MANAGERIAL SKILLS
Forging consensus
- Lead your team through setbacks and successes
- Strike the delicate balance between finding consensus and making decisions
HOW TO
Leadeship is an
unstable thing, constantly at risk of migrating toward the extremes; it either
degenerates into highhanded decision-making or devolves into bureaucratic
rule-by-committee. Whether at the apex of a state or within a small civic
association, leadership poses, again and again, the same fundamental question:
how to strike a balance between decisiveness and discussion?
That balance
requires, above all, sensitivity and adaptability: sound leadership is an
oscillation, within a spectrum going from solitary judgments to meetings of
minds. When running an organization of any sort, there are moments when you
must make up your own mind and push forth, and periods where consensus is in
order. Doubting your instincts and seeking council is salutary; seeking input
from others can be useful as a matter of principle, to draw on their creative
thinking, preempt emerging problems, or build a sense of ownership. It should
never, however, become an activity by default, used by managers to avoid making
tough decisions. Talent resides in recognizing those crucial, and relatively
rare, points in time that demand consultation—moments where you must pause and
shift from forging ahead to forging consensus.
Sound leadership oscillates from solitary judgments to meetings of minds
Consensus-building
typically comes in during difficult, pivotal moments, making it not only
especially challenging but also especially important. Indeed, all organizations
see tensions and anxieties occasionally rise, putting to the test your ability,
as a manager, to find solutions. Issues may be trivial, such as moaning over
salaries, or more existential, when staff feel a loss of direction. Discontent,
in one form or another, can easily cause misunderstandings, take personal
forms, and generally put you on the defensive. This is precisely when
leadership tends to migrate toward the extremes, through aggressive unilateral
decision-making, perfunctory procedures delegating responsibility to where it
doesn’t belong, or a combination of both.
While it is
tempting to view such moments as pure setbacks, they can more constructively be
viewed as an opportunity:
- Palpable tension and anxiety, within an organization, is in many ways
a good sign: it indicates that staff take their work seriously enough to
care. A professional environment where no one worries or complains is, in
fact, a cause for concern: it likely means staff are too intimidated or
disabused to go out on a limb.
- Such trepidation is also a vital warning. It virtually always reflects
genuine issues the organization faces or is about to encounter. Although
it is tempting to dismiss restlessness by pinning it on individuals deemed
inadequate, it usually is a mistake to do so: their sentiments should be
understood as symptomatic of deeper problems.
- Defining the latter, however, requires (and constitutes) true leadership.
Indeed, a frequent error is to expect the disgruntled to effectively
analyze their sources of dissatisfaction, spell them out constructively,
and formulate ideas to address them. It is because of the difficulties we
all face in diagnosing, voicing and resolving our own malaise that
leadership is warranted in the first place.
- Apparent confusion, therefore, is an integral part of such moments
when dialogue is needed. Staff may complain about something seemingly
trivial, when in fact they are troubled by something else, more meaningful
but elusive. There is little to be gained from firing the disgruntled,
instating new policies and procedures, or blaming a broader context beyond
your control, when the game is solving this riddle.
The exercise of
leadership, in such events, consists in devising ad hoc ways of adequately
diagnosing the problem, before deciding on appropriate remedies. This is a
necessarily creative process. Depending on circumstances, it may entail
multiplying one-on-one meetings; finding ways of getting genuine criticism to
trickle up– something crucial very few managers successfully do; brainstorming
issues collectively; seeking external council; questioning your managerial
style, team structure, or business model; and combining any of the above. The
way forward will come into focus through a mix of sensitive listening to
others, solitary thinking and much explaining of how you understand both the
problem and the solution.
This very process of recognizing the existence of a significant problem affecting your staff, establishing your commitment to resolving it, and initiating transparent communication around the issues, options and limitations, is the source of consensus, if and only if a decision is actually made. Dialogue should create a real opportunity for all concerned to speak at liberty or hold their peace, but any further dithering will erase what confidence was built. As a manager, you are expected to pull the trigger and move the organization forward, rather than stall on imperfect solutions. It is the quality of your listening and explaining that will determine the level of buy-in you will enjoy, not the length or formality of the process.
The quality of your listening will determine the buy-in you enjoy
Once your vision
is formed, it’s up to you to take the lead on implementation. To overcome an
organization’s challenges, you definitely can’t go it alone. But precisely
because you took a moment to stop, consult, put words on a confused disquiet,
and hammer out a more collegial take on things, the chances are that you will
be followed. People grumble first to be heard; second, to see you make that
decision on whatever elusive issue was troubling them.
6 September 2017
Illustration credit: The village doctor besieg’d by Thomas Rowlands on Wikipedia / public domain.