Leadership
Leadership has been coming up a lot for me recently. I recently filled an acting position, looking after Collection Services while my manager was away on leave for 6 weeks. Not a simple caretaking stint, there was a lot going on with budget estimates, recruitment, projects, etc. and I have had a bit of time to reflect since my manager has returned.
In the past couple of weeks I have also attended a couple of professional development workshops through work - the first was about 'Effective Leadership' and the other was on the topic of 'problem solving and decision making'
The first workshop (Effective Leadership) was a whole day session with a fantastic facilitator. The workshop covered some of the characteristics of high-performing teams, how the role and the subsequent expectations of a leader/manager has changed drastically in the past few years (COVID, working from home, cost of living pressures) and how leaders can build build effective teams.
- Communicating a shared vision and passion
- Demonstrating self-awareness
- Building effective teams
- Coaching and developing others
- Using personal stories to tie work goals to my passions in order to enlist/engage others
- Identifying trust 'wobbles' and working to improve either 'empathy, Logic or authenticity' (or all three!) in interpersonal interactions
- Tips/techniques on how to better facilitate meetings
- Coaching methodology - the GROW model
The GROW coaching method is something that I have been through before (it always help to refresh the memory!) but for me personally, moving out of 'solutions' mode has always been difficult. If someone comes to me with a problem, I will want to solve it but I can absolutely see how a coaching model can lead to better outcomes for everyone. I am working on the ability to determine whether a problem is a simple operational issue that can be easily resolved or if its an oportunity to dig deeper and turn it into a coaching session. Often we are so busy that you just automatically go to solution mode but knowing when I should be taking a step back, moving to the balcony view and seeing if there would be a benefit to shifting to a coaching approach is what I really want to develop.
I think being a parent really helps with this - I want my children to become self-sufficient so I often end up asking "How would you fix it?" (usually to the unhappy groans of my kids). As part of another leadership course I participated in a couple of years ago, I read the book "The Coaching Habit" by Michael Bungay Stanier. A fantastic book which I really enjoyed reading and would recommend to anyone interested. It outlines a number of different questions (7 from memory) that can be used in a coaching conversation, but I think my favourite 'go-to' (that I need to start using more when people come to me with a problem) is "That’s a great question, I have some ideas, but before I answer, what are your thoughts?".