Friday 23 December 2011

Choosing a Great Leadership Coach


Choosing a Great Leadership Coach



Choosing a Great Leadership Coach

By Mike W Bell



Coaching provides the opportunity for you to get direct, personal and focused guidance, teaching and support in the development of you leadership capability. It is vital that you get the best from your coach and build a relationship of trust as you tackle their real leadership challenges in improving organization performance.

For many leaders it is developing their 'character' and the whole range of personal and interpersonal skills that make it up, that is the key to unlocking more of their leadership potential: their creativity and imagination, their emotional flexibility, their capacity for building relationships and for taking decisive and courageous action.

Foundations of Great Leadership Coaching

As the client you should expect to be treated as a whole person complete with a vast amount of natural talent and potential. The aim should not be to 'fix' you but to help you develop and release what is already there. Each of us is on our own learning journey and there is no blame or judgment about where we are on that journey.

It is not possible to separate who we are from what we do. While the focus may be leadership in the workplace, coaching will often explore elements of body, mind, emotion and spirit and how they are impacting all aspects of your life.

It is up to you to decide what you want to achieve. The coach should do not set the agenda but help you to look beneath the presenting issues and to be really clear what outcomes you desire.

The coach is not the expert. They don't prescribe solutions and the best results come when the coach and client acknowledge their interdependent relationship and use this as a source of power and learning.

Each coaching relationship is individual. The approach and design evolves as client and coach understand more of what is needed to produce the desired results.

At the intake stage expect to establish a clear Coaching Contract for agreement and signing. It is also good to undertake an Expectations Exchange so both client and coach are really clear about what they can expect and not expect of each other.

What Outcomes can you expect of Leadership Coaching?

1. Sustainable Excellent Performance

You should expect to agree high measurable standards by which you, and your organization, can assess the outcomes of the coaching.

2. Self-Observation

Because of the coaching process, you should become more able to observe when you are performing well or not. You should learn to make the needed adjustments to your behavior without depending upon the coach.

3. Self-Learning

The coaching process should help you to learn how to learn. So the process of improvement continues when the coaching project is complete.

Wishing you a great coaching experience.

Mike W Bell has been a senior executive, leadership coach and organizational development consultant for over 30 years. For the last 15 or more of these I have been weaving an old wisdom tradition with the latest science and research to find more whole and balanced approaches to leadership and organization. My latest ebook, a modern fable entitled Leadership Intelligences in Action can be previewed at http://mutualinspiration.co.uk/leadershipintelligences/liaebook/


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4 Essential Inner Leadership Skills


4 Essential Inner Leadership Skills



4 Essential Inner Leadership Skills

By Mike W Bell



Many leaders today are finding that more being asked of them. Not just more in quantity, but more of the qualities needed to be successful.

It is becoming clear that intellect alone is insufficient to develop innovative, flexible and responsive teams and organizations that honor, develop and retain individual and collective talent and capability.

Today's leaders need to draw on more of their inner potential: to be creative, collaborative, decisive, courageous, visionary, inspiring, and caring.

Leadership is as much an expression of who we are as what we do. These four inner leadership skills will transform your leadership capabilities and make you a more effective leader of yourself and others.

1. The Wise Leader

Do you find that the expansion of information and knowledge coupled with complexity and change are making it more difficult to make sound decisions?

Paul Nutt in his book, Why Decisions Fail, reports, "For more than twenty years I have been studying how decisions are made - the key finding is startling - decisions fail half of the time".

Wise Leaders make better decisions by drawing on individual and collective knowledge, experience and genius in ways that generate deeper insights, more profound thinking and clear, purposeful action.

2. The Centred Leader

Do you stay centred and calm whatever challenge you face?

Each of us has many different facets and qualities, we all contain a cast of many characters that constitutes our 'self'. In the very centre, the essence of who we are, is the leader.

When there are many voices with a multitude of suggestions, opinions and ideas and the situation calls for leadership, it is only our still centre, our leader within, that can take command effectively and can stay calm under fire.

3. The Balanced Leader

Can you access your full potential - when you choose to?

We all have the capacity for creative expression, for adventure and change, for caring and sustaining, and for courageous and decisive action. Often, some of these qualities are more developed in us than others and we rely on and use only the stronger ones, even in situations where they are not appropriate.

Balanced leaders draw on their natural and innate talents in all of these areas, balancing creative vision with the need to sustain, exploration with the need for clear action.

4. The Conscious Leader

Is time your scarcest resource - or is it your attention that's scarce?

Do you find it difficult to concentrate for long periods and frequently lose focus as you attention is pulled away by emails, phone calls, and staff 'dropping in'? Then perhaps your attention is scarce and not your time. Time is a fixed resource, but your attention can be expanded.

Conscious leaders are able to stay present and hold an attention on many issues concurrently. They keep a clear sense of direction and don't get pulled off-track. They learn quickly and shift fluidly when they need to.

Mike W Bell has been a senior executive, leadership coach and organizational development consultant for over 30 years. For the last 15 or more of these I have been weaving an old wisdom tradition with the latest science and research to find more whole and balanced approaches to leadership and organization. My latest ebook, a modern fable entitled Leadership Intelligences in Action can be previewed at http://mutualinspiration.co.uk/leadershipintelligences/liaebook/


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4 Stages of Leadership Transformation


4 Stages of Leadership Transformation



4 Stages of Leadership Transformation

By Mike W Bell



When you understand the human development process it will enable you to create a sustained positive change in your leadership behaviors. This will make you more effective at meeting today's challenges.

Leaders need to recognise that the thought processes and mental models that underpin their current behavior are the result of long periods of social conditioning. For example notice how we seem to 'absorb' and comply with the unwritten rules of acceptable and unacceptable behavior in any group or organization usually without any conscious choice. Some of this conditioning supports our leadership capability and some robs us of our leadership power to truly influence what is happening around us.

Transformation of these thought processes cannot be achieved by intellect alone. Whilst many of the new qualities required of leaders make great sense at an intellectual level, this alone does not enable leaders to make sustainable changes and adopt new behaviours. There is a way of 'knowing' that creates transformative change. This old Chinese saying captures the difference: "To know and not to do is not to know."

It is vital for leaders 'unlearn' old thought processes and replace them with more powerful ones better aligned with how they choose to lead. But before any journey of transformation can take place there needs to be a gap.

The movement to transformation will involve at least four stages

1. Identify the Gap

Firstly the gap between the where the organization is and the vision or strategy it aspires to.

Secondly, the acknowledged gap between your current capability and where you aspire to be as a leader. From your aspirations you can then create a series of committed goals and intentions that will move the you towards your aspirations.

2. New Concepts, Tools, Models and Strategies

Drawing from the latest management science, evolutionary science, positive psychology, ancient wisdom and other sources, the key is to discover alternative world views. These will challenge your existing thinking and provide powerful and practical ways forward. Be aware of attempts to deny, deflect and defend against the new. If you are not confused then you are still within your comfort zone and nothing will change.

3. Practice, Practice, Practice

Just like developing a better serve at tennis, for example, you need to practice your new chosen thought processes and behaviors in your everyday life and work until you embody them. It's helpful if you have a coach or learning community who can support you.

4. Review, Learn, Adapt

Regular reviews will help you reflect on and learn about the progress you are making and adapt as needed to stay aligned with your aspirations and intentions.

It will help to see these stages as a cycle rather than a linear A to D plan. Once you get to stage 4 you will see new gaps that you were not able to see at stage 1 and so your transformation will spiral.

Mike W Bell has been a senior executive, leadership coach and organizational development consultant for over 30 years. For the last 15 or more of these I have been weaving an old wisdom tradition with the latest science and research to find more whole and balanced approaches to leadership and organization. My latest ebook, a modern fable entitled Leadership Intelligences in Action can be previewed at http://mutualinspiration.co.uk/leadershipintelligences/liaebook/


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Balanced Leadership Development


Balanced Leadership Development



Balanced Leadership Development

By Mike W Bell



Are you finding that your leadership challenges are changing? The traditional styles of leadership do not work too well for creating the adaptive, innovative and sustaining organisations needed to successfully compete today.

Business leaders and writers are giving some indication of what's important for leaders and leadership in this new time:

"you must also master listening to your heart"

"to include stakeholders, to evoke followership, to empower others"

"what a person is (character) and what a person does (competence)"

"the virtuoso in interpersonal skills is the corporate future"

"the world will belong to passionate, driven leaders who can energize those whom they lead"

"senior executives know they cannot command commitment"

"their convictions, their clarity, their personal commitment to their own cultivation"

Much of what is being asked of leaders today cannot be found through the intellect alone - the focus of much of our leadership development over the last 40 years. It requires leaders to bring more of who they are as human beings to their work. To be more balanced.

Gandhi said you have to be the change you want to see in the world. While many leaders speak of creativity, innovation, commitment, empowerment and self-management, many organizations are still waiting for the exemplary role models.

Our models of leadership have come from researching 'what is'. But when things change, this is no longer adequate. The traditional maps do not work when the territory shifts.

Drawing on old wisdom from indigenous cultures I offer a map of 8 inner qualities of Leadership:

  • Creativity- fostering generative growth, creativity and innovation,
  • Perception - sensing the emergent needs in your organization,
  • Emotional - a resilience and responsiveness, informed by emotions, meet challenges in a powerful way,
  • Pathfinding - bringing individual and organizational action into alignment with a larger sense of purpose,
  • Sustaining - supporting, maintaining and balancing organisational health, structures and new initiatives,
  • Prediction - discerning patterns and trends of coming cycles,
  • Decisiveness - awakening the simple clarity of right action,
  • Energy - perceiving what is needed to arouse vitality and integrity within the organisation.

Our Western culture has tended to focus on the development of Decisive Intelligence - that ability to identify and gather resources, develop strategy and take decisive action. Increasingly we see, however, that a leader's capability in this area is interconnected with his/her capability in the other seven domains. It is these that we now need to pay attention to and develop.

Mike W Bell has been a senior executive, leadership coach and organizational development consultant for over 30 years. For the last 15 or more of these I have been weaving an old wisdom tradition with the latest science and research to find more whole and balanced approaches to leadership and organization. My latest ebook, a modern fable entitled Leadership Intelligences in Action can be previewed at http://mutualinspiration.co.uk/leadershipintelligences/liaebook/


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How Leaders Can Make Better Decisions


How Leaders Can Make Better Decisions



How Leaders Can Make Better Decisions

By Mike W Bell



Today's business challenges cannot be resolved by logic and knowledge alone. Only leaders with wisdom can learn to make better decisions when faced with the conditions of what Doug Engelbart calls: "complexity multiplied by urgency."

As the evidence below shows, leaders are faced with a real challenge of how to make better decisions in a world that is continually changing. It seems that the tools and approaches they have learned are not adequate. They belong to a slower, simpler time but do not work well today. They are anchored in an out-dated worldview that sees people and organizations as machines.

As a result many leaders do not understand what is needed to make better decisions and take more effective action.

How do we best decide what is the most effective action?

"In an increasingly dynamic, interdependent and unpredictable world, it is simply no longer possible for anyone to figure it all out at the top" Peter Senge, "The Fifth Discipline."

What Peter Senge is describing here as dynamic, interdependent and unpredictable is one way to think about complexity. It was Karl Popper who popularised the distinction between problems that are clock and those that are clouds. Clock problems relate to mechanical systems that are predictable and, if they break down, no matter how complicated, the cause and effect relationships can be understood and the broken parts replaced.

Most big problems in business are not 'clocks' however, they are more like clouds; they are complex - made up of myriad interconnected parts where the cause and effect relationship are almost impossible to understand (like a weather system) and predicting the outcomes of changes is very difficult and can have disastrous unforeseen consequences.

"Many change programmes fail - and the traditional assessment of failure is 75% of the attempts - often because they do not take into account that they are working with a living system and not a machine." - Professor Keith Grint, Professor of Public Leadership & Management at Warwick University, UK.

What is suggested here is that many decisions fail because they assume that the organization, market or ecosystem is a machine and complicated rather than a living system and complex. Complex systems do not yield to IQ, logic or deduction.

An additional challenge presented by human organizations is that they are also adaptive. They learn from past behaviours and change how they respond to a similar stimulus in the future. This adds to the difficulty in predicting outcomes with any degree of certainty.

In summary, how leaders can make better decisions is by understanding how complexity affects their business.

Mike W Bell has been a senior executive, leadership coach and organizational development consultant for over 30 years. For the last 15 or more of these I have been weaving an old wisdom tradition with the latest science and research to find more whole and balanced approaches to leadership and organization. My latest eBook, a modern fable entitled Leadership Intelligences in Action can be previewed at http://mutualinspiration.co.uk/leadershipintelligences/liaebook/


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Leadership and the Wisdom Value Chain


Leadership and the Wisdom Value Chain



Leadership and the Wisdom Value Chain

By Mike W Bell



In many businesses today productive conversations are the source of wealth-creation. There is an essential value chain of intangibles: from data to information to knowledge and then to wisdom. Leadership and the wisdom value chain must be explored if organizations are to thrive.

Knowledge and Wisdom

Knowledge we can think of as contextualized information that moves to action. Peter Drucker in The New Realities said "Knowledge is information that changes something or somebody - either by becoming grounds for actions, or by making an individual (or an institution) capable of different of more effective action."

An older unknown Chinese sage said "To know and not to do is not to know".

Wisdom has to do with intuition and the long-view through understanding systems in the context of their larger whole. Wisdom is also to do with acting in resonance with what is known to be true and lasting.

Wisdom and Culture

Wisdom requires that we move beyond the limits of logical linear thinking. It is likely that the organizational culture has many conscious and unconscious protocols that make it a challenge for wisdom to come forward. It is necessary for people to speak from their heart, their emotions, their body and their spirit if wisdom is to emerge. Many organizations do not acknowledge emotions are part of a human that is acceptable at work.

By limiting conversations and decision-making to our logical brain, organizations cut off their access to the collective genius of their people. A friend, Heather Campbell, writes that businessmen wear ties as a symbol of the separation of their head from their heart!

Wisdom and Environment

We also need to consider wisdom in the context of the organization in its environment. Wisdom has to do with understanding the relationships among things and therefore seeing the whole system.

It is in this area of interrelationships that organizations show themselves to be particularly short of wisdom. In the development continuum that moves from egocentric to ethnocentric to world-centric, most organizations are stuck at the equivalent of the ethnocentric level. They will do anything to ensure their survival even if it means ignoring and ultimately destroying the world on which they totally depend for their survival.

For many leaders, their previous experience and success is a handicap. It limits them to an out-dated way of thinking. It limits the information they are able to take into their awareness. It leaves them only half conscious. And we cannot expect half conscious leaders to create a wise organization, or a wise world.

As RD Laing, the Scottish psychiatrist, said in his own inimitable style:

"The range of what we think and do is limited by what we fail to notice. And because we fail to notice that we fail to notice, there is little that we can do to change, until we notice how failing to notice shapes our thoughts and deeds."

Lets hope that leadership does not fail to notice the wisdom value chain.

Mike W Bell has been a senior executive, leadership coach and organizational development consultant for over 30 years. For the last 15 or more of these I have been weaving an old wisdom tradition with the latest science and research to find more whole and balanced approaches to leadership and organization. My latest eBook, a modern fable entitled Leadership Intelligences in Action can be previewed at http://mutualinspiration.co.uk/leadershipintelligences/liaebook/


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Practical Wisdom and Self Leadership


Practical Wisdom and Self Leadership



Practical Wisdom and Self Leadership

By Mike W Bell



Before we can lead others successfully we have to be able to lead ourselves. Accessing our practical wisdom can be thought of as the pinnacle of self leadership.

What is Wisdom?

Wisdom has been described in many different ways over the centuries. Here Joseph W. Meeker sums it up in a profound paragraph from his article "Wisdom and Wilderness":

"Wisdom is a state of the human mind characterized by profound understanding and deep insight. It is often, but not necessarily, accompanied by extensive formal knowledge. Unschooled people can acquire wisdom, and wise people can be found among carpenters, fishermen, or housewives.

"Wherever it exists, wisdom shows itself as a perception of the relativity and relationships among things. It is an awareness of wholeness that does not lose sight of particularity or concreteness, or of the intricacies of interrelationships. It is where left and right brain come together in a union of logic and poetry and sensation, and where self-awareness is no longer at odds with awareness of the otherness of the world.

"Wisdom cannot be confined to a specialized field, nor is it an academic discipline; it is the consciousness of wholeness and integrity that transcends both. Wisdom is complexity understood and relationships accepted."

Practical Wisdom

Aristotle identified two types of wisdom - the esoteric/metaphysical and the practical wisdom - what Coleridge referred to as "Common sense in an uncommon degree." I suspect both are linked and that a journey into practical wisdom and self leadership would eventually take you to a metaphysical level.

Leading the Self Wisely

It seems that the journey starts with the self; with what goes on within the self; all the thoughts, feelings, values, meaning etc and the extent to which we are conscious of them. For many of us, for much of the time, the thoughts in our heads are random; they come and go seemingly dependent upon the range of stimuli we are exposed to moment by moment. For example, I am out for a walk and see a dog, it reminds me of a good friends dog that died recently and how upset she was, and I remember that I have not been in contact for a while and I feel guilty and my mood changes and the rest of my walk is clouded by this guilt that takes me a while to shake off.

It is unlikely that this type of randomness will lead to wisdom. It is more likely that wise people have developed or learned a way to bring to structure or form to their thinking. They may meditate to quiet these thoughts and begin to let the real self emerge.

They pay attention to what they are sensing and use this information to learn from and guide their actions. If I am in a meeting and am not totally present; my mind is following the random paths it often follows then I am not truly present. In fact I am not fully conscious. And in this condition there is a lot of information that my senses pick up that stays in my unconscious.

Not only might I miss some of the content of the meeting, I will miss valuable information about how I am feeling about what's going on and how others are behaving. If I don't notice that I am getting angry or frustrated then there is every chance that I will react from these feelings without choosing. If I am not sufficiently present to pick up the cues about how others are feeling from the tone of their voice, their body posture etc, then I will not fully understand what is going on and perhaps behave inappropriately.

So a wise person is likely to be more fully present; connected to and aware of the information that is coming from their senses and using this information to learn about themselves in the moment and act in alignment with what is needed to achieve the desired outcome.

I think Otto Scharmer puts the topic of practical wisdom and self leadership very well in this comment from "Illuminating the Blind Spot of Leadership":

"What counts is not only what leaders do and how they do it, but the inner place from which they operate"

Mike W Bell has been a senior executive, leadership coach and organizational development consultant for over 30 years. For the last 15 or more of these I have been weaving an old wisdom tradition with the latest science and research to find more whole and balanced approaches to leadership and organization. My latest ebook, a modern fable entitled Leadership Intelligences in Action can be previewed at http://mutualinspiration.co.uk/leadershipintelligences/liaebook/


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Friday 16 December 2011

leading@e-speed

We all know that the nature of the world and business is changing dramatically. We are moving at e-speed into an unknown world of the future. And the rate of change is escalating. Competitive pressures demand that product cycle times are shorter resulting in the need for faster decision making. Though technology and market innovation are occurring in increasingly shorter timeframes, human capacity to respond to this rate of change is not developing as fast.

We are moving into uncharted territory. The leader has to be able to guide the organization into an unknown future, with few roadmaps.

Today, leaders must be able to continuously scan the environment to anticipate what is coming next, stay on top of what the competition is doing, ensure that market opportunities are seen and seized quickly. Simultaneously s/he must also ensure that the organization builds the capacity for the innovation necessary to generate and implement breakthrough thinking.

All of this creates unparalleled demands on the attention of a leader. Research indicates that leaders are receiving on average 190 messages a day via phone, email, etc. This combined with the pressures mentioned above, raises the specter of overwhelm from the seeming chaos that we are living in.

Many respond using previously proven methods. Trying to work more, harder, longer. However this is a time of discontinuous change, where old methods no longer work. It is not enough for a leader to redivide the allotment of time distribution on the pie chart. Instead, a new type of attention is required. As Gary Hamel says in Leading the Revolution, "Today the competitive terrain is changing so fast as to make experience irrelevant or dangerous- you can't use old maps in new terrain".

Alan Kay, who was first at Xerox, and now is an "imaginer" at Disney, is reported to have said, "Perspective is worth 80 IQ points." The way in which we use our attention is critical to successfully navigating through this tumultuous time of continuous change. As we have learned from self-organizing systems, underneath the seeming chaos, there is order if one would just look differently. In addition, attention, as a resource, is not bound, as suggested by the use of a pie chart. Attention can not only be redistributed; it can also be expanded.

This is what the leader must now learn how to do: to look differently, to expand their attention and perspectives in ways that enable them to see the patterns underneath the chaos that can lead to greater insight and breakthrough thinking.

Leaders need to both transform and master their quality of attention and help their organization quickly convert knowledge to wisdom.

Attention
As humans we have immense capacity to not only pay attention, but to pay attention to how we are paying attention. It is no longer enough to examine and re-arrange things in the external environment. We now have to examine and re-arrange things in our internal environment.

Many recognize that attention is an executive's scarcest resource. A leader has to be able to expand both their capacity for and quality of attention in order to operate skillfully in this environment.

Our partners are currently engaged in an action research project with three global companies to understand what influences an individual's abilities in this area. This is leading to the development of relevant practices to expand the capacity and quality of attention of leaders and their organizations.

Wisdom
Leaders must also learn to move themselves and their organization through the value chain from knowledge to intelligence to wisdom. In doing so they will then release the collective genius of their organization by evoking its innate wisdom.

Progression through this value chain can be achieved with the use of a design or a model. Current designs typically provide an incomplete view or 'silos of perspective'. What's needed are designs that provide a whole and integrated set of perspectives that evoke and utilize the knowledge, intelligence and wisdom that is innate in the members of the organization.

We work with designs that provide this whole and integrated set of perspectives. These designs have proven valuable for individuals in helping them learn to access their own wisdom and powerful for groups and organizations in releasing the collective genius.

As Martin Luther King, a leader with great insight and breakthrough thinking said:
" One of the great liabilities of history is that all too many people fail to remain awake through great periods of social change. Every society has its protectors of the status quo and its fraternities of the indifferent who are notorious for sleeping through revolutions. But today our very survival depends on our ability to stay awake, to adjust to new ideas, to remain vigilant and to face the challenge of change".

Mike W Bell has been a senior executive, leadership coach and organizational development consultant for over 30 years. For the last 15 or more of these I have been weaving an old wisdom tradition with the latest science and research to find more whole and balanced approaches to leadership and organization. 


My latest eBook, a modern fable entitled Leadership Intelligences in Action can be previewed at http://mutualinspiration.co.uk/leadershipintelligences/liaebook/

Culture Change

I have been reflecting on my experience with change in organisations through the lens of 'memes' and am beginning to see why some approaches are more successful than others. I am grateful to If Price and Ray Shaw for identifying a range of approaches that can help us break out of limiting patterns and I have used this to pattern my thinking.

In my work as a leadership coach, I can see that what I am often doing is identifying the client's memes and naming them. By bringing to the attention of my clients the behaviours that are disenablers and helping them see the underlying patterns of beliefs etc, that support these behaviours, they are more able to restructure and choose more empowering patterns.
With one client, using a model incorporating leadership qualities of sincerity, benevolence, wisdom, strictness and courage, he was able to see more clearly how disabling patterns were affecting his performance in relationships with direct reports where he needed to be more powerful.

Bringing patterns to people's attention is successful in certain situations but awareness of a pattern is perhaps one of the weaker approaches. Think for example, how many people continue to smoke knowing the damage it does to their health. So sometimes there are other, deeper patterns that underpin behaviours.

This is certainly true for groups. One approach I use, that I now see help clients identify memes and change them, is Open Space. This is a large group process (10- 200+ people), during which participants create and manage their own programmes around a central theme with the aim of developing plans for creative and collaborative action.

For a recent Open Space client the theme was 'How to create a vibrant culture of innovation'. The 35 participants identified more than 20 ideas, themes and approaches of what was needed and the action to be taken. After meeting in self-selected groups over two days to explore these, they finally identified seven key projects and formed the action teams to move them forward.

Another way to view the situation is that the group was identifying its current patterns that disabled innovation and agreeing new patterns and the plans to implement them. What adds power to the process is that you have the attention of a significant proportion of the organisation who now have a shared, co-created understanding of what limits them and what's needed to move forward. This greatly increases the chances of success.

There is not always this level of easy agreement however. Another large group process, Future Search, is specifically designed for where there are conflicting memes. Future Search brings together a diverse group of stakeholders (usually about 64 participants) to find common ground, build a shared vision and move into action to co-create their future.

The underlying assumption is that, rather than expend energy on trying to remove differences, it is more effective to honour the diversity and have people identify and acknowledge their interdependence.

This is a more challenging process, often described as a roller coaster ride, during which individuals and stakeholder groups surface their memes and are presented with the opportunity to let go of some of their deep patterns in return for a desired future that can only be created by the whole group working in collaboration.

We ran a Future Search conference in a small town community in Scotland. Over 60 participants including representatives of the local youth, teachers, councillors, youth workers, voluntary organisations and local businesses came together for 3 days on the theme of creating a future for youth in the town. Towards the end of the conference, as the youth were presenting back a number of projects they identified they wanted to take forward, members of the other groups continually interrupted with suggestions about how they could help make the projects more successful. Finally, out of a sense of frustration, one of the youths said, words to the effect, that they did not want this interference, they wanted to do it themselves, they could not make a bigger mess of it than the adults had already but that they would be happy to call in help if needed.

This had a profound effect on the adults. You could sense the impact of the growing realization that their operating meme was about 'helping the children' and it was no longer children they were dealing with. It was young adults who want more equal representation and participation. Over five years later, I am still hearing stories of the impact of this conference.

When this level of confrontation is not needed, sometimes it is sufficient to re-language the patterns. With one client, the director team with whom we were starting a project were 'highly academic'. The President of the company was concerned that a repeating pattern of behaviours, apparently common amongst academics and involving what's been called 'dualing egos' would disrupt the process.
As the participants gathered we sat in a circle and invited them to 'put on the robe of an elder', to bring their wisdom to the benefit of the organisation, to bring questions that would illuminate issues and help others see beyond where they had reached. There was naturally some skepticism but they played the role for the day. The President commented later that it was they best director's meeting they'd ever had.

Another approach Price and Shaw suggest is re-framing - that is, to look at the situation through a new lens or frame in order to see what is not currently being seen.

With a group of 28 tutors from a business school, we used a tool called a Wisdom Council, which is an ancient way to look into the issues and decisions facing us from eight distinct perspectives that make up a whole.

 We gave them a new frame - eight perspective - with which to explore how to move their enterprise forward. What started as a relatively straightforward business issue began to take on new dimensions. Participants gave wider meaning to what they were doing, acknowledging what had been achieved, their 'vision, boldness and brilliance', and saw the need for great balance and unity as a 'family'.

The Director of the enterprise commented afterwards that participants "were delighted by it" and added "I can truthfully say that I have never had such a spontaneous flurry of "thank you" notes for any other event."

In the spirit of learning and growth, there is value for us all examining what we are doing through new lenses. The lens of 'memes' seems to be a useful one for making more sense of why some organisational initiatives work well and other less so. 





Mike W Bell has been a senior executive, leadership coach and organizational development consultant for over 30 years. For the last 15 or more of these I have been weaving an old wisdom tradition with the latest science and research to find more whole and balanced approaches to leadership and organization. 

My latest eBook, a modern fable entitled Leadership Intelligences in Action can be previewed at http://mutualinspiration.co.uk/leadershipintelligences/liaebook/

Changing the Meme Pool

 In a recent Financial Times article1, John Weeks and Charles Galunic of INSEAD call for a re-assessment of our concept of 'culture' in organisations since its introduction by Peters and Waterman in 'In Search of Excellence' almost 20 years ago.

They claim that research over the years shows that we are no closer to answering questions like 'What is culture', 'How does it operate?' 'Can it be managed and if so, how?'. They suggest it is an over-simplification to see organisations as 'monolithic' with respect to culture and that if you examine cultures that are held up as, for example, 'entrepreneurial' you find that some parts still remain 'command and control'.

Culture change, as we have come to know, it is not the answer, and Weeks and Galunic offer an alternative view of culture:

"A better way to think of organisational culture is as a pattern of beliefs and behaviours, assumptions and routines - various elements of culture collectively we call 'memes' - which are distributed across the organisation, usually in an uneven fashion. When new ideas arrive, they infect the minds of some people before others and of some people more than others. When a new routine proves successful in one part of the organisation, it may or may not spread to other parts. Organisations are overflowing with initiatives, projects, programmes, best practices, ways of thinking and behaving, all competing for the scarcest resource of all: human attention."

Introducing new 'memes' alone does not necessarily improve performance. We must also pay attention to how memes are introduced if they are to be adopted. In their book "Shifting the Patterns'2, If Price and Ray Shaw observe:

"Where patterns create they also limit. If we want to create a great result, to step beyond the limits of current patterns, then somehow we must extricate ourselves from the familiar; undo old patterns, or at least the grip of old patterns, before creating new. This is key because if we merely try to add powerful enablers onto powerful disablers, that is, build on what is already limiting, the result is likely to be more cosmetic than substance. This helps explain, incidentally, why many executives become frustrated when major initiatives appear to run out of steam within their organisation."

This gives us another way of explaining current performance and of looking more deeply into what's needed to bring about change. Just as the medical profession realized that there are certain diseases that cannot be treated by traditional methods and can only be eradicated by changing the deep patterns held in the genes, so it is with organisations. Unless we look deeply into the current patterns of attitudes, opinions, beliefs and images that shape behaviour and make changes at this underlying level, we are in effect treating a genetic condition with palliatives.


Mike W Bell has been a senior executive, leadership coach and organizational development consultant for over 30 years. For the last 15 or more of these I have been weaving an old wisdom tradition with the latest science and research to find more whole and balanced approaches to leadership and organization. 

My latest eBook, a modern fable entitled Leadership Intelligences in Action can be previewed at http://mutualinspiration.co.uk/leadershipintelligences/liaebook/


  1. J Weeks and Charles Galunic, A cultural evolution in business thinking, Financial Times, Mastering People Management supplement, 29/10/2001
  2. If Price and Ray Shaw, Shifting the Patterns, Management Books 2000 Ltd, 1998

Leadership, Love and Memes

Fast Company magazine recently featured an article by Tim Sanders, the Chief Solutions Officer at Yahoo, entitled 'Love Is the Killer App' Here is some of what Sanders has to say in his introduction:

"The most powerful force in business isn't greed, fear, or even the raw energy of unbridled competition. The most powerful force in business is love. It's what will help your company grow and become stronger. It's what will propel your career forward. It's what will give you a sense of meaning and satisfaction in your work, which will help you do your best work..... My experience with Victoria's Secret taught me the three critical drivers of professional success, the three elemental particles of love in business. They are knowledge, networks, and compassion."
Make a mental note of your reaction right now.

I, personally, think its great that he's saying this and that its getting published in a large publication, international business magazine.

One person who does not think its great is Lucy Kellaway who wrote a review of the article in the Financial Times on 4thFebruary. She says:

"What is interesting is not whether love is a good business principle but why this daft notion has caught on now. In part it is simply a continuation of the same touchy-feely craze that started with empowerment and progressed through trust and passion to reach "love" as its logical conclusion. The reason this talk of love troubles me is not just that it is inappropriate but it detracts from what is really happening."

So how are we to make sense of these two completely divergent views? One way is to see it in terms of Spiral Dynamics which looks at human development proceeding through eight general stages or memes. A meme is basic stage of development that can be expressed in any activity. The memes or stages are not rigid levels but flowing waves with much overlap and interweaving. And we all have all of the memes potentially available to us.

You can find out more about Spiral Dynamics at http://www.spiraldynamics.org/ (take a mini-course on the left hand frame). But in summary, adapted from Spiral Dynamic: Mastering Values, Leadership and Change, by Don Beck and Chris Cowan, the eight memes are:

8. Turquoise Meme - Whole View - synergise and macromanage
7. Yellow Meme - Flex Flow - integrate and align systems
6. Green Meme - Human Bond - explore inner self, equalize others
5. Orange Meme - Strive Drive - analyse and strategize to prosper
4. Blue Meme - Truth Force - find purpose, bring order, insure future
3. Red Meme - Power Gods - express impulsively, break free, be      strong
2. Purple Meme - Kin Spirits - seek harmony and safety in a mysterious world
1. Beige Meme - Survival Sense - sharpen instincts and innate senses.

These might not mean a whole lot to you and they have been extensively researched and tested practically. However I wanted to give you a sense of this growth hierarchy before exploring three relevant memes for our discussion here.

The Orange Meme is probably where 30% of the adult population are but they have 50% of the power according to Ken Wilber in his book 'A Theory of Everything'. The Orange Meme view is that the world is a 'rational, well-oiled machine with natural laws that can be learned, mastered and manipulated for one's own purpose. The laws of science rule politics, the economy and human events'.

I would assess that Lucy Kellaway has a strong Orange Meme world view.

The Green Meme however believes that the human spirit must be freed from greed, dogma and divisiveness; feeling and caring supersede cold rationality; cherishing of the earth, Gaia, life. Emphasis on dialogue, relationships, networking, diversity, multi-culturalism and relativistic value systems. Ken Wilber suggest that the Green Meme make up 10% of the adult population and hold 15% of the power. But their numbers are growing fast. They did not really exist at all 50 years ago.

I would guess that Tim Sanders is Green Meme at least.

Even from this very short introduction, one can begin to see how both of their views are valid, depending upon what stage of development you are at. Both will find it difficult to see each others views as they are both looking at a different world. It is not until you develop to the Yellow Meme that you are open to seeing all the previous Memes and appreciating them as part of human development.

I find the implications for leaders to be enormous. It is likely that your team, department and organisation will have a diversity of value Memes. Perhaps one things that great leaders are able to do is appreciate all the other memes and communicate with them at their own level. It seems a leader has to paint many pictures, each of which appeal to a particular set of values or world view.



Mike W Bell has been a senior executive, leadership coach and organizational development consultant for over 30 years. For the last 15 or more of these I have been weaving an old wisdom tradition with the latest science and research to find more whole and balanced approaches to leadership and organization. 


My latest eBook, a modern fable entitled Leadership Intelligences in Action can be previewed at http://mutualinspiration.co.uk/leadershipintelligences/liaebook/

What is Happiness

What is happiness?
First lets explore what we mean by happiness as it plays such a large part in our lives and work and is often misunderstood.

We use words like happiness, pleasure, fun, laughter, enjoyment, satisfaction, and excitement as if they are interchangeable. We use each or any of them to create a general image of people having a good time; implying they all mean about the same.
However, happiness is quite different. Fun, pleasure, satisfaction and excitement all turn on and off but happiness does not, it stays with us regardless of the emotion being experienced. Happiness is a condition of my being - it stays with me while I am experiencing emotions.

The Benefits of happiness
When you have greater control of your happiness:
  • You feel good. You feel joy, cheer, peace and contentment
  • You are pleased with who you are and what you do
  • People enjoy being around you
  • You have higher self esteem
  • Your life is improved physically
  • You can more easily solve any problems that may arise
  • You have additional energy
  • Your life is improved in every way
  • You will have the best life imaginable – a happy one!
On the other hand, despair or unhappiness:
  • Makes you feel anger, loneliness and resentment
  • Stops you from solving your problems
  • Often creates new problems
  • Limits friendships with other people
  • Has no positive benefits
  • Will eventually destroy your life
For organisations, it appears that staff are more productive when they feel they are in greater control of their lives and when the company is investing in their development. The happiness that results leads to greater self leadership, self confidence, self responsibility which in turn result in:
  • less blaming,
  • less stress,
  • better internal relationships,
  • increased creativity,
  • greater trust,
  • greater confidence and maturity in dealing with customers.

The Conspiracies of Happiness
Often we collude to maintain many conspiracies about happiness that have us believe that happiness comes from outside of us. We are promised instant happiness for simply buying the right toothpaste or drinking the right beer. We know from our own experience that more material things do not bring us happiness. We remember how quickly the ‘happiness’ of a new job, pay rise, new house or car, international holiday etc wears off. Often leaving us feeling empty and needing something ‘bigger and better’.
Here are some common happiness conspiracies:
  • If only I had more money I’d be happy
  • If only I was more famous I’d be happy
  • If only I could find the right person to marry I’d be happy
  • If only I had more friends I’d be happy
  • If only I wasn’t physically disabled I’d be happy
  • If only someone close to me hadn’t died I’d be happy
  • If only the world was a better place, then I’d be happy

Definitions of Happiness
We would say we are in a state of happiness when our mind is at peace. Importantly, happiness comes from the inside out and not the outside in.
The modern world needs to measure everything and a mind at peace is a difficult challenge for researchers to deal with.

The closest they have come in measuring it is Life Satisfaction or the extent to which I am satisfied with my life. A great deal of interest and research is going into this area. For example the Strategy Unit of the Cabinet Office has produced a report titled “Life Satisfaction: the state of knowledge and implications for government”

However, as the underlying belief is that happiness comes from outside of us, research into Life Satisfaction looks into issues such as health, employment, income etc as measures of satisfaction. While this might be valid, it is not happiness in the sense that we understand it because life satisfaction comes from outside of us, not inside.

Taking Control of Happiness
If we accept that happiness comes from the inside out, then it is possible for us to take control of our happiness. Learning to take control of our happiness is an immensely valuable capability for a person and at the same time, as we have seen, can result in great benefits for the organisation.


Mike W Bell has been a senior executive, leadership coach and organizational development consultant for over 30 years. For the last 15 or more of these I have been weaving an old wisdom tradition with the latest science and research to find more whole and balanced approaches to leadership and organization. 

My latest eBook, a modern fable entitled Leadership Intelligences in Action can be previewed at http://mutualinspiration.co.uk/leadershipintelligences/liaebook/

Happy Staff Mean Greater Profits

Happy Staff Mean Greater Profits

This article aims to share some of the current information that suggests that happy staff mean greater profits (and performance) and explore what it means to be ‘happy’.
Maybe you never doubted that happy staff mean greater profits. Maybe you just avoided thinking about it because happiness was difficult to define. But the evidence is growing.

The Evidence
The first evidence I have comes from David Maister in his book ‘Practice What You Preach’. He says ‘This is the first attempt to use hard data to prove the link between employee satisfaction and performance. I set out to test what I’ve been advocating for years. The bad news is I still believe it. The good news is that now I’ve got proof.’

In a study involving 139 professional service firms covering 5,500 people in 15 countries, he studied the correlation between employee attitudes and financial performance.
He found that financial performance – evaluated by margins, profit per employee and profit growth over a two year period – is directly linked to employee satisfaction.
’generalised investments’

Interestingly Charles Galunic and John Weeks at INSEAD (Financial Times Mastering People Management Series) have found similar results. Their evidence suggests that when companies undertake what they call ’generalised investments’ in developing people, for example leadership and personal development, then employee commitment and loyalty can be increased.
In a study with insurance agents they found that ‘generalised investments’ including management development and technology training produced greater satisfaction and profitability.

However, they also noted that ‘generalised investments’ are something of a two edged sword – they increase loyalty and commitment but also increase mobility.
This link between ‘generalised investment’ and commitment is strengthened by Linda Bilmes at Harvard and her book ‘The People Factor’. She identifies ‘people factor’ criteria and the ones most likely to increase satisfaction are: allowing people to influence decisions that affect their working lives; training; and performance linked pay.

She quotes a study of 2,000 US and German companies, the overall levels of satisfaction were 34% of US workers and 35% of German workers. However, among workers in companies that offered people-factor benefits, job satisfaction was much higher – 58% of US and 63% of German workers.

However, she found a huge gap between what companies thought they provided and what workers believed they received. For example, 71% of respondents listed ‘I am able to influence decisions that affect me’ as ‘very important’ but only 34% of employees agreed they could do it.
Empowered Employees Dinah Daniels from The CEO Refresher says: ‘The key to creating this type of stable, productive workplace is to put employees in charge of their own success. Employees who are empowered to manage their own growth and achievement on the job tend to be more self-satisfied, more cooperative, and more pro-active in trouble-shooting and solving problems. Ultimately, they are more invested in contributing to the organization’s efficiency and bottom line because they know they have the power to affect change within the organization and to promote and control their own career growth.’

According to further research, "experts" and news reports, production is directly related to how happy employees are. How do you measure happiness? How do you link happy people and profit? Several companies have attempted to do this.

Sears has proven that for every 5% increase in "employee motivation," the company profits pushed up by half a percentage point. Unfortunately, the article from the Customer Service Advantage newsletter did not explain how Sears defined "employee motivation." A study by Towers Perrin, a global management consulting firm, showed that a lower employee turnover rate helps a company keep customers. The study showed that increasing employee retention by 2% could increase business by as much as 6%.

So if employee happiness directly affects production and performance. How can you increase employee happiness, keep employees and increase productivity?



Mike W Bell has been a senior executive, leadership coach and organizational development consultant for over 30 years. For the last 15 or more of these I have been weaving an old wisdom tradition with the latest science and research to find more whole and balanced approaches to leadership and organization. 

My latest eBook, a modern fable entitled Leadership Intelligences in Action can be previewed at http://mutualinspiration.co.uk/leadershipintelligences/liaebook/

About Me

Hi, I'm Mike Bell and this is my first experience with Blogger.


I'm married with three grown up children and two grandchildren.


My major hobby is philosophy and I am a trustee of a local philosophy society. We hold an different event almost everyday of the week in cafes, pubs, libraries etc.


Mike W Bell has been a senior executive, leadership coach and organizational development consultant for over 30 years. For the last 15 or more of these I have been weaving an old wisdom tradition with the latest science and research to find more whole and balanced approaches to leadership and organization. 

My latest eBook, a modern fable entitled Leadership Intelligences in Action can be previewed at http://mutualinspiration.co.uk/leadershipintelligences/liaebook/