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Blog

Repurposed Leadership

8/3/2016

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If you google the term ‘repurpose’ you will automatically see the word furniture. If you select that search path, you see links that describe 22 clever ways to repurpose old furniture or 12 new uses for old chairs, and dozens of DIY links that help you turn old TVs into dog beds, wooden ladders into bookshelves and old windows into wall art. There is something appealing and satisfying for many when they take an old discarded item and turn it into something new and aesthetic. The pieces of furniture reduce to a sum of parts. Then they are reconstructed and repurposed. Wood is valuable and can be stripped, stained, painted, nailed, sawed, crafted, and carved. For those with creative eyes – the parts are more important than the whole. When you stop and think about it – trees are incredible; their provision is immeasurable.

Often we fail to see the parts to leadership and instead focus on the whole. Leaders in industry ponder what it takes to on-board and develop leaders; then they stew over the ‘opt-out’ phenomenon when their investment in talent results in turnover and churn. Academic journals publish research that tries to make better sense of the gap in female and diverse leaders and why there are more women in graduate programs but less in corner offices and boardrooms. Women make up 48% of the workforce, and yet they fail to hold even 25% of top leadership positions. Leadership as a whole has become unattractive.  Like the old clunky 1970’s television that sits on the shag carpet in the living room, it is impossible to move and has terrible reception.  
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​I believe organizations are focusing on the wrong things when it comes to leadership. Recent studies show that men are opting out of leadership in equal numbers. Women are not the only ones – men are not thrilled about being a clunky television either. Even our young MBA students have aspirations that veer away from top executive roles. This shift in appeal requires private and public sectors to begin a discourse on what it means to re-purpose historical views of leadership. Individuals are not enticed by the 60-hour workweeks, political navigation of institutional games, hauling a laptop home every night and weekend lest they fall behind, or the heavy focus on policy and procedure. To win back top talent that has opted out, leadership roles in general need to move away from a gestalt acceptance and instead be reconstructed. What parts still make sense and what needs to be re-purposed for better results?

​I have worked with clients who have negotiated unique arrangements with their organizations that include everything from sabbaticals, leading short-term projects, sharing leadership, team leadership, outsourcing parts of leadership, to negotiating advanced education in return for short commitments and contributions. This goes beyond work/life balance (something slippery and hard to achieve) and instead focuses on micro-energy management and leveraging strengths that serve both the leader and the organization. These types of conversations and negotiations require creativity, risk, and willingness to change. It is about re-purposing.
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It is unrealistic for organizations to assume these agreements will result in total retention. Instead, they should assume turnover and negotiate with top talent for one or two-year terms that allow both parties opportunity for exploration and off ramping without harm. The days of employment commitment are unrecognizable in today’s changing environment. Instead, organizations need to provide seasoned leaders with career experiences that move organizational performance while allowing for individual flexibility. Like a good oak, effective leaders (under the right conditions) can bring immeasurable worth to a business.

What would it look like to re-purpose leadership in your organization?
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    Carrie Arnold, PhD, MCC, BCC

    Carrie Arnold, PhD, MCC, BCC

    In no particular order: Author | Dog mom to Moose | Speaker | Reader  Mom to human offspring  Wife | Lover of Learning Leadership coach & consultant, The Willow Group | Fellow, Institute for Social Innovation | Program Director for Evidence-Based Coaching at Fielding Graduate University 

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Carrie Arnold, PhD, MCC
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