The Theory Behind the Practice: A Brief Introduction to the Adaptive Leadership Framework
This summary of The Theory Behind the Practice: A Brief Introduction to the Adaptive Leadership Framework was prepared in support of Grantmakers in the Arts’ and Hillombo’s Pro-BIPOC Arts Funding Community of Practice Workshop.
Adaptive leadership is the practice of mobilizing people to tackle tough challenges & thrive
- Adaptive leadership is about change that enables the capacity to thrive
- What does thriving mean in your particular context?
- Leadership must wrestle with normative questions of value, purpose & process
- Leadership must orchestrate multiple stakeholder priorities to define thriving and then realize it
- Successful adaptive changes build on the past
- Successful adaptations are both conservative & progressive
- Engage people in distinguishing what is essential to preserve from their organization/agency’s heritage from what is expendable
- Anchor change in the values, competencies and strategic orientations that should endure in the organization/agency
- Organizational/agency adaptation occurs through experimentation
- Utilize an experimental mind-set
- Learn to improvise as you go
- Buy time & resources along the way for the next set of experiments
- Adaptation relies on diversity
- Build a culture that values diverse views & relies less on central planning & top-down management
- New adaptations significantly displace, reregulate & rearrange some old DNA
- This is felt by some or even by many as loss
- Learning is often painful, causing some to feel incompetent, betrayed or irrelevant
- Leadership requires the diagnostic ability to recognize those losses and the predictable defensive patterns of response
- Leadership requires knowing how to counteract these patterns of loss & defensiveness
- Adaptation takes time
- Significant change is the produce of incremental experiments that build up over time
- Culture changes slowly
- Progress is radical over time yet incremental in time, taking time to consolidate into new sets of norms & processes
- Adaptive leadership requires persistence; Stay in the game, even while taking heat along the way
The Illusion of the Broken System
- Any social system is the way it is because the people in that system (at least those with the most leverage) want it that way
- Every organization/agency is perfectly aligned to achieve the results it currently gets
- No one who tries to name or address the dysfunction in an organization/agency will be popular
- Closing the gap between the espoused value and the current reality, the value-in-practice, would be more painful to the dominant coalition than living with it
- The importance of this idea lies in the impact it has on the techniques for trying to address the problem
- When you realize that what you see as a dysfunction in the system works for others in the system, you stop focusing on trying to convince them of the rightness of your cause
- You instead begin focusing on how to mobilize and sustain people through the period of risk that often comes with adaptive change
Distinguishing Technical Problems from Adaptive Challenges
- Technical problems have known solutions that include the application of authoritative expertise through the organization’s current processes
- Adaptive challenges can only be addressed through changes in people’s priorities, beliefs, habits, and loyalties
- Making progress requires going beyond any authoritative expertise to mobilize discovery, shedding certain entrenched ways, tolerating losses, and generating the new capacity to thrive anew
- Many situations are a mix of technical problem & adaptive challenge & you must learn to differentiate between the elements
- The role of LOSS in adaptive challenges
- The adaptive part can be found in the LOSS this change would represent for a stakeholder or group of stakeholders
- The common factor in generative adaptive failure is resistance to loss
- A key to leadership is the diagnostic capacity to found out the kinds of losses at stake in a changing situation
- Jobs, wealth, status, relevance, community, identity, competence, others
- Adaptive leadership puts you in the business of assessing, managing, distributing and providing context for losses
- This context must move people through those losses to a new place
- Balance loss with conservation of the best of what the organization/agency is
- Answering questions about adaptive change and the losses involved is difficult because the answers require tough choices, trade-offs & the uncertainty of ongoing, experimental trial & error
- It challenges individuals’ & organizations’/agencies’ investments in relationships, competence & identity
- It requires a modification of the stories they have been telling themselves & the rest of the world about what they believe in, stand for & represent
- Answering questions about adaptive change and the losses involved is difficult because the answers require tough choices, trade-offs & the uncertainty of ongoing, experimental trial & error
Distinguishing Leadership from Authority
- Authority is power entrusted for services valued by the authorizer(s)
- Leaders challenge expectations & find ways to disappoint people without pushing them over the edge
- Managing the resistance you will inevitably trigger
Living in the Disequilibrium
- Honoring the reality that adaptive processes will be accompanied by distress means having compassion for the pain that comes with deep change
- Disturbing people is not the point or the purpose, but a consequence
- Keep the temperature in the Productive Zone of Disequilibrium
- Enough heat generated by your intervention to gain attention, engagement & forward motion
- But NOT so much that the organization/agency or your part in it explodes
Observe, Interpret, Intervene
Each of the processes below are highly iterative: You repeatedly refine your observations, interpretations & interventions
- Observe events & patterns around you
- This is a highly subjective activity that you will try to make objective:
- Get off the dance floor & onto the balcony to gain some distance to watch yourself as well as others interact
- Ask others to do likewise
- This is a highly subjective activity that you will try to make objective:
- Interpret what you are observing (developing multiple hypotheses about what is really going on)
- Think through your interpretation of what you have observed before you act
- Ask, “Is my explanation for what is happening correct? What are some alternative hypotheses?”
- With time and increasing skill at adaptive leadership, you may find yourself actively holding more than one interpretation about a particular observation at any moment
- This may include your holding mutually exclusive interpretations at the same time
- While you will improve with time, your interpretation remains a guess
- Interpreting is more challenging than observing
- Making your interpretation public is itself an intervention & often a provocative one
- You raise the risk of angering people who have formed different interpretations
- Design interventions based on the observation & interpretations to address the adaptive challenge you have identified
Interventions as Experiments
- Your intervention should:
- Reflect your hypothesis about the problem
- Be considered an experiment (by yourself and perhaps by others)
- Be in the service of a shared purpose
- Your intervention should:
- Provide context: Connect your interpretation of the problem to the task at hand so that people can see that your perspective is relevant to their collective efforts
- Take into account the resources available to your organization or agency
- Consider your positional power in relation to others & calibrate your effort accordingly
- Consider the skills and resources in your own toolkit
- Be sufficiently outside your comfort zone so that you don’t continue to apply your standard interventions to every situation
- Going outside your comfort zone also mitigates opponents’ strategies to deflect your efforts
Experiment and Take Risks Smartly
- Actively commit to the intervention you’ve designed but don’t let yourself become wedded to it
- This allows you to consider and integrate unanticipated possibilities
- This facilitates the iterative nature of the adaptive leadership process
Engage Above and Below the Neck
- Use your multiple intelligences (intellectual, emotional, spiritual & physical) & your multiple physical centers (mind, body, heart)
- Connect with the values, beliefs and anxieties of the people you are trying to move
- Arguments and facts don’t matter when your colleagues are stuck in their hearts and their stomachs – you must meet them there
Connect to Purpose
- What purpose is worth the risk?
- If you try to achieve this purpose, will you produce results valued in your organization?
- Defining a shared purpose is often challenging & painful; Some narrower interests will need to be sacrificed in the interests of the whole
- When you face a tough decision or when prospects for success look bleak, reminding one another what you are trying to do provides guidance, sustenance & inspiration