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Quantum Leadership

Posted by Ron Price on Monday, June 30, 2008 at 6:53 AM
Categories: Leadership Development, Executive Coaching, Performance

One of my favorite weekend activities is reading.  When I allow inquisitiveness to overrule my childish desire to finish one book before starting another, I like to read from several related books simultaneously.  This weekend was one of those times.  I moved back and forth from several different books exploring something I refer to as “quantum” leadership.  It is based on synthesizing and applying much of what has been learned over the past two decades about quantum physics, quantum mechanics, and systems thinking.  One of the most important aspects of quantum theory is that the relationship between the parts is more important than the parts.  Here is one of the excerpts from my reading that is most stimulating to me in my own exploration of leadership:

“We tried for many years to avoid the messiness and complexity of being human, and now that denial is coming back to haunt us.  We keep failing to create the outcomes and changes we need in organizations because we continue to deny that ‘the human element’ is anything but a ‘soft’ and not-to-be-taken-seriously minor distraction.  We barely manage to survive the seemingly endless procession of organizational change fads and new ideas, each of which promises to make organizations more effective.  CEOs acknowledge that about three-fourths of these efforts have failed.  This terrible record of failure is, in my estimation, due to approaches that are predominantly technical and mechanistic.  New technology is purchased; new organization charts are drawn; new training classes are offered.  But most human dynamics are completely ignored:  our need to trust one another, our need for meaningful work, our desire to contribute and be thanked for that contribution, our need to participate in changes that affect us.”

“Beyond the fads that have swept through large organizations, think of all the contemporary leadership problems that are variations on the theme that we don’t know how to work together.  We struggle to help teams form quickly and work effectively.  We struggle to learn how to work with the uniqueness that we call diversity.  We are terrified of the emotions aroused by conflict, loss, love.  In all of these struggles, it is being human that creates the problem.  We have not yet learned how to be together.  I believe we have been kept apart by three primary Western cultural beliefs:  individualism, competition, and a mechanistic world view.  Western culture, even as it continues to influence people everywhere, has not prepared us to work together in this new world of relationships.  And we don’t even know that we lack these skills.  In a simple example of the difficulties created by this ignorance, many MBA graduates who’ve been in the field a few years report that they wish they had focused more on organizational behavior and people skills while in school.”

“Leadership and the New Science – Discovering Order in a Chaotic World”, Margaret J. Wheatley

This hits close to the core of why Price Associates exists.  We are explorers, along side our clients, to help discover new opportunities in a changing world.





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