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Team Work Leadership And Knowledge
Management
Is It All The Same Game?
By: Tony Frost is CEO, Sirocco
Strategy Management
INTRODUCTION
During the 20th century organisations
became increasingly aware of the power of the effective combination
of leadership, teamwork and knowledge management. Although
a lot of research has been conducted about these elements,
very few organisations really get it right so that teams and
the individuals within teams perform at their optimum levels.
This article will primarily explore effective leadership and
teamwork and will use analogies from Africa to explain these
organisational elements.
The quest to find what makes the magic
of great leaders has been unceasing and will no doubt continue
for many years to come. The debate around the genetic versus
the environmental production of leaders and leadership has
by no means come to an end. Quite a lot is known about the
characteristics of great leaders or at least some of the characteristics
of great leaders. The question remains as to what causes these
characteristics to appear in certain people at certain times
and why others who apparently have the same characteristics
appear not to be able to reach complete performance of their
potential. There is growing awareness that the aggregate of
all the skills, competencies and knowledge that resides within
the individuals of an organisation does not necessary translate
into a collective organisational knowledge and wisdom. There
is also an appreciation that in this modern and fast changing
world of ours those companies that learn to learn fastest
are probably going to be the companies that survive and grow
into the new era economy. What is not widely known is how
to identify, harness and harvest the knowledge that exists
in abundance in all organisations. What is well known is that
knowledge and wisdom have the capacity to walk. And often
very fast!
THE MAGIC OF TEAMWORK
There can be few experiences more gratifying
for one interested in organisational growth and development
than to watch a team come together and begin to weave its
magical web of success into everything the team does. I suppose
it is possible for this to happen by accident but generally
this success is the result of a desire of all of the participants
to work together to achieve a clear and common goal. It often
includes an infusion of ideas and energy from interested stakeholders.
It certainly involves a great deal of networking and sharing
between the important team stakeholders and indeed amongst
the team members themselves.
In the African bush the Lion's entire
survival is predicated on his capacity to work as a member
of a team. Without teamwork Lions have very little chance
of survival. This applies particularly to the male Lion that
has less than 50% chance of survival at birth. If he can survive
to adulthood, the moment he becomes a threat to the dominant
male in the group he will either be killed by the dominant
male or leave the group to avoid being killed by the dominant
male. On his own out in the wilderness he has less than 50%
chance of survival. Often he will team up with another young
Lion that has been expelled from his group. Together they
will work out a "modus operandus" that will ensure
their survival up to the day they decide to find a group to
challenge for the leadership and thereby gain a brand-new
ready-made family. Only the fittest and toughest male Lions
survive the exigencies of life and are able to play their
role as a dominant male in the group. This process also ensures
that the gene pool is constantly reenergised and revitalised
with genes from only the best males. How do we make sure in
our teams that our selection process is such that we take
only the very best for the team?
The other thing that the Lion teaches
us is the importance of role clarity within the team, not
only for the individual concerned, but also clarity about
the roles of other members of the team by all team members.
Without this clarity, fleet-footed and nimble young male Lions
and Lionesses will attempt to pull down a Buffalo Bull and
the lazy heavily-muscled male Lion may even attempt the impossible
- to kill an Impala.
From the very earliest age, Lions are
engaged in a constant quest to learn more about what they
do best and that is, ensuring their survival. They are born
with the equipment; they have to learn the skills. Lion cubs
start their hunting activity practising on grasshoppers, tortoises
and chameleons, they graduate to bigger things as their competence
and skill progresses. During this process they learn that
learning does not come cost free: that it does require taking
some risks and involves all the team members. Since members
activities can vary, they practice team activities from the
very beginning. Mentoring and coaching play a very important
part of this lifelong learning process.
Another wild animal that has a great
deal to teach us about the power of teamwork and in particular
how important multi-skilling is in a team is the Wild Dog.
The Wild Dogs hunt in packs and kill by attrition. In other
words they chase their prey until they basically drop from
exhaustion. The problem with this approach is that none of
the Wild Dogs knows when the prey will drop. So, in the process
of their relay running, every dog has to be fully prepared
to apply the coup d'grace. This means each dog has to have
developed all of the skills required for hunting. This is
different than those required by each Lion focused on the
skills he/she needs for his/her particular job in the hunt.
All the herding animals like Buffalo,
Duiker, Zebra, Wildebeest and Elephant have a great deal to
teach us about the power of synergy and the, as yet untapped,
resource of intuition. Great teams have these in abundance.
When you watch great teams working there is a great deal of
overt communication but there is also substantial subliminal
and intuitive communication between the members of the team.
This is not something that can easily be taught and certainly
not something that happens quickly. It is a faculty that develops
over time and requires focus and hard work to achieve and
inculcate into each member of the team and the team as a whole.
There are two other really important
elements of excellent teamwork displayed by the great teams;
the first is an attitude or culture of inclusion. Great teams
work hard to make sure that all team members and key stakeholders
feel included in the team. Look at what some of the world's
great sporting teams have done and how hard they have worked
to create a sense of inclusion amongst their fans. If you
watch a rugby football game in South Africa involving the
Natal Sharks and particularly at their home ground, all the
fans arrive donned in black from head to toe. Even their faces
get painted pitch black. The sense of inclusion is an important
part of building a culture around the key focus of the team.
Another important element is that great
teams build strategic alliances. We see this all over but
no less in the wild where the red-billed Oxpecker cleans the
Buffalo, Eland, Rhino and Giraffe and other bigger antelopes
of the lice and ticks that plague them in the bush. They also
provide an early warning system because their listening and
seeing faculties are so sharply developed. They make a terrific
noise at the approach of any form of danger. The big antelope
tolerate some of the less pleasant aspects of the alliance
because of these benefits. For example, the black Rhino develops
painful lifetime wounds as a result of the pecking of the
Oxpecker. They tolerate the pain and discomfort for the benefits
that the little Oxpeckers bring to their relationship.
THE MYTHS AND LEGENDS OF LEADERSHIP
Leaders are the stuff legends are made
of. If one reads through the worlds history and storybooks
they abound with vivid images of leaders that have achieved
both great and terrible things. Attila Hun, Mahatma Ghandi,
Adolph Hitler and Nelson Mandela all widely recognised as
being inspirational leaders. All recognised as having achieved
hugely although not always wonderfully through their capacity
to engage the power of people. It is this essence namely the
ability to harness the power of people for worthwhile purposes
that we strive to achieve in organisations today. Let us just
look at some of the key characteristics widely recognised
as being important in the achievement of energising leadership.
Vision
Of all the animals, the Eagle epitomises
the best type of vision that great leaders bring to the organisation.
They are able to see both the big picture and each element
of that big picture with great clarity and perspective. It
is crucial that the team understands the big picture clearly
but in order for members to give that vision their whole-hearted
commitment and support. It is equally important for them to
understand in some detail their particular role within that
big picture.
Followership
One of the major misconceptions about
leadership is that it is about the leader. If one examines
the behaviour and activities of the great leaders that have
succeeded beyond all dreams and against all possible odds,
it is clear that leadership is much more about followership.
The simple fact of the matter is that without followers, leaders
have no role. Great leaders therefore understand this dynamic
fundamentally and have learnt to tap in, to be part of, and
live, actively and energetically, amongst those who follow
them.
Structure
In Africa, the Buffalo teaches us more
than most other animals about followership than leadership.
Notwithstanding the awesome power, strength, virility of the
Bull Buffalo that leads the herd, he understands full well
that without the herd his chances of survival are limited
to probably no more than 24 hours-- unless he manages to find
some other Buffalo bachelors with whom he can live out his
remaining days. He realises that his power comes from all
of the ears, all of the eyes, all of the noses, all of the
hooves and all the intuition of the entire herd of sometimes
as many as 300 or 400 or 500. He understands full well that
power is mostly about giving it away and not trying to exercise
control over it.
Great leaders have learnt the importance
of avoiding, like the plague, the corrosion of hierarchy and
bureaucracy. Like the ant and the bee that place themselves
at the middle of the organisation and not on the sharp point
at the top of the pyramid, great leaders know that in the
middle they are most accessible, most visible, most available,
best protected and most nurtured. Most importantly, they are
in a better position to be most able to communicate with the
greatest number of their followers at the same time. It has
always been interesting to me that, particularly in the early
days of mass-based unionism in South Africa, the trade union
leaders were always seen in the middle of the crowd, not at
the periphery.
Focus and Dominance
There is a misconception I believe in
these days of participation and inclusivity that the leader
must not stamp his / her authority on his/ her domain. This
is a complete fallacy. In fact, when one looks at great leaders
of the modern age like Mahatma Ghandi, Nelson Mandela, Margaret
Thatcher, Winston Churchill and others, I am sure one of the
things that is abundantly clear, is not only were they tough
but they were pre-eminently dominant. This dominance came
in part from a very clear focus on the future and what was
needed to be achieved but also on their capacity to give power
away and to trust people.
Territory Knowledge
Unfortunately, we often make assumptions
about how well we know the territory in which we operate.
Another analogy may help to illustrate this point. The Rhino
is almost completely blind. It does not have eyesight capable
of seeing much more than movement. And yet the Rhino, all
three tons of pure passion, can charge across the African
savannah at 30 kilometers an hour without falling or running
into a tree.
IMPORTANCE OF KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
Knowledge management has a number of
characteristics: it is data organised into an understandable
and clear framework, information that can be applied and knowledge
that has been shaped by experience/life. Wisdom is when knowledge
has been tested and shaped by experience and by the success
and failures in the University of Life.
The management of knowledge is
largely still in its infancy. As the experiential wheel of
information technology and management winds itself up to greater
and greater speeds our capacity to manage knowledge is going
to be stretched more and more and certainly way beyond what
we can imagine even today. It is important to emphasise that
most of the emphasis on knowledge management thus far has
been based on information technology. However organisations
are not driven by technology. Sensible organisations use technology
to facilitate communication and the flow of information. Knowledge
growth depends almost entirely on human beings having the
willingness and keenness to develop amongst themselves an
openness, which allows the information and knowledge to flow
freely for continued and ongoing personal, team and organisational
learning and growth.
PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER
We know that the world's best businesses
have learnt that the route not only to survival but to growth
and development in the new era economy will certainly include
learning faster than the competition. Excellent teams are
characterised by a culture of trust, openness and sharing,
and a shared common vision. The important thing to remember
here is that one can not just focus on teamwork, or leadership,
or knowledge management. The model that one builds for the
business should be one that takes all three of these into
account and builds an interconnected and synergistic plan.
It must ensure that the three components are also part of
every activity engaged in by the business and in particularly
training and developing activities.
To give one example of this, a client
of ours found that after years of investing in skills training,
productivity remained flat. After in-depth discussion and
diagnosis, we recommended that they should step up their adult
education initiative to ensure a much higher level of literacy
and numeracy; they should take natural work teams and teach
these teams thinking skills adapted from the De Bono model
and introduce these natural work teams to the important components
of teamworking. The focus of their training was on work and
safety but also on building relationships, networks and leadership.
These teams were taught about the importance of creating a
shared common vision, building a common value base, creating
a definite sense of direction and providing advice and support
to each other. The organisational profits that flowed from
this programme started 4 years ago and still running was five
times the costs. This is a real return on investment!
Tony Frost is CEO, Sirocco Strategy
Management, South Africa. He is author of After the
Rain published by Knowledge Resources, South Africa.
For further information, contact: sirocco@icon.co.za
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