Resources to Engage your People

Resources to Better Engage Your People in Change Leadership

Resources to Engage your People

In our article on ‘The Future of Change‘ we looked at the time dilemma facing those in leadership positions. Basically, how we need to overcome the pressure on our time created by a reactive approaches. Coupled with proposing practical strategies for stealing that time back to think ‘smarter’ about what’s coming.

everybody leads change

One thing the article didn’t cover however, is how the nature of ‘who’ is ‘leadership’ is also changing.
As more and more of human routine gets handled by AI, bots and automation, inevitably more and more of human responsibility will concern non-routine activity. Primarily activity concerned with change, relationships, and change in relationships. Much of this change will need to be autonomous, self-directed. In part this is to avoid further overloading established leadership roles. But in bigger part, it will be because we will need to make these changes quickly and with direct understanding of the specific situation. Change leadership becomes everybody’s responsibility.
People at all levels will be making decisions that will change the nature of their relationships with their colleagues and all around them. They too will effectively be in leadership. This is a concept that is well understood in new coaching models – that we lead up, across, and within, as well as down. As Steven Covey put it ‘Leadership is a choice, not a position’.
But how will they make decisions? Will they also get the thinking time necessary?
Perhaps that is the wrong question. The reality is that, unless they get to spend some of their time in thinking, they too will spend far more of their time in redoing, fixing, dealing with consequences, or other inefficiency.

Learning to Lead Change

Somehow, we, the people in more established leadership roles, need to prepare them for this choice. And prepare them for how to make the best decisions.
The best way to do this is to involve them in the decisions being made at a higher level. Doing so will bring for clear benefits. One, they will learn good thinking practices and tools. Two, they will learn the importance of engaging others in their own decisions. Three they will understand better how it all fits together, and have ownership that their decisions need to support that. And four, their more detailed knowledge and insight will be available to make the higher level decisions better.
Engaging people in decisions on a whiteboard with sticky notesProviding of course that the higher-level decisions are an exemplar of this approach.
We have spent a large part of the last 30 years modelling such participative decision making in top-level workshops. And also in lower-level meetings.
Library of Participative Decision Tools and Selection MatrixOver time we have developed and collated a wide range of practical resources to support this. We have made these resources freely available to all those seeking to better engage the hearts and minds of their people. And we have developed practical pathways for people to learn how to use them. Starting with easy intuitive tools and techniques, and building to more sophisticated ones. Basically, we have a tool for every situation, and every level of ability. We will provide links to explain these shortly, but first, there is a key point to make.

these tools are not dialogue-centric

That doesn’t mean that we don’t think dialogue is important. We do! Indeed, we think balanced, supportive, insightful, dialogue is vital! And all of our tools are designed to lead onto and furnish such dialogue. It is just that we find, in meetings where verbal dialogue is pretty much the only form of communication, it is rarely balanced, supportive, insightful or inclusive. As such it is often a poor example of good decision making.
The reality is, as tensions rise, it tends to be overly-controlled by certain personalities, and dominated by those who believe their ideas should prevail. As such, it typically disadvantages those who may be quieter, more reflective, diverse, creative, introvert or junior. And it disadvantages them to the extent that, in some organisations, dominant personalities are more likely to succeed, and end up leading future meetings, and maintaining this culture.
But we need to use our meetings to build real participation and ownership at all levels, across diverse populations. Consequently, we need to give everyone a ‘voice’ so they can share in the ownership of the result, and cascade that commitment to their people.
Many of the toolsets you will encounter through the links below are about building that voice through non verbal participation. But, in doing so, they ensure that everybody’s opinion is ‘out there’. And, because of this, it informs a richer, more creative dialogue based on a broader context, more creative input, and more diverse sources.

Resources to Support Change Leadership

Glass orb representing the first 50 adventures in Leading by Adventure

Leading by Adventure – Series 1

Series 1 began on 5th January 2021 and completed on 25th January 2022. It has been a rich and varied exploration from a wide range of different perspectives. The full catalogue can be seen below.
If you have missed any of the adventures, you will (for the next few months at least) be able to access them from the adventures library.

What next?

I have been working on ideas for Series 2, and at some point I would like to launch another series of 50 adventures. If you have any ideas for inclusion in this please get in touch with me.
However, the current series of adventures represents a pretty comprehensive resource for anyone wishing to stretch and exercise their ‘leading by adventure’ muscles (see below). That said, I do not believe they are at their best as a library. I think they work better as a weekly programme. And so my intention, at some point, is to create a mailing service which people can initiate independently.
If you know of someone that would like to use this service, and would like to accelerate my development of it please get in touch.
In the meantime, I plan to refocus my efforts on the toolchest. To continue the work in helping people make their meetings and team work more participative, inclusive and uplifting. These resources also represent ‘leading by adventure’ – the facilitation of people to share new perspectives and develop new skill sets.
For that reason, if you have not done so already, I would suggest that you subscribe to the toolchest (it is free). This will enable you to keep updated and refreshed with new ways that you can inspire and energise your team.

Series 1 Catalogue

Images of adventures 1-50
If you have missed any of the adventures, or would like to revisit them, you will (for the next few months at least) be able to access them from the adventures library.
Image of woman staring at futuristic images - metaphor for leading adventure in others

Leading Adventure in Others

“The future is a different country, they do things differently there”.

At some point the future will become our place of residence. But, if we are to make ourselves at home in it … If we are to realise its potential … We will need to embrace that transition. Adventuring is about developing that readiness to journey into it.
To illustrate what I mean, I would ask you to take a look at the people around you. If you do, you are likely to find a spectrum of different attitudes to their current situation and responsibilities.
Some are stressed, disappointed, disengaged, entrenched, resistant, awkward, resentful.
And some are excited, enthused, immersed, joyful, curious, compassionate.
Some are victims of the changes that have brought them to where they are
And some are adventurers within it.
There are those who have attitudes that help them to see the opportunities in change. These attitudes are fed and reinforced by what they make of those opportunities. And this helps to nourish their mental health.
And there are others who have attitudes which focus on the risks and the downsides of change. They resist the new, cling to the old, and may be unprepared for what happens. As a result their attitude is also fed and reinforced by their experience, and their mental health suffers.

the danger for all of us is that the increasing rate of change is likely to push us in the wrong direction…

Most of us, fall somewhere closer to the middle of this spectrum.
But the danger for all of us is that the increasing rate of change is likely to push us in the wrong direction unless we intentionally increase our ability to engage positively with it. That has been the purpose of the Leading by Adventure programme.

… unless we intentionally increase our ability to engage positively with it

Over the three months from April to June 2021, Leading by Adventure focused on the ‘leading’ element of adventure. It shared a sequence of tools that can be used to facilitate the engagement of teams with the opportunities of change: SWOT, Forcefields, Fishbones, Intuition, Hopes & Concerns, Brutethink, Staying Open, PMI, Solution Effect, ORID, Kanban, and Review.  And it has also shared tailored resources to support this in the form of Virtual Flipcharts and Instant Whiteboards.
12 video stills of the Adventure series on leading adventure in others
 
These tools help to enable people to contribute better to what is happening. And through this to take fuller ownership of the possibilities. By using them, leaders can better develop the attitudes and the skill set of their people in rising above the change, and seeing its pattern and potential. They can navigate change, rather than feel subject to it. They can see themselves as adventurers not victims.
The exercises in Leading by Adventure., help us to practice the skills of ‘journey’ in ourselves and our team. Deliberately taking a few minutes out each week to try something new. To develop our intellectual and emotional ‘muscles’ in embracing a growth mindset.
To access the full set of Adventures to date, please click here.