Further to the earlier post on the Ordinariness of Leadership Actions, listening is shown as different from a leader and subordinate perspective, and leadership is revealed as an emergent phenomenon.
In an earlier post, I summarised Alvesson and Sveningsson’s conclusions about the mundaneness of much leadership action.
When the researchers asked managers to specify the practice of leadership, they initially talked of formulating and communicating visions, strategies and overall guidelines but were not able actually to illuminate what they did in relation to these visions and strategies.
What they did instead was they talked about tasks such as listening, chatting and being cheerful as some of the things that were important in leadership. Some suggested they had special skills in this area, or that they favoured a style of being available for informal chats that allowed employees to talk with them (i.e. leaders as listeners). It is difficult to see how these things relate to the rhetoric of leadership as being about grand concepts such as strategies, visions and ‘the big picture’.
Listening and chatting do not really fit in as either leadership (transformation, strategy) nor management (administration, organising), according to the common management / leadership dichotomy. In fact, listening and chatting are not much different from what "non-leaders" also do in going about their work.
One of the managers in the study referred to listening from the point of view of being the manager, and also being the subordinate. Listening enabled the manager to be receptive to and understand information and ideas from those below, although the manager might not be able to take action on the ideas – but at least the staff would feel listened to – listening would convey caring and respect. So far so orthodox.
Contrast the same manager discussing the experience of being listened to by his own manager. In this situation, much more emphasis was placed on the substantive concerns being expressed by the subordinate, and a strong requirements for action to be taken by the manager – the listener (manager) needed to be influenced by the subordinate. As a subordinate, without the response of action being taken, the experience of having his feelings taken into account was not enough.
The managers saw their listening, chatting and being cheerful not as means to an end, such as gaining more information, but as valuable in and of themselves, because it was the managers doing it. For example, contrast a secretary claiming that a vital part of their work was listening, chatting and being cheerful – it would be seen as a normal, but minor part of their work – not something that would give them a pay rise.
I think the authors make some very interesting observations in this study. Once managers get past the initial rhetoric that they are formulating and communicating vision or strategy, they can’t say how they do this apart from listening and chatting, which really, are things that almost anyone can do. While there is a tendency for the managers to imply they have special skills in this area, the researchers are not so sure. I am also struck by the view of the manager that just listening was enough, but as a subordinate he needed action from his boss to show he’d been listened to. As a subordinate, just being listened to but ignored was not enough. After all, it’s only when you get the response that you know you’ve been listened to – that you understand what your gesture meant.
I, of course, also have a view on this listening and chatting business.
I think the reason that listening and chatting are highlighted as important are because they amount to human interaction. We are all humans, and hence we are all bound up in human interaction. We cannot escape from human interaction. It is from this interaction that there is the potential for novelty, something new to occur in our organisations.
I am inclined to think, like Doug Griffin in his book The Emergence of Leadership that leadership consists of interactions from which leadership emerges, and is recognised by the participants as leadership – it is hence an emergent phenomenon.
As in the situation of John Robinson, the captain of my tennis team in my earlier post, who told me that he was humbled by what I wrote in that post. At the time he was not seeing himself as showing the leadership qualities I referred to, just wanting to start the day off on the right foot. Nevertheless, I recognised these leadership qualities, and the members of the other team at least stopped what they were doing to listen and took him seriously. They did not, for example, ignore him and continue talking amongst themselves. This, I think, was the recognition of his leadership. And once I pointed it out to him, I think that John can also see that what he did amounted to leadership. It’ll be interesting to see how our doubles match together goes next Saturday!