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Media Interview

Women in Leadership: How to Find Your Authentic Voice

Do Women Make Better Crisis Leaders? 

Leadership effectiveness is about the extent to which people are willing to follow the direction a leader sets. We support what we help to create. What makes people most likely to follow a direction is the opportunity to have a voice and contribute to the direction and to feel heard in the process. Leaders who are able to listen, be curious, take in multiple perspectives, navigate decisions that do not have easy answers, consider the impact on both people and results, and get things done are far more likely to build relationships and trust…someone that others want to follow. 

There are three languages of communication that we speak in: 

  1. Power
  2. Affect
  3. Meaning 

women in leadership

Men Vs Women Leaders: Who Speaks Affect?

Men and women both can and do speak in Affect, But organizations can have cultural biases that minimize or silence communication in affect. I’ve witnessed leadership teams where someone would inquire about how the staff might feel about a decision and the response was sentiments like – ‘this is work, it’s not personal’ or ‘I don’t know, I’m not their therapist’. Those beliefs hinder anyone from bringing the voice of affect, which is needed at all times, but most certainly in a time of crisis. 

Our societal norms make it more socially acceptable for women to bring the voice of affect,which is one reason this skill might be more developed for women. Yet this is ultimately about having range in your behavior and communication;meaning that it’s available and accessible to men as well. 

Obstacles that Dissuade Women from Actively Pursuing Leadership Roles

Many years ago as I took on a new leadership role I was told by the CEO “I don’t think you have what it takes to lead.”About six months later he came back to me and said “I was very wrong.”. Leadership is not a cookie cutter mold – it looks different on everyone and yet women often get told we are ‘too much’ of something or ‘not enough’ of something else. Women are often judged or critiqued against an old mental model of what leadership looks like. We need to change that. Our job in corporate America is to welcome differences in leadership – we need leaders who are effective and capable of bringing a whole range of behavior and communication propensities to their role. 

Women Who Pushed Back Are an Inspiration

I’m inspired by many women who have a story to tell where they pushed back against feedback or norms that said ‘you can’t do it that way’. Oprah tells a story about when she first launched her talk show and after a bad experience with a guest segment she made a personal decision that she would no longer invite certain types of guests. She got lots of push back about how that would not work and people would not watch. Amidst all of that feedback she maintained her clear vision about the impact she wanted to have and what she believed was needed. It’s a real example to me of clarity of purpose and trusting your gut instinct that makes it your own brand of leadership – not someone else’s.  

Advice for Young Women Entering the Workforce

Don’t take it personally if someone thinks your version of leadership is not leadership. Treat it as a data point and decide what you want to do from there. Keep in mind that the feedback is as much about them as it is you. Find your own authentic voice and then find the place that is the right fit for you. Pay attention to your gut instinct. When a team or company does not feel like a good fit – follow that instinct before you get locked into believing that you don’t have any other options and you have to just be miserable in order to bring home a paycheck. 

Impactful Business Lessons From the Pandemic to Carry Forward

When I draw a timeline of my professional and personal life, what I have come to learn is that many of the high moments are preceded by a low moment – a time when it felt like everything was being pulled out from under my feet. 

So coming into 2020 I already had a value of looking at those ‘low’ moments as a place to create rather than get caught up in the disappointment, fear or longing for what once was. So in March of 2020 I pivoted the whole business to go from executive coaching and leading workshops in the room across the country to coaching and leading workshops online – and it worked! My business had transitioned to completely remote since 2012, so we already knew how to work online. 

I have learned the value of not being so attached to how we do things currently that I miss the moments to invent, create and pivot to something completely new. It’s important to observe what’s needed and be willing to try small experiments that you can learn from quickly. The pandemic taught me to be okay with things not being perfect and make it okay for others as well. I call it the year of our beautiful human imperfections – where it’s okay to bring your full-self to work. 

Find your Superpower as a Female Leader

I know this about me: I care about and I frequently seek the perspectives of others. I do both of these without thinking, so they come naturally. I’ve learned to find the balance of not over caring – meaning filling that role for others. I have also learned that there are times to seek perspective and time to just make a decision and move forward. 

I encourage you to find and nurture your superpower. It may take some trial and error to land on it, so start now and take notes. (or something to wind this up.)

Marsha

An earlier version of this article was published in HR.com as part of their Women in Leadership series. 

Agile Has Stickiness: An Interview With Agilist and Leadership Coach Marsha Acker

In a recent interview with Yves Hanoulle, I talked about ‘Agile has stickiness’. 

Yves was a wonderful host. We talked about the following:

  • My two degrees in engineering
  • How when I want to do something, I just do it…
  • My passion for growing leadership in others
  • At what age I started talking about leadership to my daughter
  • What I learned about doing harm to others
  • How difficult the world is for a 13 year old to navigate
  • How I plan whitespace and how I use it
  • How I think online working has an impact on diversity
  • The stickiness of agile

We also talked about these books:

The Art & Science of Facilitation

Agile software development in the large

Synchronicity the inner path of leadership

Cultivating Transformations

Watch the full episode here:

How Collective Intelligence Can Change Culture

Come think with me!

Here are a few questions I have for you as we start this conversation about collective intelligence.

  • Do you know how to have a conversation?
  • Have you ever experienced a time when you thought you were showing up to a conversation, but instead you got yelled at? 
  • You showed up to a conversation and instead everyone was multitasking on their phones, or on another device? 
  • Have you ever showed up to a conversation and instead one person really spoke the entire time and you didn’t really have a voice in the conversation at all?

George Bernard Shaw said it best:

“The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place.”

Often we think we are communicating when we are really doing something else entirely! 

What Kinds of Conversations Do You Have?

Let’s look at metaphorically how the conversations can be broken down. 

[This comes from work done by William Isaacs.]

1) Monologue

Single voice.Turn taking. Download.

2) Debate

Beating down. Advocacy. There is a winner and a loser. I am holding strongly to a point of view and my job is to persuade, convince, cajole: to bring you over to my point of view. 

3) Discussion

It means to break apart. It feels a bit like table tennis. You take a topic and pull it apart in different ways and then it gets lobbed back and forth a bit. 

4) Skillful Conversation

It’s the first time where inquiry comes into the conversation. It’s a bit like plowing a field. We stick long enough with a topic to understand what’s there, we are inquiring and asking questions of others.

5) Dialogue

It’s metaphorically like a pool of water. We’re contributing to a pool of meaning. And everybody has equal voice. There aren’t any particular sides. There is no known objective. The idea and new thinking emerges from conversation, rather than somebody bringing ‘the idea’ into the conversation.

The Art & Science of Conversations

I believe that conversations are the single greatest predictor of success. 

Whether we are or aren’t having them and if we can learn to be more intentional about how we invite conversation, how we participate, cultivate and facilitate dialogue, I don’t believe there is anything, any challenge, any initiative that an organization is taking on that they can not skillfully navigate towards an effective outcome! 

Active engagement in skillful conversation and dialogue is the key to collective intelligence and culture change!  

“The fastest way to change the culture in an organization is by changing the way we talk and think together.”

Mindset Work is Needed To Engage in Meaningful Dialogue

It might take an organisation 1-2 years to put these concepts in play, and practice, in order to realize their full potential!

It all starts by learning the nuts and bolts of the structure of conversations. You need to fully understand what dialogue is and how to start thinking about it differently! 

Dialogue Is How We Access Collective Intelligence

Without dialogue, we can’t change culture, we can’t get to agility, we can’t seek the big things in organizations, these solutions, or vexing issues! 

Things like higher performance, agility in business, change culture, innovation, looking to anticipate what’s coming in terms of change. 

The solutions to these issues emerge from dialogue. Not from tools, processes or frameworks.

Solutions emerge from that collective pool of meaning!

Interested in learning more?

Watch and Listen! 

This article is based on my presentation for the Business Agility Conference in June 2021. 

It was recorded and can be watched right here! 

Dialogue is the Foundation to Increasing Agility

Dialogue is leadership! 

It’s not about what happens, it is about how you chose to respond to it! Learn more about dialogue! 

Leadership is a journey and your collaborative leadership journey can begin right here.

yoyo

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Recent Posts

  • Why We Need to Invest in Behavior Change – Not of Another Tool
  • Why Thinking you Need to Have All the Answers is Counterproductive for your Team
  • How to Welcome Disagreement Within Your Team (and mean it)
  • How to Welcome Team Opposition from a Space of Confidence and Curiosity
  • Why a Difference of Opinion Makes Your Team Much More Effective

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