a further 44% considered it was poor. [Borderless 2016 Leadership Development Survey]

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Your choice - career or family...?

25/10/2016

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​A couple of weeks ago (10 October) the first female chairman of the Institute of Directors, Lady Judge, caused controversy when she said that mothers risk losing their jobs if they take long maternity breaks. She argued that the American system, which entitles new mothers to 12 weeks of unpaid leave, was better than its UK counterpart because it ensured that women's careers did not "come off the tracks".

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At the helm of unbalanced ships

27/4/2016

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Essentially, and incontrovertibly, leadership makes a difference to company performance. When market and resource opportunities are scarce this impact is significantly amplified. 

In the Borderless 2016 Leadership Development Survey, 54% of those polled considered that leadership development in their organisation was ineffective and nearly a third (29%) were unaware of any leadership development coaching or mentoring initiatives at all.

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