Season 2, Episode 7

Leading in Conversation
Leading in Conversation
Season 2, Episode 7
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Shownotes

Eight principles for leading in times of not knowing:

  1. Good enough holding of anxiety
  2. Causality uncertain
  3. Tentative Certainty
  4. Engage collectively to make sense
  5. Act in the grey (when not sure)
  6. Good enough (no time for perfection)
  7. Space for mistakes
  8. Plan differently

Chris Corrigan, The Art of Hosting programme.  

Participatory narrative inquiry

Transcript

Kate: Hello and welcome back to Leading in Conversation. It’s great to be back with you again. Today Nelis and I are joined by an old friend of mine – less emphasis on the old there – Reverend Doctor Rob Hay, I should say. Welcome to the podcast Rob! 

Rob: Thank you very much. Nice to be with you. 

Kate: One of the reasons we’ve invited Rob to join us today is because as my tutor on the Masters program I did, Rob was responsible for my discovery of conversational leadership, which has been very significant to me, as you all will know. So we wanted to invite Rob along and hear a little bit about his own research and what he’s been doing since. So, Rob, give us an introduction, tell us a little bit about yourself, where you are and what you’re doing these days.

Rob: Yeah. Thanks Kate. Currently, I live in Leicestershire in the UK, pretty much in the middle of England, if you want to get the geography there. I currently work for the Church of England, I’m an ordained priest and responsible for leadership development for the diocese, the area where we work. Before that, as Kate mentioned, I was in a college, both as principal and running the leadership Masters programme that Kate was part of. During my working life, I started off in retail on a management training scheme and then I’ve done a number of leadership roles over the years covering commercial, public sector, third sector, and also a couple of startups in there. 

Nelis: Thank you. Yeah, this is my first time of meeting you and I am sure that Kate knows quite a bit about what I’m going to ask you already but I have no idea. So can you tell me a little bit about your journey of discovery into conversational leadership, dialogical approaches, CRPR? How did you discover that? What did that do to you?

Rob: Yes, I, like many of us of my kind of age, we kind of grew up as it were in leadership with classic approaches. Strong leadership. Leadership knows, leadership directs, it structures, it organises. And that had kind of been my life and experience, but increasingly I realised that an awful lot of what I was doing as a leader and what I was observing other people doing as leaders didn’t seem to have very much effect. And there was part of me that felt quite relieved about that and then part of me, though, felt quite disappointed. I couldn’t quite decide how I felt about it. But what I also began to notice was that some leaders seem to become really quite toxic. And, you know, when I’ve talked to people about toxic leadership, something I did a lot of work on in the early days, most people at a gut level know what I mean. Most people have been in some kind of environment. And so my Master’s work that I did many many years ago, was trying to look at why leaders became toxic. And there were three things that I noted out of that. The fundamental one was when they didn’t know what they should do. Or they didn’t know the answers for the questions people were asking of them as their followers. The second thing was, they didn’t feel they could admit not knowing because of the whole aura of leadership, the kind of heroic leadership model. And then what that meant was, that they covered up the lack of knowledge. They couldn’t admit that they didn’t know. And as soon as they began to cover up once or twice, it then became, if you like, a spiral of deception. You know, that sounds quite dramatic, it sounds quite negative. It was just their way of coping that, you know, and once you, try and give the impression you know, you have to keep on doing that. And so, there was this sort of toxic downward spiral. The encouraging thing was the very few people set out to be deliberately toxic. So it was often a case of feeling they weren’t up to the job, often a sense of imposter syndrome. So that was kind of the MA thesis, but then of course, well how do we work as leaders when we don’t know, when we have limited knowledge? And so that then became the focus of my research and I sketched out some ideas for a PhD, I began to think more deeply about it. And then I went to see a potential supervisor. We had a great conversation for a couple hours. He was really excited about the subject. And then with something of a wry smile, he handed me a book and said, “Go away and have a read of this. And if you still want me to supervise you, then I will”. And it was a very large book by a man called Ralph Stacey, who I think has probably been mentioned in previous podcasts. And I spent the next three months with a love-hate relationship with this book. There was a particular moment on the holiday where I think I had pretty much given up the idea of doing a PhD. I just concluded I wasn’t up to it because the ideas in this book, I couldn’t get my head around. And then all of a sudden there was a light bulb moment and his thinking is around, effectively his term for conversational leadership, complex responsive processes of relating (CRPR). But the fundamental bit that suddenly hit me and made perfect sense and has grown in in that, “Yes, this is obvious” ever since is the point that actually organisations in and of themselves don’t exist. They are just the figment of our imagination. Because what’s actually happening is you have a bunch of people having conversations. So if you think about it, an organisation can’t do anything. You know, you might register an organisation legally. It doesn’t suddenly bring it to life. It only begins to do things when the individuals within it start talking and so his a big idea was, the only thing that we can actually affect and work with is conversation. And for me, that was such a radical moment that it… I’ve described it as almost like discovering that gravity didn’t exist, the theory of gravity was wrong. 

Kate: I was reading your thesis before and that really stood out to me, “as if gravity didn’t exist”. Yeah, and I remember having a similar moment. Rob, you also handed me that big tome and I also had that reaction: I am not worthy, my brain is not up to this, because Ralph Stacy’s writing is not the easiest to follow. But also that massive aha moment of “Oh wow”. It was showing me a view of the world from a completely different angle I didn’t know existed. An organisation is not a thing, a reified thing that exists in itself. It is actually made up of us as the people having the conversations. And I’ve seen subsequently explaining that concept to people that lights go on as well. And Nelis is nodding as well. 

Nelis: Yes, I’ve talked about it to people even though I haven’t read the big tome yet. Yeah, I’m interested by your comments about toxic leadership and how that shaped your thinking. It comes actually from quite a different angle from the one that got me into it. It is actually the opposite side of it, not knowing was always pretty clear to me. And what do you do with that? I mean, what on earth does leadership then look like when you don’t know. That is what got me into it. From what you’re sharing, it’s actually the opposite, where you see people covering up and not admitting, and not knowing and that resulting in toxic leadership. I found that very interesting. 

Rob: It’s probably the fact you’re a Dutchman and I’m a Brit, you see. You just name the reality much more readily than us Brits. I think the the commonality, if you like, in it was the toxic leadership was starting me from a point of dealing with the lived experience of the leaders and, you know, Kate will remember, one of the things that we’d often end up talking quite a lot about was just, “What are the realities going on, at any point, that we need to name?” And, you know, that’s become quite important as I’ve continued that journey. I do quite a lot of coaching now and often working with leaders, just to help them begin to name the realities, and the power of naming realities. 

Kate: And something I picked up on Rob, was about paying attention to the quality of ongoing participation. And that’s everything. 

Rob: And you know, I think I wrote my thesis on the challenge of paying attention. The way I approached my own research was particularly around what my experience as a leader was like leading a large change process. And then ethnographically engaging the leadership team, and gaining their perspectives and experiences. And, you know, it almost became the challenge of paying attention and keeping on keeping on paying attention. You know, there was that sense of yeah, I’m paying attention, but actually always as soon as I stop paying attention, something interesting, relevant, useful, is going to pop up that I need to pay attention to. And this whole approach contrasted so strongly with what many of us were brought up with on leadership. You know, you think of Kurt Lewin’s approach of doing this thing of “unfreeze, change, and refreeze”. Just seems completely bonkers now because nothing stays still long enough for that approach. 

Kate: We’ve talked about that in previous podcasts as well, how change is our constant now, and constantly change is our constant. 

Rob: And I think that’s why the contention of the ability to pay attention is something that I still don’t think we’re beginning to see enough of yet. You know, you’ve got hints of it in the leadership research going on, but what are the skills for paying attention? How do we enable people to do that better as leaders. And particularly one of my noticings, in my own research was, the hardest times to be paying attention and doing research on myself, was when stuff was so busy or manic, or it had been really difficult. But actually those, when you did manage to pay attention, they were the real gems that suddenly gave you a different understanding. 

Kate: And those are the most critical times as well. And the times when I think we can slip most easily into toxic behaviours. 

Rob: Well, they’re also the times when followers most want behaviour that I would say is toxic. You know, because if you think about even the last sort of 10 years of political leadership internationally, I can remember a time when I first started teaching leadership that George W Bush, we kind of held up as a toxic leader and that these days I hold him up as quite a good example of leadership. But there’s something about, when the world feels very uncertain, very fast, moving very changeable, we want the easy option of strong leadership. Knowing what we three know, from our experience in leadership, that strong leadership isn’t going to get us where we need to go. 

Nelis: So, it’s interesting what you’re saying about toxic leadership, just going on a little bit more about that. It’s not just a decision of the leader to cover up. It is the pressure from the followers to not want to know all the complexities, to ask him to know that he doesn’t know. He often or she often isn’t given the option of admitting to not knowing. And so toxic leadership is a bit of the result of the pressures internal to the leader, but also, I think, external to the leader. 

Kate: Almost a mutually agreed deception. “Let’s pretend that we know what we’re doing and where we’re going here”! 

Rob: One of the things that I found… so over the last seven years, I’ve stepped into the coaching space as an add-on to some of the other areas I’ve worked in. And I would say, particularly working with very senior leaders, that pressure they feel from followers almost becomes the hardest thing that they have to work with. And meeting the expectations or finding ways of refusing to meet the expectations, without feeling as though they cease to be a leader.

Kate: That’s often a challenge of conversational leadership that people mentioned to us, particularly from more hierarchical cultures, that I am expected to lead, I’m expected to have the answers, but if I ask questions of others and invite their engagement, I’m seen as weak. And we’ve discussed that on a few podcasts as well. 

Rob: Yeah, I was coaching somebody who is operating in a different cultural setup. Literally, just a couple weeks ago. And we were talking about this challenge but actually, as we reflected that we realised, that there was still a massive space for conversation, you know, in that culture. You’d never move away from the situation where the overall leader was the person that was going to make the decision. But actually there was lots of opportunity for them to sit with people, have conversations, listen. So I tend to challenge people with an assumption that it’s not culturally appropriate. Now, I think conversation comes into every culture. It’s just figuring out how it works. 

Kate: So Rob, I was intrigued to see that your LinkedIn profile says “helping leaders navigate not knowing”. Tell us a little bit about that. How do you do that? 

Rob: Yeah, and this arose from, as Kate and I have both hinted at, the fact that we both found Stacey fairly dense and theoretically exciting, and practically applied quite difficult. And so what I tried to do with my own research work because I was interested in the lived experience of leading was develop some practices that leaders could use to work in spaces of limited knowledge. And you know, there’s eight. I can run through them very quickly now and see what you make of them. The first is something you’ve touched on elsewhere in the podcast: a good enough holding of anxiety. I’m slightly unpopular at times because I actually think anxiety is healthy and we should never be without anxiety, because that’s stasis and stasis is on the way to death. But we do have to hold it at a manageable level and figure out how we do that. Secondly, just working with the fact that causality is uncertain. We’re often under pressure particularly when it comes to planning and donors and bids and those kinds of things to act as if A plus B equals C and we know it rarely ever does. How do we name that, work with it? Then probably quite a newish area, I certainly haven’t found much work on it, something I called tentative certainty. We don’t need to be absolutely certain. We just need to be certain enough to be able to take the next step. And tentative certainty is something that I’ve been doing quite a lot of work on more recently. Also beginning to apply it to what it might mean for faith, belief and conviction. Which is outside of the focus of this conversation but interesting nonetheless. So if we can be tentatively certain and that’s what we’re working towards, how do we then make sense? And I know again, you’ve talked about this, but actually, the ability to engage in collective discernment together. And again, the times that that is most needed are often the times where we face pressure to act quickly. And therefore we tend to make isolated individual decisions rather than engage collectively to make better sense. Fifthly, acting in the grey, just that permission, that the idea of legitimising leaders to act when they really are not sure, that’s you know, like walking in fog. George Carlin, the American comedian, says, “No one knows what’s next, but everybody does it”. And I quite like that, there’s a depth and a profoundness to that the longer you think about. Number six is ‘good enough’. What is actually needed? Not perfection, often, rarely ever perfection, and perfection is increasingly out of reach these days because of the speed of change anyway. Then the space for mistakes. Because, if all of this is tentative, how do we allow space for mistakes? I talk in some of my work about practising making mistakes that are not fatal. 

Kate: I like that. 

Rob: And particularly, if working with a leadership team, that’s one of the things that I spend quite a bit of time doing with them, to build confidence together. How can we actually collectively own some mistakes that we’re making? Just because, then when bigger mistakes happen, we can handle it. We can work together. And then, the eighth: and this is kind of where we realise that everything is turned on its head, is the need to plan differently. So again, sometimes the challenge is in a complex world, why bother planning, if causality is uncertain and everything else. I would say planning is even more important now, but it’s important because inevitably, very quickly, you’ll go off track. If you’ve done the planning well, you’ll be able to see the implications of that divergence from the plan, and then adjust the resources, the intentions, all of the other things very quickly. So those are just eight practices. 

Kate: I love the list you’ve got there, you know, good enough. A good enough plan. I read a quote yesterday – forget who it was by – but it effectively said, “Plans are useless but planning is everything”. And that’s the same. You know, those plans will change but the process that you go through is invaluable. And I just wanted to say, we’ll post a list of those eight points, as well as Rob’s circles of leadership practice diagram in the show notes. So, if you didn’t catch all of those or you were scrambling to write them down, they’ll be in the show notes. Nelis, any reflections on what Rob has shared there? 

Nelis: Well, first of all, yes, I recognise what you’re sharing and we’ve talked about several of those themes and I love how you’re coming at them in a fairly systematic way, which I think is really helpful. In some ways it’s a real step up – as much as we’re impressed by Stacey – from Stacey’s very theoretical and “So what?” kind of approach. So I really appreciate that. It gives it some practicality. One of the things I’m sitting with here is the moments you most need this, is also the moment it’s hardest to do. You’ve mentioned that twice now and the reality of the time pressures. When things are the most under pressure, the most complex, you have the least freedom to actually do this actually, when you most need it. So how do you handle that? Do you have advice or thoughts about that whole question, about that dilemma, that is constant, which I think we as leaders all experience? 

Rob: You’re absolutely right. It’s the times when we are most expected to act by our followers, that we often most need to pause and pay attention. One of the other things I was absolutely fascinated about in my original research and work since, is what it means to act as a leader. And I think what I’ve noticed is, rarely do we understand the value of choosing not to do something or resisting, holding off from doing something. And that’s very much around this followers’ expectations issue. They’re feeling anxious, they’re feeling nervous, something’s happened. They want the leader to be seen to be responding. I have found – and actually write in my thesis – one particular example, but have seen it many times since, where holding off from making a decision meant that in the end, we made a much, much better decision that radically changed the course of where we were going. And that I think is something that we can play with a bit more as leaders. It takes courage. But the other key thing I would say is, we just need to normalise the not knowing. So noticing the not knowing in the daily leadership experience rather than just doing it at the big scary times. Kate might remember that one of the things that I would occasionally do much to the frustration of some of my staff at the time, was talk about all the things we didn’t know. We’d be faced with the decision. It might not be a massive decision, but I’d kind of sit there ticking off on my fingers all the things we don’t know. Actually that’s really quite an unusual thing for a leader to do. But the question of, okay, if we make this decision, what is the worst possible thing that can happen? Let’s talk about that. And then if we make the decision, anything else is a good outcome. 

Nelis: Yeah, I appreciate that. And what you’re talking about and I think that’s very helpful to ask ourselves, can we not make a decision? Free yourself from the pressure of your followers. At the same time, some of those pressures are not necessarily even your followers, they are deadlines imposed by circumstances, realities, opportunities that go away, or whatever your context would be. And so I’m pondering, how do you act in those circumstances? And maybe there even, it’s admitting the not knowing. And asking yourself, so what would happen if we didn’t go for it, your worst case scenario may be helpful. So, I’m processing this, because that is where the rubber hits the road, where it gets really difficult. 

Rob: It is, I think, it is where the tentative certainty context comes in. Again, what we can do is we can offer leadership but we can offer it in a way that is tentative and that allows us to do a couple of things. It allows us to move forward and as we discover more knowledge potentially make a 180 degree turn, and reverse and come back. And if we haven’t been tentative, doing that can be a very difficult decision. Often feels a bit of a crisis. The other thing of making explicit the tentative nature of our knowledge is it invites others into that sense-making process. So it might be, well, actually I don’t know where we should go but we’ve got to do something. Therefore because I’m the leader and no one else is offering anything, I’m going to suggest we do this. That’s a step forward. But actually, when we’ve done that step forward, let’s all sit together and see what we’re beginning to notice. What’s beginning to emerge? Is it looking like it has possibility as we head down that particular avenue?

Kate: And there’s a real honesty, vulnerability, transparency in that, which I love, Rob. And it’s not the traditional leadership approach where you are meant to be omniscient and omnipotent, etc. But it’s so much more real and authentic. And I think that the majority of people would really want that, leaders explaining, “Well this is what we know, this is what we don’t know. We’re going to try this”. I love that whole idea of tentative certainty because there’s so much we can’t know nowadays. I just wonder how in the last few years here, with the pandemic, how have you moved on in any way from where you were when you finished your thesis, submitted your thesis, or or have the events of the last couple of years just cemented that for you?

Rob: One of the interesting exercises we did which was pandemic-related, but bigger than the pandemic is , you know the challenge of working in the Church of England and working across the diocese is, you know, we have about 20, 000 regular worshippers who regard themselves as being part of the Church of England in this part of the world. In the middle of the pandemic, we had just begun before it struck, to name the reality that the pattern of ministry, the way we did stuff wasn’t sustainable, it wasn’t appropriate for the modern day. You know, things like geography, travel distances, all of those things were outdated, and that we needed to change it. How we do that with 20 000 stakeholders, which then got locked down – and Leicester was the longest single lockdown in the world, it was 15 months in one particular part of the city –  was a real challenge. But I at that point engaged with the work of Chris Corrigan – I will give you the details for the show notes. Chris is based in Canada. We engaged with him on a course called ‘Hosting in Complexity’, about having large scale conversations. And it was so timely, because we did that course, two weeks before the pandemic. 

Kate: Wow.

Rob: During the pandemic, we hosted 600 conversations across the diocese, most of which were online. But it used an approach called participative narrative inquiry, where we ask the number of questions to garner stories from people. And then we offered those stories back into focus groups and said, “Look, these were your stories. Does that make sense? Talk about them”. And it just took on my own thinking about the value of collective  sense-making because they weren’t data that we had gathered. They could have been but we wouldn’t have understood them very well because we then handed them back and said, “Okay this is what we heard, what do you make of it?”. It then took us on so much further and has really meant we’ve had a much more participative change process going on. So that sense of collective ownership, deep engagements together and particularly-  and Leicester is the most diverse city in the UK. It’s the first minority white city – just at that reminder of actually who’s telling this story and what I’m hearing is not what they are intending to tell me and therefore we’ve got to work together, to begin to hear one another, make sense of this together, in an extended conversation. 

Kate: I love that use of stories. It’s something that we experimented with a bit as well because as you know my interest has been in approaching change as an organisation, how can we co-create that, co-construct that together? At one of our international conferences, we gathered most significant change stories and then used that as the body of data to reflect on together in the conference. In another event we invited stories – we were looking at mental models, shifts that we needed to make in the organisation to achieve the goals that we had set out for ourselves. And we invited people to share stories that reflected mental models that may or may not need to change. And we used that within an Open Space Technology framework. And again that was very powerful using people’s own data, own narratives as your data source. Yeah. Really interesting to hear that you’re doing that in that multi-faith, multi-cultural context as well. And especially the point you made about what you’re hearing, what you’re seeing in their stories, may not be what they intended, there’s a whole other topic to discuss there, but that’s very important as well, to remember in this world of conversations being everything, what are we hearing? Was it what people were intending?

Nelis: Can I do a follow-up question here? So you talked about that sense-making in a more diverse context. And I’m assuming that more diverse context is also more than multi-faith context, and how do you see that impact leadership conversation? And how is that different from your experience of a theological college?

Rob: I think one of the interesting things that I’ve seen in a multi-faith context… I’m involved in a leadership program at the University of Birmingham where we… it’s in faith leadership, and we have multiple faiths together. I think it’s taught me that we often make a lot of assumptions. That when we talk about… whether it’s faith, whether they’re values… is values-based leadership would take us away from simply defining it as a religion. But we often make assumptions about what our shared values or our shared faith means. And when we’re in a mono-faith context… and I suspect it’s exactly the same with a monocultural context, we simply make assumptions that we know what we mean as we talk together. When those conversations cross some of those boundaries and we take time to say, “Okay, I’m using this word, what does that mean to you?”. So when I sat with an Imam and listened to what he means by how his faith impacts his leadership, it’s made me reflect better on how my faith impacts my leadership. Whereas, if I’ve had conversations with other people who are Christian leaders, it hasn’t been as helpful because we haven’t named some of those realities and teased them out. So if you like, I think it’s partly about making the diversity that we have more explicit in the conversation, which is the helpful principle anyway. 

Nelis: I find it interesting that that very deep diversity allows you to go deeper in your sense making, and I think that’s what you’re saying, because you easily stay on the surface because everybody knows this, so you don’t have to talk about it. And if that starts being challenged, you actually go a spade deeper or several spades deeper in your conversation, in your exploration of what’s actually going on. That may apply to leadership but actually to other things as well. And I think it’s not just religion, it’s values, it’s the things that everybody knows, and that can actually be cultural assumptions as well. It can come from different angles. And I think that’s a really valuable aspect where we’re often afraid of the ‘different’. What you’re saying is actually it adds an incredibly valuable component to the process and the conversation. 

Rob: Yes. And You know, I think I’d link it to something else that we’re working on here and I think folks are in a number of places which is how do we deal with difference better? And so I was in a conversation yesterday, talking about how can we create cultural curiosity so that we can actually enjoy engaging across the difference. And you know, this was in a context where we were reflecting on a number of years where anti-racism training and conscious bias training has been offered and taken up. But almost that, if you don’t follow that up with something that helps people develop confidence and curiosity and humility in that space around engaging together, you almost just make it a higher mountain to climb because people are more fearful of creating a difficult situation, doing something that’s not appropriate. So I think there’s quite a challenge coming back to our original question of, you know, how do we engage across that diversity in a time that we have a healthy care for our words and awareness of one another’s feelings and histories are at play. But actually, the political correctness can inhibit conversation. And that’s really sad. 

Nelis: Yeah, it’s when you aren’t allowed to ask questions of curiosity because you may be punished for it, then you’re in trouble. 

Rob: Yeah. That’s a really nice way of putting it. 

Nelis: I’d like to go back to our earlier conversation. We kind of skipped your actual writing of the thesis in the middle of a massive change process, as you describe it in your thesis itself, which I think at times was actually quite traumatic. Did you find any kind of limitations to the model? So I think it’s, you describe the strengths quite well, allowing to embrace that uncertainty together, creating a space for this to be able to be discussed, avoiding toxic leadership and I think these are all incredibly important, but I’m also asking myself in the process of doing that, that you come across some limitations as well, where you said, “Okay, well in certain contexts, I had to move away from the ideal because it just wasn’t possible or there are weak sides to what I try to do here. Any insights on that? 

Rob: There were certainly times where it was very tempting to say “this is a luxury, I don’t have time for it”. You know, the attentiveness, the engagement, the collective discernment. I think I noticed that when I did weaken my focus on it and was tempting to do that, the outcomes were much poorer. So I think in many respects the challenge was about normalising the ideas in an organisation, so that collectively you can work together on it. So the more people that began to realise the conversation was the most important thing, the easier it became as the leader to work in that space, because other people were being attentive. Other people were saying hang on, “Who’s around the table? How do we get more diversity around this table?”. Because when it was just me in the early days, with some of those ideas, the sheer exhaustion of paying attention was difficult and just the ability, I think, to maintain that was difficult. But it was very encouraging quite how quickly my leadership team in particular felt it resonated enough. They didn’t need to know all of the theory but it made sense at a gut level. And you know, they would say, “Okay, well, actually that term is giving me a language to articulate what I know at a gut level.”. So I think that began to teach me something about how we make some of these things more accessible. I think the other really difficult thing is just how we pay attention to things and how we process them as humans. So you know we’ve talked about stuff being constantly changing. In our minds we make snapshots. So we kind of focus on something, we make sense of it. And the problem is as soon as we’ve stopped paying lots of attention to that and moved on to something else that needs to fit with it, that continues to move. And one of Stacey’s really profound pieces of work was around how we then abstract ideas from that. So if we make sense by saying okay, in the middle of this terrain that I’m looking at there, is this big tall tower. And it’s right in the middle. As soon as we begin to move to other stuff, it’s no longer right in the middle. But because we assume it’s there, we then begin to abstract that and make bigger and bigger errors, the longer we stick with something. So this is why tentative certainty became such a strong feature. It wasn’t just about recognizing that I didn’t know everything. It was about recognizing that I had to hold stuff constantly in a space of tentativeness. Because as soon as time moved on, I moved on, other people moved on, the situation changed. Does that make sense? 

Nelis: Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. You’re touching on something that I’ve been wondering about: what is our human capacity for dealing with uncertainty, giving attention to everything? Your paying attention is a core concept. What you’re sharing really resonates with me. At the same time, we as humans pick up maybe 1 percent of all of our stimuli around us because we abstract for the rest as being a constant background. We assume we know that and what you’re saying that’s not true and it’s really helpful to be aware of that. At the same time as human beings, our capacity to process everything is extremely limited. So, I’m asking myself, realistically, how far can you go with this? And how far can you ask your followers to go in this? Because of all of our limited capacity to deal with uncertainty. 

Rob: Two slightly different levels… I’ll attempt to respond to that. I do think we have to recognize that some people don’t want to engage with the complexity and that’s fine. You know, if you think of people in the organisation who have a particular job, they want to be able to turn up for it, do what you’ve told them to do, and go because they’ve got a lot of other stuff going on or that’s just where they see it. So you know there is something about saying, who needs to engage with this level of complexity? Who needs to engage with these realities? And one of the things that I use as a very crude definition of leadership, is that a leader’s job is to create the environment in which their followers can thrive. And for some that is a very contained environment. It pays little reality, little bearing to reality because that’s what they need and how they are going to operate. So that would be one thing I think to accept and to work with. Then, I think for the people who can engage and want to engage with some of the complexities and need the ability to pay attention, there are some things that we can do as we work in leadership development. And I think some of them, most of them, are very simple things and we often over complicate it. So one of the most powerful that I have used over the last six or seven years, here is a listening exercise where we get people to talk and listen in pairs. And you know, the first off they have to talk for a minute. And then they have to repeat in the next 30 seconds everything they’ve heard back to the person. Absolutely exhausting. Next exercise is talk for less time, brief summary of three or four headlines from what they’ve heard. And actually, people feel that they’ve been better heard, than the regurgitation. And then we get them to talk for the same amount of time, 30 seconds. And then the person just has to come up with one word, that is the impression they’re taking away from the person. And that is almost always the exercise where people feel most heard. So I think there are skills we can use as to how we pay attention and those are quite underdeveloped for most of us. 

Kate: That’s a fascinating example. 

Rob: It’s a real fun one to do. And effectively what you’re doing is, you know, if you imagine a sort of midpoint when you’re listening to everything, you’re listening to everything in that midpoint. Then you’re listening for the headlines above the line. And then you’re actually looking for the feeling below the line. 

Kate: And that’s such a critical skill as leaders, is not only listening but communicating to people that they have been heard and understood. 

Rob: Well and there we’re getting on to one other thing that Stacey was really hot on. And certainly the point that I first encountered this. You know, we talk about conversation. I’ve said conversation is what an organisation is. Stacey went further and said conversation isn’t words, it’s actually a gesture. It’s accepting that what I’m saying to you two this afternoon, you’re not hearing exactly as I intend it. And so we kind of gesture it back and forward and we make sense of what we’re saying together. 

Kate: I have one more question for you Rob. And it’s about scale. When you discovered these ideas, CRPR, conversational leadership, you were working in a relatively small environment. You were leading a college, which was relatively small in terms of the staff team, and then students. And then you move to a diocese of 20, 000, I think you said? Talk a little bit about the differences in scale. What shifts, what doesn’t, what still applies? What doesn’t? What do you have to do differently? 

Rob: In many respects I think the key change has been one of particularly enabling others to operate with our thinking, rather than us operating with it, first hand with a leadership team. I mean, obviously, we do that as part of it, but, you know, hosting large-scale conversations. We have about 300 ordained and lay leaders. Currently, I’m running a program to upskill about 400 to work with some of these things. Because obviously we’re moving into a reshaped ministry pattern. It feels very unfamiliar to people. It feels quite scary. We are trying to do it in a way that we prioritise local discernment and autonomy and agency. And therefore we keep having to say, “Well, we can’t tell you what that’s going to look like, because that’s yet to be discussed and agreed locally and it will emerge”. So helping those leaders to hold their own anxiety, to work with tentative emergence, to help others live with a level of anxiety. And particularly when you’re talking about ritualised patterns of thinking, of behaviour, of faith, of meaning-making, that’s really deep stuff and challenging for people. So it’s it’s those small challenge for each of the leaders to do that. But actually so many of the principles that we’re talking about in conversational leadership have come into play with what we’ve been doing in the program. 

Nelis: Yeah, it’s interesting to see how you are able to bring it to the next level, different scale. What I found interesting in our conversation was, I went in assuming that we would talk a lot about limited knowledge. And we talked about that and you gave those eight angles for that and the system for it. But what I find interesting is that you quickly took it into paying attention and how important that is. And that was core to everything. You said it’s about paying attention, really constantly revising your own thinking, listening to others, bringing people into the conversation from different angles. And you challenged me through that as a core concept it’s not just about limited knowledge and about not knowing, it’s about paying attention, which makes it very practical. I think we can all embrace this idea of how do I pay attention on a more regular basis and more broadly. So I think that’s a great takeaway for me. 

Rob: You’re absolutely right. I think for me it’s become the kind of key focus that leaders need to be having. But actually, it’s a key skill that we need across the board at the moment, as we’re engaging difference in every part of society, every part of our lives. You know, that ability to not jump to conclusions but to actually continue to pay attention, to be able to revise our thinking. Just so relevant for so many parts of our lives today. 

Kate: And so many, very current examples in the news, I’m thinking, recently here in the UK particularly. But yeah, for all of us, as attention spans are shrinking due to the effects of social media, etc., something we can all work on is paying attention and the quality of our attention.

Nelis: Paying attention. That’s a great takeaway. So Kate…

Kate: Yes, it just remains for me to wrap things up, as usual. Thank you Rob for coming. It’s been fantastic to talk to you again and to see how your ideas have developed and grown since I last talked to you about these things. Thank you to our listeners for showing up again. As always, if you have any comments or questions, thoughts, we’d love to hear from you. Head on over to leadinginconeversation.net, leave us a comment or contact us on social media as well. Thank you both. Until the next time, Nelis. 

Nelis: Thank you and see you.

Rob: Thank you. Thank you for having me.

Season 2, Episode 6

Leading in Conversation
Leading in Conversation
Season 2, Episode 6
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Shownotes

Peter Block’s three characteristics of powerful questions: personal, ambiguous and provoke anxiety.

Adaptive/ technical problems – Heifetz & Linsky

Steve Cuss : Managing leadership anxiety, theirs and yours.

Jim Wilder, neuropsychologist

Kegan and Leahey “Immunity to Change” framework – one explanation

David Erlichman, Impact Networks

Contact Dano: Dan@focusdconsulting.us 

Transcript

Kate: Hello, and welcome back to Leading in Conversation, to our sixth episode of season 2. And we’re really happy to have another guest with us today, Dano, and I will let Nelis introduce him to you.

Nelis: Well, I will actually leave most of the introduction to himself, Kate. But it’s kind of nice to show the connection. Dano and I have gotten to know each other in a leadership training course and really connected on a number of fronts around leadership experiences and leadership hopes and also collaboration between organisations. And we wanted to make that concrete by doing leadership mentoring together. So we had a cohort of leaders that we mentored jointly, and it was great fun to work with him on this. And that’s when we really wrestled with a lot of the kind of issues that are so related to conversational leadership. So I always wanted to bring Dano onto our podcast at some point, because he’s got a lot to contribute. So here you are. Welcome, Dano. I’m really excited for you to finally be with us. And why don’t you introduce – a little bit more – yourself, your background, so that our listeners have an idea of who you actually are.

Dano: Thanks, Nelis, and thanks, Kate. I have been leading in numerous settings for over 25 years, in business and nonprofit segments while I was still living in the US. And then my family moved to India in 2008, and launched a number of different businesses. I was in the manufacturing field, and also education. And the challenges and the dynamics of business in South Asia, in a very emerging market, it punished me in many ways, but it also grew me up. And I think in the midst of that, after I

ended one of those businesses I felt like… coaching… when, while I was still running with the manufacturing, I got involved in coaching, got some coach training, and it was so transformational to realise the power of a question. And the capacity, what had to happen inside me? My interior life, to be able to listen, actually listen to people. I think it’s Peter Block. He says. Great questions have 3 components. They’re ambiguous, personal, and they evoke anxiety. And I love that dimension of a really great question, and I think I’m always on the hunt for an elegant and beautiful question at just the right moment.

Kate: Can I ask you to repeat that quote again from Peter Block? I love it.

Dano: He said, great questions have 3 components. They’re ambiguous, personal, and they evoke anxiety in the listener.

Kate: Really interesting, isn’t it? Especially if you think about using coaching, aiming to achieve those kinds of goals in the business environment, work environment, because we don’t tend to invite ambiguity, anxiety, or personal things into our work. Can you expand a little bit on how you have worked that out in your leadership experiences?

Dano: Yeah. Block is certainly a thought mentor for me. And of course, actually, I’m always trying to

create psychological safety and manage my own anxiety. But there’s something about a question when you are hoping to help the whole system be engaged, when you’re inviting everybody to bring their best, and to not just verbally talk about, “Yeah, I’m in this. I’m with you. I’m committed”. But these 3 key elements or essential elements of a great question, they cultivate ownership.

Block would also say that these kinds of questions are this kind of attitude or mindset pushes creativity to the bottom and the edge of a given system. And I think that describes a lot of what I try to accomplish in organisational spaces is cultivating, unleash, unleash everybody, so that the people at the edges, people far away from the centre, maybe far away from whatever is perceived as the top, feel like they are living an expression of what’s becoming a passion, or a calling, or a sense of like ownership. Some people call it ownership. I’m not sure I love that word exactly, but it communicates clearly what people oftentimes are doing.

Kate: There’s a sense in ownership of, there’s that danger of kind of like, “Here’s our vision. Now we want you to own it. Here’s the thing we want you to do. Now you own it.”. That’s what the word ownership evokes for me, and that, of course, is the antithesis of what we want to achieve in conversational leadership.

Dano: I feel the same way about the word empowerment. Empowerment feels like, “I have the power, and I’ll dispense it wherever I want. I have all the power. You don’t. So I’m gonna empower you.” But it’s actually quite patriarchal, and it’s a word that I’d never wanna use. I recognize when people use it, they don’t always mean that. But the intent gets too mixed up in the idea that I hold all the power, and I’ll give it to you as I plead.

Nelis: So, you talked about ownership and about empowerment as two of those concepts of sort of traditional management speak and you’re contrasting that with another approach. And I think I’ve heard you talk about co-creation as the alternative to that. And that’s what we often talk about in our podcast as well. So I want to come back to that with you. But before we do that, I’d like to hear a little bit more concretely about those questions about those anxiety, inducing questions, personal, ambiguous. And because can you give some examples to that? So that we’re not talking just theoretically, but also make it concrete for people, and maybe contrast that with the types of questions we don’t want to ask.

Dano: Yeah, I love that, that you want to get serious about and concrete about them. So an example of a great, a personal and ambiguous and evoking anxiety kind of question might be, “Where are you at on the crossroads of your life? And maybe you know, if there’s 2 signs, just tell me the 2 signs that you’re at.

Kate: You immediately take it really, really deep, really personal.

Dano: And what I like to usually say is, now you can just throw a fluff thing out there. You can just kind of be fake, but everybody’s going to know it. And I think we’re going to be really honest right now. So I’m going to invite everybody to another level of honesty. And so what that does is it’s ambiguous like, there’s no right answer. I wonder what he wants me to say?

In South Asia, in quite a dominant culture… and of course I came in as a non-Indian, and Indians are always navigating with me: “Okay, do I wanna get something from him? Do I need to respect him? Do I need to put him down?” The nexus of power in that cross-cultural setting was confusing, because many of them hadn’t worked with an expat before. The idea of ambiguous is, “Well, what is the right answer? I need you to tell me what the right answer is, so I can give you the right answer.”. And so that’s why I like to cultivate ambiguous questions. And then take time and be really patient, because it is for someone coming from a background that, there was a very clear right and wrong, and you were acknowledged or approved, or given some kind of benefits that came from complying. It takes time to work that muscle. So that’s what I mean by, as an example. Another example is, “What part do you play in how our organisation got to the place it’s at?” And so it’s just especially in the moment when there’s like lots of squeaky frustration or “things are bad”, or “they did this” or “hear what they did again”, especially if you hear it, like, I hear that going on over here, it’s a great time to raise it in a group setting. And once again, “What part do you play?” says I acknowledge that other people have a part to play. I took on a new leadership setting and we would usually say, “I inherited a bunch of problems. But by about 18 months they’re my problems”. I can’t blame anybody else for them. So I try to cultivate those kinds of things in these kinds of questions.

Kate: I love it. I know that you’ve worked with Josiah who we interviewed, I think it was the first episode of this season, and Josiah is another master of the question that takes you immediately bypassing levels 1, 2, 3, 4 of conversation from the superficial right into deep and meaningful questions. It’s definitely a superpower you guys share. So how do you use these kinds of questions in your work?

Dano: Well, I do a lot of executive coaching, C-suite coaching, and so maybe I’ll start there. Getting to know someone and having them tell their story, but not tell their story from the perspective of trying to earn something with me or prove something to me. You have to change the kinds of questions that you ask, and so usually… actually, this is a good moment to mention, you know, Nelis also asked, what are some bad questions? Those kinds of people oftentimes want to ask questions like, “Why aren’t we getting those kinds of people in the room? Or why don’t we have better people? Or how do we get those people to change?” And it’s very reactive. And it’s a simple path toward getting things fixed. And so I oftentimes will want to ask, like C-suite leaders, what’s the question that you know what’s the question you need someone to ask you right now. And whenever they ask it, then I say, let’s let’s massage that question. Let’s make a better question. Because, just because someone got into senior leadership doesn’t necessarily mean they ask good questions. They might just be getting good results. But they haven’t cultivated an interior curiosity that unleashes flourishing for everyone, and they have a lot of assumptions that come along with that. Yeah, I like asking powerful questions there and then also, you know, using, “Tell me more”. So it isn’t a question, it’s a way of double clicking on something someone said. I think, being, you know, immensely curious. When people aren’t used to anyone being curious around them, it strikes them, some people are afraid of it.

Kate: It can feel very threatening and puts you on the spot. But there’s also something like, “This person is interested in me”. I’ve done some coaching training recently, and just when the coach, the trainer, asked me questions about my life suddenly it takes you into a whole, another domain, a whole nother realm, doesn’t it? Of focus and interest? And wow, somebody’s actually asking about me. And this is serious. And this is gonna help me. Yeah.

Dano: And I think, too, that’s something that right now, I think across the corporate world, I mean, that’s the real integration of whole life, the spiritual life in the sense of my deepest values and the things that matter to me, who I am, when no one’s looking, my values and my integrity. When you invite people to explore those dimensions, it can be a little scary, but they are bringing them to the workplace. They just don’t know it. They think they’ve kind of compartmentalised that. And you wanna call them out and say, “Are you kidding me? You are lying to yourself, and therefore you’re lying to other people, and we can all see it. You’re only hiding from yourself. You’re not really hiding from anybody else”. That isn’t normally what people want to hire me to do.

Dano: But the result, when they see a greater sense of integration, they appreciate it, or I’ve also had somebody who paid me upfront for 10 coaching appointments, and constantly gives excuses and doesn’t want to do anymore. I’m just glad they paid upfront. So, yeah, well. But it wasn’t really what they wanted, or they’re not sure now they really want to enter that again. And I mean, I have to balance that. 

Nelis: When you’re not in a coaching environment, but in a leadership environment, do you get those negative reactions as well? Or is it generally people are ready to bring their whole selves

to the situation?

Dano: Well, you can’t make adults do anything, but you can create environments and you can ask permission. “I’d like to ask permission to do something that’s probably gonna feel very uncomfortable and challenging.” “Do I have permission?”. So I use a permission question that gets there. And then in group settings, I allow people to opt out. But those people that opt out don’t have a voice in contributing. So I was in a gathering of large, probably 35 mid-level leaders that would directly relate to the international director. And we were doing – I don’t know if you’re familiar with Keegan and Leahy’s “immunity to change”? – So we were doing immunity to change framework at an individual level with the hope to do it at a group level. We needed to do an individual level. Then, maybe 6 months later, we were hoping to do a group level or a whole team level. And I had given my own map, which is uncovering of some deep assumptions that underpin my life, and it was quite transparent. I felt like I was being as transparent as I could possibly be.

Kate: And you have to be when you’re using that tool. Otherwise it doesn’t work.

Dano: No one will believe you if you don’t. 

Kate: You have to lead as you want them to participate. Yeah.

Dano: So I could see his eyes as he was reading my map, and we were talking about it, and there was a feeling of real uncomfortableness in the room. Meaning like, you’re kind of exposed, and I don’t know how I feel about you leading up front now that you’ve been authentic about what have been some things inside you that have happened. And he just basically opted out. At one point I came back and I said, “Hey, I noticed that you haven’t connected, haven’t paired up or connected with anyone”. He goes, “Nah, I’m good. I don’t need this. It’s like, okay”. And I realised from that point forward, danger, danger, danger, someone that wasn’t willing. He didn’t say for any other reason. “You know, I don’t really need this, I’m good”. And so finding ways to ask questions but then also creating a psychological safety. So for him, there was nothing I was going to do that was going to create enough psychological safety to enter in. For others a degree of sharing authentically at certain levels before you go straight to, you know, the deepest assumptions that are going to expose you. You know, staging that. I think also pre-work. I noticed that some pre-work can do work like that. So having them ask powerful questions of others. Or maybe do an appreciative inquiry of another person coming to the meeting, and you say to them, “You’re going to be telling their story and so be ready to tell it like you’d want someone to tell your story”. So there’s a sense of empathy that’s cultivated. I think those, Nelis, are ways that I found to do that.

Nelis: Yeah, that’s really helpful. I think that element of permission and gradually easing people in. I think those are. Those are really helpful concepts to go deeper and to really tackle things more profoundly, because if you throw people in at the deep end, you may get that reaction of that

leader that you just talked about like, “Whoa, I’m I’m not ready for this”. 

Kate: We’ll definitely put a link to that particular tool you mentioned – immunity to change – in our show notes. I did it last year sometime, and it was incredibly powerful for me in overcoming a real blockage in my leadership. Nelis is nodding, people can’t see it. He actually worked through some of it afterwards with me, working out the implications for how I show up. I did it as part of that Use-of-self module on the course we’ve all taken, and was very, very powerful. And I’m still, I think, reaping the benefits of that so definitely, let’s share that in our show notes.

Nelis: And it’s fascinating. I haven’t thought of it in that terms – I came across it when you introduced that, Kate – to do that at an organisation level. I’ve been aware of it as a personal tool, but as an organisational tool I find that a fascinating idea. What would it take as a group to look at this? What is our organisational assumption? Deep assumptions that we have?

Kate: That block us from reaching the goal we want to reach. 


Nelis: Exactly. And how do we, as an organisation, tend to respond or want to respond? And why? So yeah, that would be fascinating.

Kate: I rocked up to that session, thinking it was about immunity to change, “How can we get these people to change?” and realised, “Oh, wait, the finger’s pointing at me”. You have to start with yourself and work through this, and be willing to look at your deeply-held assumptions and blockages and things like that, and I think that’s the best way around to do it.

Dano: I don’t think I found another tool that surfaces hidden, of course it’s hidden commitments, hidden assumptions. I don’t know. There’s another tool that surfaces it faster, and I don’t say fast, like fast as the goal, but efficiently. I mean, if somebody went into therapy for a year, they could probably surface some of those things, but high cost, not easy to disperse across a whole organisational setting, doesn’t deal with the whole system. So it’s very powerful in that way. And I think too, then, I would also say appreciative inquiry. “Who are we when we’re at our best?”. “What is us? What is the sense of us-ness?”. Again, cross-culturally, this can be very challenging. In one way, there’s an advantage cross-culturally. But if you have people who come from individualistic and collectivist cultures, they can sometimes mean different things. And yet that’s one of the most beautiful moments of making meaning of what it means to be us or who we’re at when we’re at our best. That surfaces a different kind of thing. But it’s a really positive and an encouraging thing. That also is a great moment to contrast. Who are we at when we’re at our worst, or even, I’m gonna jump in too quickly into another kind of mental model. But there’s some neuroscientists that talk about fast twitch and slow twitch brain activity, and how being able to cultivate joy and express empathy, and renew the connections in our brain toward joyful experiences. They give us a greater sense of trust, relational trust. I can believe you. I don’t assume the worst, and that most of us are at a joy deficiency. And so they had some very simple practices that are really powerful. And I’ve done it in lots of different settings. And it’s almost like it renews the circuitry in the room. Another way to describe it would be, it softens up the soil of the ground that the whole group is working in, and everybody’s just a little more soft toward each other a little more. It doesn’t mean that they’re just limp and unengaged. It means there’s a sense of empathy and psychological safety that pervades the space. Jim Wilder is one of the neuroscientists that I follow. And I’m just totally fascinated by that as anxiety reducer that doesn’t attack anxiety or try to address the anxiety. But instead, it says your anxiety is coming from a place you don’t really know about. We’re going to work on cultivating some of that space and the soil of your life, and then the soil of our whole system. And what I’ve been saying these days is good soil, bad soil will kill the best seed. Doesn’t matter how great your idea is, if you have bad soil, if you don’t have psychological safety, radical trust, a shared sense of empathy, and a meaning-making mechanism between you, your best idea, your best seed will just be eaten up. But if you have good soil, even a below average seed can grow, and it could improve because there’s a capacity to renew. In my organisational design work I’ve been spending a lot of time on “what’s the soil like?”. And as a leader, don’t focus on a great idea, a great seed, or trying to get everybody to move in your direction, focus on creating great soil. And then, everything that’s happening will be more positive. There’ll be more progress, less resistance. You’ll retain more people. There’ll be a sense of continuity. Yeah, I could keep going. But you get the point.

Kate: That’s really interesting. Dano. That sense of the soil is what’s important. You can have the best strategy, the best idea, but if the soil’s not ready for something to grow in it, then you’re not going to go anywhere. How would you go about working on the soil, in an organisation, for example?

Dano: Well, I like to ask many leaders. I’m gonna touch on co-creation, which maybe we’ll get to later, too. But I like to invite a team of leaders – that’s a mixture of upper level and mid-level leaders, and maybe even a couple people that are more like line workers – to join a co-creation team which could be, you could also call it a change agent, team, or kind of change work. But sometimes it’s connected to an event. And sometimes an event is a great catalytic opportunity for more extended change, because you’re going to see everyone face-to-face. I always ask each of them. “Hey, we’re gonna do lots of survey work. So how about everybody does 5 interviews? Not the same people, and try to get out as wide as possible and ask questions like the questions I mentioned earlier about you know where you’re at in the intersection of your life, or what part you play and how we got to where we are. Those kinds of survey questions, they cultivate empathy and they also require the co-creation team to carry the voice of another, and so they don’t just summarise when they come back. We’ll oftentimes use a mural board, so we can visualise all that’s happening, we can see it more clearly. And so we capture the different post-it notes that go on to a mural and that means that the co-creation team doesn’t just bring their voice. We don’t just want them to be the change agents. We want them to amplify the voice of the people they interviewed. And they have a much deeper sense of compassion and empathy for those people. Some people really got hurt, or have really been marginalised or don’t feel like they’ve been heard. And so both that happens. And then especially for emerging leaders who’ve maybe not been invited to this space before. They realise it’s not about me trying to drive my outcome. It’s way bigger than that, and so… trying to find ways to get them to listen well, and then to bring that together and interpret, like, what are we sensing is the – I like to call it – the inner voice. What’s the, if it’s the personification of the organisation, if the organisation was a person, what would they be having nightmares about? What would they be saying to themselves, what’s the internal dialogue that’s happening? So we’re trying to surface that for the whole and then pay attention to it. Like, really, listen, you heard somebody really hurt, or really in a lot of pain. You heard someone that felt like they were thriving. How do we put all that together? That’s how real humans are. We’re almost schizophrenic in that way. One time we can have great experience, and we can have a terrible one the next day. And then we’re still the same person. So trying to navigate and manage and make meaning of that together, and then let that work of kind of observing and interpreting lead us to action. Or sometimes it’s just experimentation, let’s try something. But oftentimes it’s just saying it’s not good enough to assume we know what they want, but we need to listen and do a better job of listening, and then bring that into whatever the next season might be characterised by, or whatever the event might be characterised by. And then, use quotes and things like that from those people. That makes the co-creation team, I think, on a different posture. They’re not trying to drive their own outcomes, but they feel like they’re carrying the voice from the edges. At the same time, sometimes there’s a leader there that can say, “There is a future” and they’re trying to interpret or understand the future that maybe some people at the edges might be feeling they want, but still be able to cast a vision, for there is a future. There’s hope. We have a direction we’re going, and we need to be living out this way. But it doesn’t ignore any of the edges, and it really to me it creates a lot of cohesiveness and I found I can’t trust anybody on a co-creation team that hasn’t done a lot of good survey work and doesn’t feel responsible for carrying the voices of the people at the edges for the the main purpose of the work that we share together.

Kate: There’s something really important there about authenticity and integrity, I think, at the start of a process which really resonates. 

Nelis: Yeah, I love how you bring together the collective part, the organisation as a person, and I really like that sort of image. What would the nightmares be? What is the internal dialogue? What is? If you imagine the organisation as a person, what does that tell you? So that’s a very collective way of looking at it, and then at the same time saying, okay, but it’s not just all collective. There may be a leader who can tell “There is a future”. There is an individual responsibility. It’s not just passive, the organisation thinks this because there is a need for, yeah, stepping up and sometimes being that different voice. So that individual versus collective tension that you described there I find fascinating. And I think that’s part of where our conversations about conversational leadership go, isn’t it, Kate? Where you talk about okay, there is a huge collective part, and conversational leadership is not 1% at the top knowing everything. But there is still a leadership role. And what is that leadership role? And how do you manage that polarity?

Dano: Yes.

Nelis: So I am not sure I followed you a hundred percent on your fast twitch versus slow twitch image. The image you created there is about, I think, the quick bursts of action, the things that need immediate resolution versus the long term things that you talked about. This joy, the context that allows you to go for it in the long haul, and I think the picture is athletes who can do 100 metre dashes versus the marathon. The marathon needs slow twitch, the fast twitch is the 100 metre dash. Is that correct? And how are you using that in your leadership experience?

Dano: I don’t know how it works exactly in athletics, but in terms of the mental, the neuroscience, the neuroscientists are saying these days, we respond out of a deficit for joy, or out of a deficit of a feeling of being heard, or a feeling of safety and the immediate thing, it’s not something we think about. It’s not actually part of our cognitive process. It’s a collection of our woundings and trauma. And we react oftentimes. This is another book by Steve Cuss, Managing leadership anxiety, yours and theirs. He talks about, in a moment of uncertainty, what do you need to be okay? In a moment of uncertainty what do you think you need to be okay? In a trauma unit he was a chaplain in a hospital, and saw 250 people die right before his eyes in a 2 year span. So he would just be like, he showed up, and the person just died, and the whole family’s there, and they’re expecting him to say something. Really scary. And, what do you think you need? And I had to come to realise, I think I need to be in control. Others I know, they think they need to be able to be responsible for everything. Others, they want to punctuate that sense of anxiety or uncertainty with humour. Other people demand respect. You can have the whole gambit of potential things. Those are the fast twitch. We don’t control it. It’s the overflow of the condition of the soil of our life. And if our interior life is riddled with wounding, with pain, with betrayal that’s unprocessed. We might have all those experiences, but if we’ve worked through it, we can actually respond and not react or not want to fight instead, we can come from a different source. I think that’s why leaders need to cultivate a really healthy interior life. But then also be able to cultivate organisational health in the whole system or the whole landscape can be characterised by a greater sense of health in the soil, and it shows up like a sense of mutuality and respect and empathy and less “I’m trying to drive my outcome” and how can we be the best version of who we are. And even accountability is a great example of this. Accountability in this setting says, “Kate, I noticed that you showed up this way. That isn’t like us. I felt like you’re not being us”. Or maybe even, “ I noticed you weren’t being yourself in that moment. But you, I want you to say, it’s tough for me, because you’re also not being like what we committed to. We committed to being people who do the… whatever it is. And I noticed you didn’t do that and I want to call you back to your best self. I want to call you back to who we agreed on being together”. There’s an example of cultivating great health and not saying, did you check it off the list, or did you do the right thing or demanding allegiance, but more like drawing you back to the sense of that collective calling that we agreed to. So it has to be a moment of calling where we collectively share, “Yeah, that’s who we’re going to be”. That’s an example of accountability that works when someone betrays the deepest values.

Nelis: I love what you’re saying there, and that’s quite hard. We’ve had conversations recently about people or about issues. I think we all know those, where there’s an unhealthy soil and unhealthy environment, either at an individual or at the organisational level. And the question is, do you let it go because that is so much easier? Or do you find a way to confront it? And my experience is that if you don’t find a healthy way to confront that, to help see a healthy soil, it always comes back to bite you in the long run.

Dano: Mhmm.

Nelis van den Berg: But that’s hard work, because it doesn’t always get a positive response.

Dano: No, and people aren’t expecting that’s what leaders are going do.

Kate: I’m just thinking of my last annual review with Nelis. Nelis is very good at pulling me up on stuff like that. I hate it at the time, but it always yields growth. It’s horrible when it happens, when someone has the courage to challenge you and say, “You know this thing you do, or the way you show up, that’s not helping us”. He doesn’t use the same language as you, but you know, as my supervisor, he’s been very good at that over the years. And it’s tough to do but you have to do it if you want people to flourish and grow in their roles. And if you want the soil organisationally to be healthy, I mean particularly as leaders. It’s that use-of-self, that self awareness, is so critical.

Nelis: It’s massive. I’m just thinking back over my conversations in my regular leadership today and yesterday. And this kind of issue has cropped up 3 times, and 3 times the question is, do we drop it or do we address it? I think my consistent response was, let’s address it. But woah, this is hard. This is really hard, how do we do it? What’s the best way of engaging with that? So yeah, I really appreciate that.

Dano: The leaders that want to, that choose to ignore this and just drive toward organisational outcomes… I don’t know if you call them, you know Level one leaders, or something like that. They could get pretty high up in the organisation, but all they talk about is outcome, outcome, outcome. They are the leaders that drive organisations into the ground. And it requires another bridge building, healing leader, to come after them, to recover from the pain of drive, drive, drive, drive, drive. But there’s, I think, a kind of leader, and I would call them another…. I don’t know what you call them, maybe they’re deeper level. Maybe they’re not. They’re not actually ascending the ladder to try something different, but the ones that cultivate this interior life, that cultivate the soil, that want to see flourishing happening, all at the edges, not just at the top, those are the kinds of leaders that oftentimes, I think, actually, the results in those organisations of larger health and wider health, those are the kinds of spaces where other organisations come and go. We heard about some good stuff that’s happening there, can you tell us more? I think they’re deliberately developmental, to use a Keegan and Leahy. They’re spaces where people thrive and where individual contribution is actually eclipsed by the collective, like a comprehensive and collective capacity to do really hard work that is not just defined by the outcome that the organisation might be going after. I do think they make money. They’re successful. They thrive. But especially in this environment, when retention of employees, managing stakeholder outcomes, just creating health everywhere. It’s a surprising antidote to the kinds of corporate anxiety that I think, drive a lot of organisations and burn people out. To me it’s inhuman, and I feel like as a leader, I can’t do that. I’m not. It’s just not part of how I’m wired.

Kate: I think it’s a great antidote to where we find ourselves in the world right now. I was just talking earlier with someone about change fatigue and recognizing that change isn’t something that has a beginning and end anymore. We’ve said this before in the podcast, we’re in a state of continuous change, and we’re moving into that chaos zone we talked about another podcast. We’re living in the volatile, uncertain, complex. ambiguous, is that right? And it’s a difficult place to navigate these days and leadership within that. I think you just look at our newspapers, television screens to see how our politicians are navigating that not well, in many cases, and across the board, across the world  I think we have a real crisis of leadership, because I think we’re being called to lead in an environment that is so VUCA, that is so challenging. And I love what you’ve been sharing here, I was thinking this feels a little bit like leadership therapy or something. I think this going back to the soil, the health of the organisation, getting real with people is something I’m going to be chewing over for a while.

Dano: Well, I also love that you mentioned politics because the autocrat loves to say to the masses, “If you vote for me, I’ll keep you safe. I’ll give you a predictable future. I’ll give you certainty”. Those are all lies. But the courageous leader, the empathetic leader, says “I don’t know what the future holds, but together, if we learn to trust each other, if we learn to create space where we actually share meaning, and we stand side by side, we can endure a future that’s unknowable”. And that’s so much more authentic and honest and not manipulative. But I don’t know, have you seen a politician do that? 

Kate: I don’t know how you begin to achieve that across a nation? I’m sure there are leaders that have done that. I’d like to think about how you even do that in an organisation with 4,000 people. Can you tell us some examples from your context, how you create that, or how you would go about creating that environment of safety?

Dano: Well, I was on a recent co-creation team in a large organisational setting, and we prepared for maybe 9, 10 months to head into a large gathering. We did a lot of survey work about the theme. And when we asked people questions, there was a lot of dissatisfaction and a lot of like, “Well, what else can we do? We’re just kind of stuck with the model we have, and we can’t reimagine it”. And so as a co-creation team we spent a lot of time at the beginning, like listening, listening to each other, telling stories, surfacing metaphors. One of the activities we did was, what’s the metaphor you bring to, I think it was oversight was one of the themes, and so it was lovely to hear the Argentineans talk about this tree that’s down near Patagonia, whose roots get connected to each other, and it was interesting to hear another Brit tell the story of how the metaphor they used was like a Indian train station. I mean, it’s fascinating to see what creativity surfaced. Another one did something about the solar system, it was very lovely. And then we spent time gallery walking, looking around, watching, what stood out to you? And then we did some work around adaptive challenges, identifying that the challenge in front of us wasn’t just a technical challenge that if we just applied a solution, it would be fixed. Instead, as Warren Bennett says, what you resist persists. So it’s a persistent problem. We keep attacking it head on, and head on is not going, it’s just getting stronger, we’re just reinforcing it. And so. The next day, when we went after an activity that comes from the book Impact Networks, by David Erlichman. Fascinating book. One of my favourite books.

Nelis van den Berg: I love it!

Dano: David has an interaction that he recommended roughly, that essentially has 3 rounds. We said to them, we’re gonna do a social experiment. And we divided the group by their last names. And the first group, we said, “All right, who’s someone that’s had an impact on your life?”. We had 3 questions, and so you reached out and connected to them. And then there was another question, and it was a different kind of dimension question. It might have been like, “Who have you learned the most from? So then, you and the person that you’re with would go and connect with the other person. But that other person might be connected to someone else’s chain. So there’s this emerging network or chains of people that start to form. And so the chains got very interconnected of course. I personally underestimated how even at a senior leader level how sensitive it would feel to not be picked. I was really surprised. For me, I just thought of it as a social experiment. I probably could have chosen some questions that were a little more benign. What I was hoping to accomplish was, “How well networked are you?”. Change flows through people who are connected and have capacity for depth and are doing the interior work. But a couple of people didn’t get picked, and they felt upset by that. And then a few people heard that someone was hurt, and then they got more hurt for them than the people that actually got hurt. So I had to stand up at the end and apologise. I said “I apologise, and never intended for anybody to feel excluded or left at the edges”. It was dicey, and I overestimated the capacity of this group to endure ambiguity and to do a real experiment on how well connected you were. I have not had this much negative feedback from my leadership, I don’t know ever. It was pretty rough.

At the same time one of my partners… we borrowed a ladder from the conference centre, and he was taking some video on the ladder, a 25 foot ladder… And he said, he helped us see it. He said the amount of chronic anxiety in this room full of senior leaders was striking. One of our insights was that in the conference before –  this is like the post conference – in the conference before these were the leaders that people came to for answers and direction. They stood up in front. They had a microphone in their hand. They had the marker, the whiteboard marker in their hand. They were the ones rolling out, and then in this setting, they were all completely just, they were just equal, and if your influence, or your willingness to coach or contribute to others, if it wasn’t apparent, then it showed up.

So I think we were talking about adaptive challenges going into this, but I would say I didn’t mean to create quite so much anxiety, but in reality, I think what happened was we made that anxiety more apparent. We just surfaced what was already there. 

Kate: It’s there, and I think across the board, I think we have a lot of leaders who listen to this podcast. And I think they probably will be nodding their heads, saying. “Yeah, there’s anxiety there. This world is a hard place to lead in right now”. Really interesting to hear that story. Thank you. Thank you for sharing vulnerably, honestly, about something you received a lot of critique for. 

Kate: Nelis, can you just summarise for us a couple of things that you’ve heard Dano sharing?

Nelis: Yeah, I really appreciate what you just shared too, Dano, and what I’m hearing you say is, get beyond the immediate results, get beyond the delivery of quick outcomes, and really go deep into what is the organisational mindset? Where are the individuals? Where are we as leaders at? And how can we bring out the best we could be as an organisation and as people. And so, yeah, you talked about that from different angles. And I think that’s a challenge that I’m going to take home and again work with, in our different organisations. How can we be the best we can be? And how can we create that future together in a way that challenges, in the way we talked, started our conversation with the right kind of questions, exploring. That’s exciting. I appreciate your insights and your vulnerability in sharing here. So thank you, Dano.

Dano: Thanks, Nelis, thanks for the invitation. Thank you, Kate.

Nelis: It was wonderful to have you on our podcast.

Kate: Yes, thanks so much, Dano, for sharing. I’m looking forward to chewing over what you have shared, I think it’s really relevant, really helpful at this time. As always, thank you to our listeners for showing up, and do head over to leadinginconversation.net if you have any comments, thoughts, questions, or if you want to check out the show notes for resources that Dano has mentioned. See you next time. Bye.

Season 2, Episode 5

Leading in Conversation
Leading in Conversation
Leading in Conversation, Season 2, Episode 5
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Transcript

Kate: Hello, and welcome to Leading in Conversation. We are happy to have two colleagues with us today, Anthony and Heline, both from Africa, and I will let them introduce themselves in a minute. They were facilitators at an event that Nelis and I attended in November, and we really liked what they did with the facilitation to generate free, flowing conversations. So we’ve invited them to share with us and with you today. Antony and Heline, welcome.

Anthony: Thank you. Kate it’s really an honour for us to come and join you and Nelis in this part of the conversation and podcast. My name is Anthony Kamau. I am born and raised in the city of Nairobi. That’s where I am, born, raised and working in the city of Nairobi all this while. I work as a special programs coordinator within our organisation and really in a nutshell what that means is my work is to help all the countries that we work with to find innovative ways of resourcing our work, either with people or funding, and training the people that we bring on board. So once again, thank you for having me on board.

Kate: Great to have you with us. Heline.

Heline: Thank you, Kate. Thank you, Nelis. My name is Helen Kimbung, I am glad to be with you on this podcast today. I am Cameroonian, and I serve and live in Cameroon, precisely, Yaounde. My role is in human resources. So I am leading the human resources effort within our organisation here in Cameroon, which entails basically finding people who are passionate and called to be involved in the work we are doing, and then supporting them as they do their work, so that they can thrive while at it.

Kate: Brilliant. Thank you.

Nelis: Yes, thank you. And just as Kate said, we were impressed with the way they both led and organised facilitation of an event. And I’ve been impressed with both of them before, just observing their leadership and their desire to pick up new concepts, to run with them. And that sense of innovation is something that I really see in both of you. So it’s exciting to see that. And we’ll come back to that sense of innovation. So, we met together, as Kate said, to brainstorm together, to look at our strategies in Africa, and to really look at, how do we connect the strategy with the reality on the ground? And that’s what we wanted to explore with people rather than just throw things at people. Because, as we’ve said in this podcast before, that just doesn’t work. And it was really fascinating to see how Anthony and Heline tried to culturally adapt that, to make it work in the African context. So I’d love to hear some thoughts from you on what drove you in those adaptations. So what are your initial thoughts? What comes to mind when you say, okay, yes, when we took those concepts, here’s what we thought. So, what were your ideas? What did you immediately run into, like, okay, we need to make some changes here?

Anthony Kamau: Thank you. Nelis. The idea of running meetings within big organisations has always been either you pick something that is really working very well and ensure that it is implemented all across like a straight jacket. But when Heline and I and the team that we were facilitating the meeting together with, we were asked to lead this, we sort of asked ourselves, what is our audience in this meeting, and what is the goal that we are trying to achieve? And really, the goal that we are trying to achieve is to help people participate in a meeting actively, and we wanted them to feel that there is a level of inclusivity that is included. And at the same time we wanted to come out with actionable output out of the meeting. And so, yeah! So when we thought about the model of open space technology, we said, this is really great. But hey, open space technology has some few risks that we are aware of, and we wanted to mitigate those risks because you don’t want a meeting whereby, because the conversation is loosely guided, the conversations become messy, confusing and frustrating because a lot of input is coming from everywhere. And we sat down and asked, how can open space technology be an African open space technology? That’s where the conversation really started and it flowed on and on.

Heline Kimbung: Yes, and I can add that the idea of having free, flowing conversations, albeit with specific goals to achieve in mind is not a concept that is completely foreign to our context. It helped that the facilitation team was diverse, and we could really ask ourselves what works within our wider African context. We asked ourselves what would be a good, meaningful conversation with what could happen with the leaders that are gathering together at this meeting? How can we make it our own? How can they make it their own? And as we thought about that we considered typical conversations that happen within our different communities, and the whole idea of fireplace charts came up, which which we we thought, this is really typically our thing. People would gather around a fireplace or gather around a meal in the kitchen to have conversations and people who have the liberty to share what was on their mind, to build up new topics and then to let the conversation flow freely. So that’s how we got about fireplace chats.

Nelis: So is that just a name change? Or was there more to it?

Anthony: Well, it’s not just branding, really. It’s both the technique and the brands were a little bit different. So it was a hybrid system, I would say, because what we did is we took all that we love about open space technology. The idea of, you know, ensuring that participants have full control of the meeting, and the experience they have and the outcomes of that whole meeting. But the same time taking something else that we love that is so African, conversational leadership, where people just meet and then there is a specific person who is hosting a conversation, and everyone is feeling free to participate in that conversation. So yeah, good things in open space technology. So it’s not just a rebranding, but taking advantage of that and making it African, and ensuring that we have someone who is identifying, framing, hosting the conversations, the discussions, so that they mirror in a way, those conversations that are happening every day in the villages in Africa. 

Kate: That’s really interesting. I didn’t realise that, the mirroring what happens in African communities, anyway. And tell me more about the role of the host, the person who’s sort of coordinating, loosely coordinating, not controlling.

Heline: In the context of the conversations that we had, the host typically would be, or was the person who received as many people as were interested in a given topic which had been previously framed by the group, by the people, and the hosts would help allow the conversation to happen, and then frame or the host would help get the conversation going, ensure that everyone had a chance to share asking questions, by asking questions. For example, the host could ask, are there other things you would like to share? The host would also be conscious of everyone that was around that fireplace, and having chat, and then inviting voices that were a bit more silent or helping really those that were that had more ideas to also be conscious of everyone else that was together around the fireplace. And hosts also had the responsibility to see that the main takeaways from that conversation were being captured in such a way that they would be beneficial for that group afterwards, but also for the wider group, following those conversations.

Anthony: And one more thing that it’s good we mention is that typically conversations can go on and on and on and on. And it can take different tangents. And what we wanted is the host of that fireplace chart to really ensure that discussions still remain on the topic. It’s good, Africans love to talk about the weather. Africans love to talk about their family members. How is the extended family doing? All those things are good things, but given the time frame, we wanted the hosts of the conversation to also ensure that the discussions are kept on the topic, and that was one of their big roles.

Nelis: So you identified those hosts ahead of time, didn’t you? 

Heline: Yes, we found that it would be helpful for us to identify a discussion facilitator hosts ahead of time. Because then it would give us it would help us save time. So we didn’t have to ask for volunteers on the spot and it’s to see if someone was willing or we didn’t want to have the same people, just the same people doing it over and over. We felt that identifying hosts ahead of time also gave us a chance to  invite leaders that way that way, newer or that way emerging, if you may, to participate in these important conversations by hosting. So we went ahead and identified people, emerging leaders. For the most part, and then we give them the chance to host conversations around the fireplace.

Kate King: That’s really interesting, because I didn’t realise at the time that you had chosen people beforehand. I somehow missed that in the process. So that’s an adaptation of open space technology which says, you bring the topic. And you host. Or maybe people, bring the topic and then we ask, who would like to host this conversation? I should probably add that one of the other aims of this event was to develop emerging leaders. So they were invited along. And it was seen as a development opportunity. So that’s a really good way of giving people that opportunity to try out facilitating a small group. Less threatening in that small group context. I remember the first time that happened to me at an international conference. It was terrifying, but it was a great experience. So tell us, how did the topics emerge?

Anthony: So we wanted it to be very natural. And so how we had designed the facilitation style was, we have one of our global leaders presenting something to do with the global plan. And then, after the presentation, we will solicit responses from the people, and then we get to ask them, “in your table groups just talk about what is your highlight? What are the questions that are emerging out of this?” and then we would collect all those questions and insights in a way and hand it over to the synthesis team. This is a group of guys who are really bright and analytical. They are able to see the big picture out of the messy many ideas that are coming up and then they will summarise for us quickly that these are the main topics that people are really highlighting. And voila! There came our topics, and then we asked people. Now, which topic do you want to talk about?

Kate King: And that was done amazingly quickly. I was really impressed at that because I was sitting right next to the Synthesis team’s little area with their flip chart and their posters on the table, and there was just a buzz of people scurrying around and connecting ideas. And while they were doing that there was something else happening in the room, wasn’t there? There was another session, so it wasn’t even during a break. 

Anthony: Wasn’t it? We intended, intentionally made sure that there is no gap when the synthesis team is doing their work, and we did not want it to feel mechanical. So what we did is ensure that, oh, yeah, someone else is there for 15 min taking us through another session, which feels very natural.

Kate: Yes, it worked very well.

Nelis: Yes. And I think that you touched on this with the hosts as well. And this topic did the same thing. Is you created a way that it is not the same people who always bring up topics, or who end up being the hosts of conversations, so that it really is a collective process for the whole group. And you get a diversity of voices in there, and really create a way that everyone could participate. Everyone co-owned the topic, and it wasn’t your usual, often Western people who ended up volunteering all the topics or being hosts, because I’ve seen that before, and that there is that risk. So I think you really overcame some cultural issues that way.

Heline: And just adding that even the table, the discussion host, the host had the chance to pick the topics that they wanted to host by themselves. So we didn’t just hand topics to different hosts to say, “Okay, you are hosting this discussion around this topic”, but they had the chance to choose the topic that they wanted to host the conversation around. So it allowed for them to be comfortable and to feel like they were on top of facilitating the conversations that were happening around the table.

Kate King: And two things that I noticed were, if there were a lot of people who wanted to discuss one topic, you actually split the group into two, so it was a decent size. And I think that was a really good decision, because if the group gets, too, some people automatically sort of just start to sit back and opt out. 

Heline: We had previously decided that for a good conversation to really happen within the time that was allocated. It would be helpful to have a certain number of people, and so we kept our eyes in the room, and when we saw that there was interest in one topic, and we had more than the maximum number of people going towards that group. We had numerous hosts that had already been pre identified. We just went ahead and split the group, and a different host picked up the topic so the same topic could be discussed at 2 or 3 different tables if there were more and more people that were interested in that conversation.

Kate: And I think that worked well, for another reason is that a previous event I had attended one topic really touched everyone, and there was a huge group at that table, twelve people, I think it was. And then some of the other groups just had a couple of people, 2 or 3, and it had that feeling of, I think people were like, oh, what are we missing out on that table? Why is everyone on that table? Oh, this topic is more important to people. The way you equalised the group sizes, actually, I think, had that really positive effect on the dynamic for the rest of the groups. I noticed that there weren’t any groups that just had 2 or 3 people. Actually, it spread quite evenly.

Anthony: Yeah, that was something we had not planned for. We had hoped that as people raised the topics, you know, the synthesis team, if they do a good job, how we will know is the manner in which people will be distributed in those groups. And so because sometimes you might have a synthesis team that comes up with topics and people are not gravitating towards those topics, and having people in one group might represent that that’s a topic that is of interest for most people and needs attention. But it might also indicate that the synthesis team has not really captured the individual topics that are there. So that was something that we found out as a, you know, a reward of having good synthesis team members working with you.

Kate: Now in pure open space technology, there isn’t a synthesis team. It’s actually individuals who put their hand up, and they come to the front, and they write their topic on a piece of paper and say, Who wants to join me? And using that method, you often end up with a couple tables where actually, there isn’t much interest. Only a few people go. And so you don’t have such good conversations. And I think the synthesis probably ensures that you’re bringing together several ideas around a similar topic. So there are naturally going to be more people interested in joining that group. Just a small thing that I observed, but I think it was really helpful.

Nelis: There was another element that you introduced that isn’t pure open space technology. And that is what you call clan gatherings. So can you expand a bit on that? What was the thinking behind that? And how did that work?

Anthony: When you have a team of people who are coming from about thirty-four countries, and you have operations in most of those countries, you want to ensure that at the end of the day people who are coming from the same context can come together and say, “Hey, guys, this has been a good strategy meeting that asks us what we need to do in order to serve the people that we serve”. So the clan meeting really naturally came out of that because we wanted to ensure that we give opportunities for people who are coming from the same country to just sit down together and discuss, “What are we hearing? What are our actual commitments that we are coming out of this meeting with?”. So that it’s not one of those feel good meetings you’ve come to and “Oh, yeah, we experienced this new fireplace kind of thing where ideas were coming up. But is it leading to actionable outputs that are contextual?”. So that’s why we put together the clan meetings. And the interesting thing is again we are looking at, this is Africa. Where do we find the most equalising and the most agreement of things? It’s really within the clan, because it’s where people come together and say, “Hey, we heard about this. But does it really work in our context? Does it really work in our village? Or is it just something that really happens broadly but it can’t take place in our context?”. So that explains the clan meeting.

Heline: Right, adding to that, while the Fireplace Chats gave everyone in the room, every leader in the room, to have conversations around topics that interest them so they could go as they wanted to, the clan meetings now gave them the chance to come back home, bring back what they’ve been hearing, be it from the fireplace chats that happened with leaders from other countries or from other contexts. They could now come back with their own immediate team, their clan, as Antony was saying. “This is what I’m hearing. This is a success story from country A. This is a challenge from country. B. How does that really apply to us?”. “What action steps can we take from these things that we’ve been hearing from others, that we would bring back home and try to contextualise it?”. So it was really a time to bring back home what leaders have been hearing from everyone else that was in the room.

Kate: Yeah, I think that was such a brilliant move from the facilitation team and achieved that cross fertilisation that we’re always looking for when we hold these international events or area events so that you may, you know you may be stuck on one particular thing in your own country. But then, when you meet with others who actually have similar challenges, and you see how they’re tackling them. You can learn something and contextualise it and apply it in your context.

Nelis: Yeah, I agree, that I loved how that worked together. And it’s this sense of inspiration and an application. So you go from inspiration to application. You go from cross fertilisation to bringing it home, like you called it. And it also has this sense of collective responsibility. It’s not just about the individuals. And I think that is one of the African cultural contexts, of course. You’ve got to co-own. It is not about me owning it, it’s about us owning that. And that’s where the clan, I think, is absolutely essential. So I really like that sense of bringing it home, of ownership as a group. And then, a sense of okay, what are we going to do with this? So how are we going to push this forward and that bridges that gap to making it actionable, that you talked about Anthony early on.

Kate: And that’s often a criticism of conversational leadership. People say, “Oh, it’s just talk. And then what do you take away at the end of it?” Well, I think if a generative process, conversational leadership is done well, it’s done exactly how you did. You actually had people make commitments at the end, and stand up and share them with the whole room, which I thought was very brave. But  it really does sort of start to cement that into reality. You’ve got to think, well, what are we going to do? And now we’re going to tell people about it, and that introduces an element of accountability as well.

Anthony: Yeah, and on top of accountability, what that ends up doing is when people know what you are committing to, they know how to support you, be it leaders who are at the area level or global level, or people who are within your context. When they hear you as the director or one of the individuals in that country saying, “This is what we are committing to”. They start thinking, “Okay, this is how I can reallocate my resources to come alongside you to help you to be successful”.

Heline: Right? And I think it was also really beneficial for leaders present that we could have those clan meetings while together, because sometimes you could say, Okay, you go into into meetings, and then you take your own notes, and you take your own ideas and you take your own possible action points, and then you go back home and try to see what to do with it or not. So being able to have those clan meetings, while together, was also really showing evidence of us wanting, wanting the leaders present to start to together with their clan see what they could do, and how they could bring it back home. So it was happening while they were still together within that atmosphere, in those meetings and not just “Okay, we went to these meetings, and we came back. And what can we remember from our notes? And what can we do?” So it was, I think, that it was also beneficial that we could have those clan meetings happening following conversations, while still in that atmosphere of those meetings.

Anthony: Yeah. And I just wanted to mention that, you know, one of the things about those commitments is, I was talking to one of the leaders just this week and I was asking him, “How are you doing with your commitments?” He said, “Oh, yeah, you know what I need to meet with my larger leadership team, apart from the people that we had invited, so that we talk more about that and see how to move forward”. And, one of the emerging leaders that he had invited was on his case, asking him, “What are we doing about these things that we talked about, or are there any plans for us to move forward? Or was it just a paper that we wrote to show, you know ,the people who are in the meeting that we are committed to something?”. And that in itself really gave me joy, because this emerging leader is a young lady who is not yet 30, but she is really looking forward to her contribution mattering in the organisation.

Kate: And that, I think, is so key. When you use a participatory process like this, people see their contribution mattering, and it energises them to continue afterwards. They were part of creating those commitments, and they want to see them developed. I think, particularly if you bring younger emerging leaders in, they’re not so consumed with the overwhelming burden of running an organisation like the senior leaders are, and maybe they have a little bit more space, a little bit more energy to be part of pushing those things forward. Love it, it’s great. So, looking back now, a month or so on, how do you feel it went overall? Is there anything you’d do differently next time? Anything you learned in the process?

Anthony: Yeah. Just recently we met together as a facilitation team, and we were drafting our report that we want to send back to our leaders and we asked ourselves, when we were thinking about the recommendation, what would we have done differently? And what will we tell our leaders, top leader, to implement differently? And obviously, one of the big things is the tension of when you want people to discuss, how much presentation do you want to do? So, striking that balance between a plenary session where someone stands and they are talking to you about a specific aspect of the global plan versus sitting down in your groups and having conversation. That balance is still one of those things that we are thinking, “Oh, yeah, we are not sure whether we got it right”. We are not sure whether we would want to go with either. So it’s one of those battles that is still going on, and still unresolved in our report.

Heline: Yeah, I can add that one lesson, or one, I wouldn’t say it is something that could have been done differently, because I believe that as we were planning those meetings, it became clear, is that when you have a mandate or when you have a responsibility to facilitate a meeting, such important meetings, and you do not really, you get to really understand what the objectives are, what your responsibilities are, it can be a challenge. I found that the leadership that gave us responsibility to  facilitate those meetings, to plan and facilitate those meetings, communicated very clearly with us, and the communication was clear, not because we had this one time clear conversation. It was clear eventually, because we, as we met with the leadership ,as we asked questions, and as they told us, painted a picture for us. It became even clearer what the responsibility was, and I think that helped a great deal. Another thing I can share is that even though the leadership had an idea of what they wanted the meetings to be like and what the goals were for the meeting, they gave us some liberty to be able to contextualise those meetings and make it ours for our context in Africa. And I think that’s really key. Because that’s why the tools that were proposed to us, we had the chance to understand a bit more, especially with Antony on our team, who had also not, just understood, rather experienced the use of other tools, particularly the open space technology tool for facilitating meetings. It was helpful that we felt that there was a degree of liberty that was given to the team to contextualise things. So for us to be able to say, Okay, how can this be meaningful in an African context. We felt that the team had communicated clearly, and we could actually do that or meet the goals that had been previously communicated to us. So let’s say, that was really really great, and it helped us a great deal.

Nelis: I would like to ask a more broad question. So you’ve been familiar with conversational leadership for a while. And now you have led this at this kind of level with a large group. So what are your additional learnings around conversational leadership? What works and doesn’t work, as you look back?

Anthony: conversational leadership, let me start by saying, Nelis, it’s not really

something that is foreign to the African context. That’s one of the things that I’m starting to see. Africans lead by conversations a lot. You find very easily, leaders want to identify an issue and frame it in such a way that they can invite people to speak into that issue in a clear way. So that’s one thing that has been solidified in my mind that conversational. But something that probably I learned is, it’s very easy for the leader not to participate in the conversation when conversational leadership is happening, because it sort of feels like, “Oh, I have framed the issue. Now, guys, come and talk about it, and then, when you’re done, you let me know.”. And it puts leaders as outsiders. And I think this is especially me and other people on the facilitation team. We did feel like we were outsiders to this conversation. So really we were not going to the table discussions. And probably sometimes it’s because we are following up with other things. But for the majority of the time it’s because we felt our work was to ensure that we are framing these issues and the conversations and allow people to talk. But we ourselves and other global leaders, a few who attended, sometimes I did notice, it’s like we are pulling away from those conversations and waiting for the reporting to come back. And it is something that I need to work on, and we need to work on as an organisation.

Kate: I will say, having done facilitation at other meetings before we learned about conversational leadership that just does happen if you’re a facilitator. I remember coming away from one of our international conferences, saying “I’m actually not aware of what emerged really or what happened in the sessions because I was so focused on running the sessions, the activities, the different outputs, etc.”. I didn’t really participate. And in those days I wasn’t a leader. I was just a facilitator, it didn’t really matter. But I see what you mean. If you have leaders who are part of the facilitation team, then they are missing out of being part of the process. And there’s a real challenge of being a participant facilitator. And I think we have to just be really careful about that. I also noticed that I and other global leaders were often hanging back from the group, because we were told, we committed as a group of global leaders coming that we weren’t going to dominate, that we were there to listen, to learn and to let the people on the ground really contribute and take things forward. It’s quite easy, if you come in as a global leader and you speak, nobody wants to really challenge you. They’ll just sort of nod and repeat what you’re saying. But actually we wanted to deliberately hold back, so that that may have been some of what you were seeing.

Nelis: But it’s a good challenge, because as Anthony is saying, there is a risk in that, so it’s finding that balance of really feeling you can participate without dominating and creating space and that’s very tricky, because you often fall on one side or the other. You end up dominating anyway, or you end up not really participating, and neither result is great. So that’s quite an interesting challenge. Thank you for raising that.

Anthony: To put it in the African lenses, Nelis, is what the global leaders were doing really, is to prepare a good meal for their visitors, if you may, but then they are not joining them in celebrating in that meal, you know, just putting it for them and telling them, “Hey, enjoy!” And you are not eating with us, then we are not in one spirit, if you may, we are not walking together in this. You are just inviting us to your table so that you show off and put your table there, and then you leave us. 

Kate: Wow! When you put it like that Anthony, it’s so powerful and I feel terrible. Thank you for explaining it like that. Yeah, I can see that now. We had good intentions in holding back, but actually interpreted, perhaps from an African perspective, that was negative. Definitely something for us to think about. Heline?

Heline: Yes, another thing I can share, just going back to the question Nelis asked about having co-facilitated these large meetings, and what one would say from the perspective of conversational leadership. One thing, I realised again, is that conventional leadership really can be very uncomfortable because, even though the leader or the leaders were there to frame the big issue, in reality, they do not have control of how the conversations were going to go and what the outcomes of those conversations were going to be. So that can be uncomfortable. And it’s really like being in a vulnerable place because you’re not sure, you know, what people are taking exactly what taking out of those conversations, and if it’s away from what you intended or not. But I think it is very freeing when we are able to do that, frame the bigger issue and and and let people take the conversation around that big issue, or within the scope of that big issue as they would choose, because they are thinking about how that works for them, how that applies for them, how that is a challenge for them. So I think at the end of the day, when you look at it, despite coming from a place of being uncomfortable, it can be very rewarding. Because then what comes is not what the leader is saying, “Okay, this is what has worked for for Côte d’Ivore, so bring it to Cameroon, it’s going to work. This is what has worked for Kenya. So let’s take it to Uganda, it’s going to work”. But really people are hearing, and then they are trying to bring it home by themselves. So that’s one thing I really saw that I think is powerful when conversations are facilitated in a way like what we had.

Nelis: Thank you. I really appreciate those takeaways, two massive takeaways from both of you. One is the challenge of real participation, not preparing a meal and then not participating. And, secondly, the power of letting the uncomfortable happen so that people can take it home themselves. Another quote I remember from both of you, is this sense of, conversational leadership fits in Africa. You didn’t say it exactly like that. But that observation, I think, is quite powerful. So we need to come to a close. Are there any other things that you would like to say, there’s another takeaway I want you to, or our listeners, to take home from this?

Anthony: For me, it’s just to mention that when you invite us to this podcast, of course, the assumption is that two of us really worked very hard on this. But in truth, the facilitation team was made up of a multicultural, multi-generational kind of team. And the impact that this brought was that we are having people who have a rich history and experience, and they are bringing it as part of the tools that we are using. But at the same time we are having people who are coming from diverse contexts and they are bringing it to the table. And so, in order to put together this as a success, we really needed that aspect of multicultural teams, but also multigenerational, because together we do better. And that is what Africa believes in.

Nelis: Great.

Kate: I love that there’s still space for oldies like Nelis and I.  Heline, any last thoughts from you?

Heline: That’s for sure. There is space, there is actually space for everyone, and that is very, that’s really African. It’s like cooking a good pot of soup. Usually we have all kinds of spices that go into it, and they come from all kinds of places. Some come from the ground, others come from the tree, some it’s really just the flower of the tree, some is the seed, it comes from from all kinds of places. And I think that, like Anthony was saying, what we had, we are getting a sense that it was a good pot of soup, that was prepared, and it involved the participation of everyone. Again, it’s been served. It’s a process that takes time. We usually cook for hours and hours. We usually have conversations for hours and hours. We don’t know how to really just do very quick, you know some of our quickest meals would still take an hour. So that is what we were finding with those meetings, and that is what we believe that even coming away from that, we need to continue to promote. Give it the time. Let the conversation flow, and then let’s see what we take out of it. Our hope and our desire is that we would all be able to attend the goals that have been set and just feast from this good pot of soup that we’ve been cooking, or we’ve cooked together.

Nelis: I love that image and that festive sense, the sense of it being a meal, a real gathering, the multicultural aspect of that. It’s actually fun to see how you guys also made that physically a reality. I mean the multicoloured cloth, the African sort of decoration, all of that. Going into that room you had that sense of we’re gonna have this time of festivity together, conversation, a good part of soup, basically.

Kate: I love that. I’m now going to think of conversational leadership as that pot of soup bubbling away for hours while people mill around the fire talking, celebrating, being together. It’s really moving away from the task focus that those of us from the West are often guilty of and to the relationship, the process. I love it. Thank you, Heline, for that image. That’s it. I think that’s a very generative image. And we’ve talked about that in previous podcasts. So we’ll see where we can take that in future. Thank you both. This has been an awesome podcast, really enjoyed hearing your really unique perspective on conversational leadership. And I think there’s a lot for us to take away and chew over there.

Anthony: Thank you very much for inviting us. Yeah, we appreciate the time and we hope that you know, learners, listeners, are learning, and we ourselves are learning through these conversations. Really, thank you.

Kate: Thanks.

Heline: Thank you.

Kate: Thank you to our listeners for joining us again. As always, I’ll say, head over to leadinginconversation.net if you have any comments, thoughts, questions to share as a result of listening to this podcast. Thank you everyone. See you next time, bye-bye.

Season 2, episode 4

Leading in Conversation
Leading in Conversation
Season 2, episode 4
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Transcript

Kate: Hello and welcome back to Leading in Conversation, and also a very Happy New Year to you. We’re kicking off our first podcast of this new year 2024, with a special guest, our colleague, Andreas Ernst. Welcome, Andreas!

Andreas: Thank you, Kate. Good to see you.

Nelis: We’re excited to have you here. We have touched base from time to time from many years back to very recently in a hotel, but there’s also years that we don’t see each other. So it’s good to have you here. But our guests don’t know you, so why don’t you share a little bit of your background and what you do, where you’re from, etc.

Andreas: Thank you. Yeah. My name is Andreas Ernst. I’m an MK, for those who might have heard that term. It means missionary kid, which means, basically, I’m confused, lost my identity. No, it just means it takes a bit of a while to explain my identity. But I was born in Cameroon, grew up there, with parents who were involved in language development work. I’m currently working with SIL in media training, coordinating media training. And, yeah, I love what we do in media today in SIL, and I’m glad I have a chance here to talk to you two about what this conversational leadership look like might, what conversational leadership looks like in the context of community development. 

Kate: So Nelis referred to a hotel. We actually met up with Andreas and his wife for dinner in a hotel in Budapest, when we were there a couple of months ago, weeks ago, our leadership team was there, and we touched on the subject of conversational leadership. And Andreas’ eyes lit up. He was like, “Oh, I’d love to talk to you some more about that.”. So we said, “Well, how about you do it and we record it for our podcast?”. So thank you for being a willing victim! So tell me, Andreas, how did you first hear about conversational leadership or get interested in it?

Andreas: I think the first time I actually heard that particular term used was probably during one of our SIL Leadership training events. We have this foundational course that you both know and are part of building and teaching, and it’s called 4 Pillars. And during this time leadership was talked about a lot in terms of how you can bring different cultures together. How do you work in cross cultural settings, and especially the need for that sort of leadership style to be very inclusive and and very much based on conversations and dialogue. And that’s something I’ve always been fascinated with and loved. So it attracted me. And also, just because of the way I grew up living in different cultures, I’ve often found that I’ve had to sort of be a chameleon, adapting to cultures and always asking lots of questions to gain trust, to bridge, I found myself sometimes between African cultures and Western cultures. And I’ve seen that’s actually something that gives trust and safety so that you can work together more easily with other people. So when I studied literacy program development, I got very interested in all the participatory methods. And yeah, so that’s where my passion comes from.

Nelis: I find it interesting what you’re saying here, Andreas, because you, at the start you said being a missionary kid means I’m basically confused. You said, that’s part of my identity. And then you took it right into this conversational leadership concept about listening, about being in between cultures, about not always being sure building bridges. It’s kind of fascinating. You’re bringing your identity into actually this topic. Am I reading that correctly?

Andreas: Yeah, and you know, for me it’s been an ongoing battle in my life to know, who am I? I have always found myself between different sort of cultures. So you know my parents, you know  they’re from a Western background but serving in Africa for over many years. But then me having been born there and growing up, going out with my friends and setting traps, and hunting with slingshots, and fishing in the rivers, and playing soccer, and learning the culture that the way you live as a community of children. And then the uncles and aunts you have in an African village – it takes a village to raise a child, as they say. So I always had all these different cultures around me. I realised there are these clashes between different world views, and I often found myself in between, because I could kind of sense the differences in expectations. I remember one particular moment when I actually decided not to join a group on a trip, because I was embarrassed.

Because I felt like you know, I’m not sure how this is going to come across. And that’s just because I was immature, didn’t really know how to handle those differences. But yeah, it’s that clash of different cultures and worldviews where people are doing the best they can to communicate. And yet I’ve always felt there is that need from both, from whatever side one comes from, culturally speaking to find a meeting ground somewhere, also in terms of how decisions are being made. In terms of verbalising expectations, and not assuming too much. So I think that’s where my interest comes from all the way back to my roots.

Kate: Obviously, you said, you’re interested in how we can use conversational leadership in community development. And you’ll have a natural inroad there from your childhood, growing up in an African village culture that will probably, I assume, make it easier for you to have those conversations and culturally appropriate ways in Cameroon because you grew up in that context?

Andreas: In some ways, yes, I have had the privilege of growing up with those different cultures. The other side of it though, too, is that because I can switch, I sometimes don’t behave the way people expect me to behave. So, just to give an example, somebody might think I have a certain mindset and I come to a project and just because of the colour of my skin they might think “Well, this guy’s gonna throw money at things just the way the other person did before them or somebody else, or some other organisation has been doing so let’s expect them to do that”. And that has a big – I would say – almost negative impact on how community development can be developed.

Kate: That’s a really interesting point about the expectations that are there even before you arrive in a given context to start a conversation. You’re up against people’s expectations of you, based on your culture, the colour of your skin, etc. They will make assumptions about you.

Nelis: Yeah, but I think that’s also one of the strengths you bring. You’re more aware of your assumptions and your worldview than somebody who hasn’t been in multiple cultures at the same time. And I think what you’re saying and I resonate with that is, so much of conversation and conversational leadership depends on unearthing assumptions, unearthing expectations. Otherwise you talk at a surface level, but you never get to the real issues. So from my perspective, you do have a leg up there and I think it’s one of the reasons you’re so interested in it because it helps you bridge those different sort of realities. So can you say a little bit more about how you’re practically doing that? So when you are in those kinds of contexts, how do you bridge gaps and expectations? How do you help people understand one another?

Andreas: Well, I guess through trial and error. It’s making a lot of mistakes in learning from them. Yeah, I mean, I’ve been involved in a couple of different community-owned projects. And I’ve come sort of to the conclusion that it’s a lot to do with just taking the time. You know I do have some Swiss blood in me, being half Swiss, and having been professionally working in Switzerland as well and also the kind of organisational structures, and planning, impact planning and what not that we do typically in organisations can kind of make us be focused on intermediate goals and short-term goals that we need to measure. So I have also been involved in development projects like that where I’ve probably tried to move ahead a bit more quickly than I should have. But one thing I’ve just learned is just how precious it is to be on the ground. Just to give an example, I was working in an area in Cameroon where we had a very clear task given by the organisation, which was to promote literacy to promote the use of mother tongue in the local churches and we were even as people on the ground, being fed very specific things that we were supposed to be doing and even there already the conversational leadership between us who were on the ground and the higher up leaders of the organisation wasn’t always running smoothly. There was sort of the idea that you were being told what to do, because others knew what that community needed, because they had researched it and planned the project. But then, as I was working on the ground, I realised that the felt needs of the community were very different. And if we were going to achieve anything in that community because they were so closely such a close community, and everything was controlled by the sort of traditional leaders, we were needing to get some trust from the leadership, from the local traditional chiefs. So that, for example, even the Muslim community there would not really accept what we were doing, would not accept us, would not understand the reason why we were there without that. And so I would just regularly go and visit the chief. He would invite me to come and just chat with him because he was lonely, you know, he felt that me as an expat, I was sort of approachable and safe, so he would just want to have long conversations about his religious beliefs, and so on. And then, with the trust that came over time, he started asking me to go. He said, “Okay, it’s all very nice what you’re doing, and I’m supporting. But can you help us find water? That’s the biggest problem we have”. So he took me up to the mountain with all his advisers, and we went up there several times, and then we started looking into partners who might be able to drill a hole. Get that water flowing back down to the village. And it was through that conversation that we gained the trust, and then, later on, we were able to start a reading centre in that village, and he made a decree that the different schools, the different religious communities, that everybody should contribute a certain number of bricks. And even the schoolchildren were making bricks for us to build the building. He gave us land for it. And actually today that project might become a radio station. I think, for me, it was a lot about having conversations, so that we know what people want, and so that people know that we have good intentions, that we care, that we are flexible, we’re serving. And then out of that grew what became a reading centre. And again, our plan had been to say, “Okay, let’s have some books and reading materials available for the youth there”, because a lot of kids were studying at secondary level. But then, when the project evolved, it actually became a reading centre for kids who came and they had solar energy in the evening, so they could do their homework, they have all the books available there. That was not planned. That was how it evolved. And then, I still remember when the chief reached out to me and said, “I’d like to thank you, because this year we got the best results of all the schools in the area thanks to the solar system and the centre that we had built”. 

Nelis: It’s fascinating what you’re touching on. One is taking time. And I think that we have touched on that in other podcasts as well, the importance of taking the time. The importance of building trust. And flexibility. And I think that last point of, just, it’s going to evolve into something different from what you expect is, I think, a key part of conversational leadership. We talk about this whole uncertainty, and you can’t plan it all out and it’s kind of exciting to see how you very practically do that at the local level, and what the results then are. That’s encouraging.

Kate: So my question is, how much were the people in the community involved in coming up with the solutions and what was needed? You said at one point that the chief made a decree. That’s not what we consider conversational leadership but we’re dealing with very different cultures here.

Andreas: I think that the fact that the chief made that decree was not to say that there wasn’t a need for us to have lots of meetings, so we had very regular meetings and we made sure we chose kind of a neutral place and we we kept sending invitations to the Muslim community, different church communities, different political leaders, and they’d show up, and there’d be lots of plastic chairs out, and and then also for me, it was very important that right from the start, when we were leading these meetings, I wasn’t the one always talking, so I had by that time I identified some local Christians that I trusted in, with whom you know I had been sharing the idea. They had already inspired the idea through what they saw as the need. And so it became our kind of vision to explore. And then, as we invited these communities, we kept having to have meetings because it wasn’t just about what the chief had decreed, but it was  to help people understand what this might look like, what are the practical needs? And then there was the eternal hunger for people to know who is going to own this? Generally, people want to know, who’s going to own this? Who has the power in the end?  That’s how people understood, you know what it might look like. And they also felt like we were building into what they were saying, the concerns they had. So, for example, we built a committee of people who were going to manage the construction site itself and we made sure that every community had a representative in that structure and so forth.

Nelis: I love what you said about the ownership question. We haven’t explored that deeply in this podcast, but I think it’s on the minds of a lot of people when actually, decisions are made, who owns it in the end? Do I have a real say, or is it just show? Is it just a sense of, yeah, we talked to you but in the end the decision is actually somewhere else. That sense of real ownership, I think, is a core point. And I see how that worked in the community and how you created symbols around that, that it’s not just what you do. It’s also putting some flag in the ground, basically saying, “Well, we’ve got a representative on the committee that won’t guarantee that real ownership, but it’s a symbol of it”. And I think that those are helpful concepts to keep in mind.

Andreas: And one thing we felt that we talked a lot about during those meetings with the different communities was not just about who might do what and how we could share the load. But also what types of people are needed. You know, people, sometimes, they might say, “We need an imam, we need somebody religiously positioned to have power”. Or they might say, “Well, we need people with MA degrees”, or politically favoured people and that sort of thing. So it was also talking about, are we sure we want this? What would it look like? What are the ups and downs of these types of people and then defining together…that was very interesting. What should be the moral characteristic that we’re looking for in these people? And also that conversation actually ensured that people were trusting each other more because they were realising, “Okay, we are making consensus on this. You know, the Catholics are not saying the Pope has to be in charge, or it’s the Pope’s”. I mean, that’s exaggerated. But you know, it was kind of becoming clear that we want to keep it at a humble level, where we want people that we trust, that are serving, so that afterwards we don’t start accusing each other of abusing power, or trying to benefit personally or as a separate community from the project. And yeah, so it was that moral side of it that we could have a conversation about with everybody. So that was interesting as well.

Kate: Dialogue is such a key thing when you are bringing together different faith communities, isn’t it because you have to spend a long time talking to build the trust, to make sure you’re all on the same page. And it’s great to see that demonstrated in your project.

Andreas:  I think for me also, one thing that I struggled with at times was to just say, “Okay, I don’t wanna be the one leading it. I can be there to assist. I can bring in a lot as a neutral person, but the local people are facilitating that conversation”. You know, sometimes you wonder, okay, why didn’t they also ask this other thing? Or why did they push back so hard on this thing? Or you know, sometimes you wish people had a bit more experience in long term exposure to this sort of conversational type leadership. But you don’t, or you can’t always assume that people have that. And yet they can learn it through the process. And then to say, okay, that is in itself a goal worth pursuing. And it doesn’t mean one has to jump in. But it’s also something they learn, and also to realise that people tend to belong to one community or another. No matter, you know, how much they want to bring in consensus, and they will be seen through the eyes of what group they belong to. They may not have the sort of neutral sense of trust directed towards them from other communities simply because they are being categorised. And so when they speak, they also have to make sure they represent that particular, those particular roots that they’re representing. And I think to be honest, I think that’s where we, as you know, neutral facilitators from the outside, do have a role. I do think that you know any development agency organisation has a huge moral responsibility to be involved in community development and conversational change simply because we have on our side managed to be a little bit more neutral if we will accept it and work with that. I’ve heard it said that we Westerners shouldn’t be involved in community development because we don’t know the culture. We don’t really know what’s going on and over the years I’ve seen that I’m not sure it’s always true. I’ve seen some Westerners that are very good at knowing the local culture, very good at asking questions, at bringing consensus and also some local facilitators who are maybe using a model of  leading change that is very top down, even though culturally acceptable. And that doesn’t always work simply. So it doesn’t work just because they are from that community or may know the community. So anyway. But I don’t know. That’s something I actually would love to hear what you two think about, too.

Kate: Yeah, I think we definitely have a role. I mean someone coming in from the outside to a situation where there’s a lot of vested interest, and you want the whole system represented in the project. You want to know that you’re hearing the views of different communities, different sub-communities within the bigger project community. That we can perhaps bring that neutrality that is helpful sometimes. Nelis, you’ve worked in Cameroon specifically, any thoughts on this.

Nelis: Yeah, I think you’re right. I mean, there is that possibility. And I love the way you put it as almost a moral responsibility. But it’s also very tempting to forget that the real ownership lies with the people themselves, because you so easily as a development person with relative power, relative money, sort of take on the Savior complex. And secondly, I was really convicted myself that it is very easy to see how other people should solve their problems. Because you don’t know the nuances of it. So you don’t see how hard it actually is. So, as an outsider, you always think that the problems of somebody else should be easy to solve. But you know how difficult your own are. Well, if we come with that humility, and really recognizing the ownership of the local, to really recognize the complexity and and often really good reasons why it wasn’t solved up to this point. Then you can, I think, have a valuable role as an outsider, whether that’s coming from the West or from within the wider culture, or whatever. But there’s a commitment to humility and listening, and not taking up the ownership or taking it away from the people, I think, is going to be key in that. And interestingly enough, that I think is, it applies actually to wider conversational leadership conversations in general. So I see a beautiful sort of overlap with what we talked about in other contexts.

Kate: I don’t know if you listen to the podcast we did with Peter Van Dingenen? I loved how Peter described the way he went into the villages, and kind of acted a bit dumb and just asked questions. So what do you mean? And tell me about this. He went with the assumption, they have all the information needed to solve the problem, and in this case it was latrines, installing latrines. The one installed by an NGO just kind of collapsed and wasn’t appropriate, and he was there to try and help solve the latrine problem. But he just went in asking questions and kind of playing a little bit dumb. Like, “You tell me how this works”. That’s connected to what Nelis is saying about humility, not going in with all the answers. You have to hold back as a facilitator, even if you might have more information, if you want a solution to emerge from the people, from the community, they have to be the ones to bring the solution, to bring the answers.

Andreas: Yeah, I really like that reminder also. The fact that the way that people might sometimes expect somebody who’s a facilitator to act in a certain way can also kind of create that idea in ourselves that we think, oh, we are, we do have some answers. And oh, these people are expecting a solution. Particularly in some African context where you know it’s the elite, or it’s the person who is well positioned financially, or whatever politically, or from the outside. Typically there is a certain expectation that they come in, and they solve the problem as a sort of Messiah. And so it’s not just being very much aware of what we don’t know when asking those questions, but also when people respond or interact with you as if you are that sort of person to say, Okay, this is a trap. I am very basic here. I don’t really know what’s happening, and I am allowed to ask questions that make people think, even though I know that what they would probably answer would bring it back to me again. And so it’s that sort of that sense of playing dumb that can sometimes break up the notion that people have that they can’t do anything, or they don’t really know, or that they shouldn’t be talking because somebody else should be talking. Even asking specific people that are not used to being asked can be one way of breaking that up and bringing that wise input from a particular person or other, and nobody can tell you. Hey? Why did you ask that woman to say something when the village chief is present because you’re just a naive Western white man, so…

Kate: You can use that to your advantage at times. I recently did some coaching training, coaching not to become a coach, but to help me become a better supervisor. And I was really struck by the emphasis on shifting away from yourself. It’s not about you. Even the information you want to find out about, that’s not really what it’s about. It’s all about the person you’re supervising or coaching their agency, their ability to do things themselves. You shouldn’t be telling them, you shouldn’t even be asking leading questions that take them to the conclusion you want them to reach. Really challenging for me, actually. And there’s a whole sense of sort of emptying out of yourself when you are entering into a facilitational role like this. You’ve got to leave yourself and your preferences and ideas at the door. Now it’s different if you’re a participant facilitator, which we often are in work situations, you know we are part of the solution as well. But if you’re coming just as a facilitator to a community, and actually you won’t be living in the community and living with the solution that is developed, you’ve always got to empty yourself and to give the community agency to come up with the answers themselves, the solutions. Yeah. I thought that was really challenging for me, actually.

Andreas: Yeah, I think that is very true. It’s so challenging to make sure we empty ourselves. And I think it’s particularly difficult, too, because we in some sense, to build a change or to bring innovation there are things that maybe an outsider brings in, in terms of the know-how or advocacy, that can take root, that people may not know about. So in some ways you have to know what it is you offer and be very clear about it. But by doing that right away you also influence how much responsibility or expectations, how many expectations come your way in terms of what you’re going to be doing. So I think that’s also a really very big challenge. And if I compare, for example, this project I talked about earlier, where something came out of it that was quite shaped by the different participants in terms of location, the books that were available, and so forth. With when you want to maybe start a radio project. Again, you might know who could be technical partners, financial partners. What sort of process is needed to have the licensing from the government? You may be in a position to be an advocate for a project like that, and, or to find other local people who can do that. And so giving that information, but doing it in a way that the people receiving it own it, that you say, “Okay, this is what you could do or do you have more questions?” but being courageous enough to own what it is that we really can bring to the table, and also what we can’t and constantly renegotiating, re-clarifying that. And the other thing I find very difficult is just to refrain from intervening when something doesn’t move forward. To just say, “Okay, this meeting last time, this last meeting didn’t take place, or they haven’t yet collected this amount of money that we had decided we would collect” and then just wait on it, even if it takes a couple of months. So that people see, okay, this is really not going anywhere if we don’t do anything, and to be okay with that. And I think long-term it does pay off. 

Kate: The problem is, if you play to heavy-handed a role when you leave, inevitably, as the ex-pat, what’s going to happen? The aim is for a sustainable product, a sustainable library, or whatever it is that you’re building. And if, if you are too involved, then things may not last beyond your presence, but also what’s produced may be something that works for you as a Westerner, but doesn’t work in the local context. Therefore it’s not sustainable in the long run, either.

Nelis: And that needs to be balanced with still wanting to see change. And actually, people looking to you to help bring that change from both sides, actually from the agency that sent you and from the community. And so I think that’s the art, isn’t it? There isn’t a recipe as such. It’s knowing when to keep pushing, and when to really step back and just wait. And really allowing that ownership to be real, but still play your role. I think that comes back to the question we always ask ourselves: so in conversational leadership, how do you play the role of leader well enough? Because there is a leadership aspect for this. And so I find it’s fascinating to keep wrestling with that. I think that’s what we all need to do to learn that.

Andreas: Yeah. And just to give an example, recently, I realised that sometimes you’re kind of stuck between two worlds. Recently we started a radio project and this partner gave us the whole studio equipment, the antenna and everything and we got the licence from the government. The community worked really hard. They mobilised funding for a lot of the aspects of the work. And then, because of safety reasons they were still afraid of starting the broadcasting and it was just delaying and delaying, and they had also outsourced some of the practical work on the antenna to somebody. And then there was a kind of a dispute with the technician and what not. And now that the partner wrote to me and said, “Well, if you guys are not broadcasting very soon, we think we might need to take away the whole station and send it somewhere else”. And you know I kind of diplomatically tried to write back to them, say, “Well, thank you for your patience. It’s taken more time than we maybe we were planning for. But you know…”. So I just realise there’s also that side of realising that you’re not just communicating to the community, you’re also protecting them, and being okay with that.

Andreas: And also, I think sometimes, as Western ministries, we realise how much ownership is important. And we even, for that, we have a plan. We say, “Okay, we’re, gonna spend 5 years or or 2 years or 3 years on this. And after that we’re gonna, that’s it. No more. Nothing. We’re not gonna help”. But during that intense time we may be intervening in a way that creates dependency on us because we’re trying to speed things up. And so I think it’s also bravely considering, what does it mean, actually, to own something locally by the community? And at what point can we say, “Okay, we’re done”. And how do we discern what role we have in the future? And I think that, too, it should lead us to really integrate everybody from the start. But maybe not be too systematic about the way we time and define what it means to not be involved anymore. 

Kate: I think learning to become more comfortable with uncertainty and not knowing is a big part of conversational leadership. You can’t control everything. You can’t plan everything. You may start reality. You may start a conversation or a process, thinking you’re heading in one direction, but then, if the real issue emerges, you may want to go in another direction. And sometimes it’s quite hard as leaders involved in conversational leadership, to let go of that outcome you had in mind and actually go with the other solution that’s proposed. Nelis any thoughts around this?

Nelis: Yeah, I’m just thinking, that’s hard, because you’re always driven by the reality that solutions are expected, your finances depend on success. If you don’t deliver the project is probably gonna stop or fall apart just like you described. So it is that fine line between flexibility, listening, letting the real issue emerge, but not losing sight of the outcomes that together you aim for, or the direction you’ve set, and that is such a tricky interplay. And doing that well, I think we constantly need to challenge each other on that: “Hey, guys, we need to be more flexible” or “Wait a second. Are we losing track of our objectives here? Are we letting ourselves be sidetracked too far?” And it’s that interplay that I think we need each other to hold each other accountable to that. In practice, Kate. I see you and I actually do that in our work as we go, as we lead, in our leadership team. Sometimes we say, “Well, you’re saying that, but is this still the right thing? Is this truly conversational? Have we asked the right people or….”.

Kate: Or have we slipped back…

Nelis: into “top down”, yeah? 

Nelis: I think we can start to wrap this up. What I really loved about this back and forth is, is around ownership and flexibility, and then holding each other accountable to that. And as we started wrestling around that, I think that is something we can take forward and actually think about in our work with communities, but also in any kind of leadership role: Am I taking on too much ownership? Am I emptying myself out enough? Am I listening enough? Am I interested in the other rather than in my goals only? So I think that is something that I’m going to take away from this conversation is a really helpful concept to move forward.

Kate: Thank you. Nelis. Thank you, Andreas. It’s been good to have you with us. And let’s keep talking, keep thinking about these things. That’s all from us today, and, as always, do hop over to leadinginconversation.net, if you want to comment, ask questions, or even just look at the transcript or the show notes. That’s all for today. Thank you. Bye.

Nelis: Thank you. Bye, bye.

Season 2, Episode 3

Leading in Conversation
Leading in Conversation
Leading in Conversation, Season 2 Episode 3
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Shownotes

Ralph Stacey Matrix

Leadership Centre graph

see: https://www.leadershipcentre.org.uk/artofchangemaking/theory/complexity/

transcript


Kate: Hello! And welcome to “Leading in Conversation”. We are going to try something a little bit new today, aren’t we, Nelis?

Nelis: Yes, we are, and it is quite a challenge, because I have no idea where we’re going to end up. We are going to explore verbally, just chat about this topic without exactly knowing where we’re going to land.

Kate: So this is a little Christmas treat for you, something different. And we’ll see where it goes. So let me start out by explaining how this topic came about. I’ve been doing a leadership course recently and one of the things we looked at in our last residential was this matrix by Ralph Stacey. Now, it will probably help you to see this, and there are two ways you can do that. You can either visit our website leadinginconversation.net. Or you can Google “Stacey matrix”. We’re going to talk about the version of it that’s on our website. You will get slightly different versions if you Google, there are lots of different versions out there, but it will help you to be able to visualise it. Nelis. Why don’t you describe the matrix, first of all? 

Nelis: Yes, let’s describe it. And people who are just listening will still get the gist of it. So the matrix basically has two axes. So one is the level of certainty. Are you very certain or very close to certainty? Or are you very far from certainty?

Kate: And that’s along the bottom. The certainty axis is the horizontal.

Nelis: Yes, and then you’ve got the vertical axis which is about agreement. Are we close to agreement? Does everybody basically have the same opinion about it? Or is it far from agreement? Are there a lot of different opinions around it? And people go in every direction about what the solution actually is. So when you visualise that, certainty versus agreement, when you are in the bottom left area where most people agree, and most people are pretty certain about what’s going to happen. Then you are in the zone of control, and that’s indicated as the “Control” zone where you just need to do a good job in executing. When you get into the region where that is much less the case, the whole middle area, that is the area where it’s complex. where agreement is not a given, the outcomes are not a given, and you’ve got to work together to find ways forward. And that is described as the area where you want to convene. Now, there’s also a third area, and, Kate, why don’t you describe that?

Kate: First of all, I’m going to say, you what we’ve been talking about in this podcast – Conversational leadership – is what you do in that central zone where it’s complex when there’s not total agreement, not total certainty. Things are complex, not complicated, and various graphs, the charts that you’ll see online, have “complicated” between “control”, the control zone and the complex zone. But in that complex zone, in a sense that’s what we’ve been talking about, how to convene, how to gather people together to get input, the diversity, hearing from all voices. Because when you’re not certain, and when you don’t agree, it’s really good to get together and discuss things. Now, I was all very happy looking at this chart and thinking, “Yeah, that’s where we are. That’s where we do convening, conversational leadership”. But then, if you go further up diagonally up towards the top right corner, you enter what’s called the chaotic zone and this is what caught my attention recently, because I have been sensing chaos in our work. We have been in a complex zone for a long time, and are getting probably quite comfortable with living there, with medium amounts of agreement and certainty. But it seems in our work particularly right now, we are entering into this space where there is not a lot of agreement, and there’s not a lot of certainty about things. And I wonder if that resonates with other people, as well. In the world around us things are happening so quickly. Things are emerging that we don’t know much about, like AI, is changing the world of work, the world for all of us. We’re not necessarily in agreement on how to use it. We don’t really know how to use it, and things are changing all the time. So keeping on top of that chaos in that chaotic zone. And the leadership approach that Stacey recommends for that zone is called “sense and act”. So you have “execution” in the bottom left corner, you have “convening” in the middle and you have “sensing and acting” in the top right.

Nelis: Yes. and we want to explore that area today because it goes against what we’ve been talking about for the last two years. And sometimes you need that. And it’s good to challenge ourselves. How do you act in a place where agreement is just not going to be possible. You can convene all you want but people are going to go in every direction. The polarisation is so strong that convening won’t be enough and the outcomes are so uncertain that you can talk all you want, but you’re not going to get to a place where everybody’s reasonably comfortable, that this is the right direction. And that is this zone of chaos, that as an organisation you want to avoid getting into, but sometimes you can’t. But it’s also the place where new things happen. It actually can be an exciting place.

Kate: Yes, so actually, on the version of Stacey’s matrix that we’re using, the space between complexity and chaos is called the zone of innovation. And if you’ve done any reading about complexity science, the edge of chaos is where there is great productivity, novelty emerges. And we won’t go into that in any depth now but that’s where innovation happens and happens well. If you try to innovate in the control zone it’s not going to work. You’ve got to be on the edge of chaos for it to have the right environment for new things to emerge.

Nelis: And there’s another version of this model which the Leadership Center has brought out, which, as the first part of that area, says “saying yes to the mess, experiments, uncertainty”. And I find that interesting. So to what extent are we, as organisations, able to say yes to the mess? And how do you deal with that? What kind of leadership is needed in the mess? And I find that a quite invigorating kind of topic to say, “Okay, what does that mean?” And how do you avoid becoming too sort of dictatorial because somebody will need to make decisions, and there’s no agreement. How do you then have healthy leadership patterns in that zone?

Kate: And I think that the version of Stacey’s matrix that the Leadership Center has put out is really helpful, actually Nelis. Maybe we’ll put that onto the website as well. It contrasts the bottom left corner which it calls “ordinary management”. It’s where, it’s that technical rational decision making simple structures, effective procedures, monitoring coordination, providing direction. It’s all the things we’ve set up over the years to make a business or organisation funtion well. And that’s fine when you’re close to agreement and near to certainty. But when you’re in the top right, far from agreement, far from certainty, they describe it as, that’s when leadership is necessary, or “extraordinary management”. Ordinary management won’t suffice when you’re in that top right space, and I think they merge complexity and chaos there more than we would. But, as Nelis said, they list things like “saying yes to the mess, experiments, uncertainty, encouraging connectivity, conversation, building networks”. I think that’s all things that we’ve talked about as part of conversational leadership. But then those adaptive issues, wicked issues, that are the ones that you can’t just rely on your ordinary proven approaches to solve. You have to find different solutions and bring different people in to try and work out what they are. An interesting one listed there also is challenging habits and assumptions and containing anxiety. Nelis, what does it feel like in the chaotic zone? We’re kind of entering it a little bit. Which is why this resonated with us. And we decided, “Hey, let’s do a podcast talking about it”.

Nelis: Yes. anxiety is a good word there. And the interesting part of that is you need to contain it as a leader in order to not communicate angst to your followers, because if there is, if your leaders are giving a sense that they’re lost, total chaos emerges. And so how do you enter into the chaotic zone while… and as a leader feel anxious and and still communicate a sense of control or a sense of yeah, being on top of things. Trust is key. So personally, I resonate with a sense of anxiety. I have no idea where it’s going to go, and sometimes it feels quite overwhelming, because there’s so many things coming at you at the same time. We’re talking about our partnership environment. We’re talking about technical developments in the whole AI space, the whole area where we’re working in is changing dramatically. Our financial models are starting to fall apart or need to be replaced. All of those things. 

Kate: There are a lot of new new partners emerging, new players in the field and we’re trying to figure out, “Well, okay, how do we fit here?”.

Nelis: And in some ways that is complex. But it gets into this area of chaos where there’s so much uncertainty, so much disagreement, that you’ve got people going all directions at the same time. And for me as a leader, it is that sense of “I have no idea where it is going to go”. At the same time holding on to certain key beliefs. And I think that is key in that. So you’ve got that sense of uncertainty. You’re not sure yourself. You certainly disagree with a lot of others about it. But at the same time that is when you need to hold on to what you really believe in, and that’s spiritually, but also practically, what are your core values? And anchor your actions and your sensing on that. And I think that is one of the things that comes to mind for me primarily. I don’t know. How do you feel about that?

Kate: You know that I don’t do well with chaos and disorder! I think those who work with me will know that they’ve seen me…Holding anxiety is not one of my gifts. I think you do it quite well. But I’m a very expressive person. I’m a very emotional person. What I feel is usually very apparent to other people. So this is an area I need to grow in if chaos is going to be somewhere where we’re living a lot more. Let’s talk about sensing and acting. I’m very comfortable with convening now. Executing, fine. Sensing and acting to me sounds a little bit contrary to some of the stuff we’ve been stressing about convening. You know, you get the right people in the room. You get diversity. Everyone has wisdom. Does that all go out the window, do you think, when we’re in this corner where Stacey’s saying, we need to sense and act? What does that mean to you?

Nelis: And that’s where we get into the unpredictability of even this podcast because…

Kate: We’re in the chaos zone.

Nelis: This is a chaotic podcast! I think the key here is in some ways bringing those two things close together. You can’t get agreement in the sense of what you normally do in the convening zone. Looking for ways to move forward with the highest level of buy-in you can possibly get. But there is still a need to get the wisdom from more than one person, because sensing to me is not just an individual thing. It’s not about me sensing as a leader and just doing it. The systems that we talked about in all of the other podcasts, the wisdom of the group, bringing in new ideas, new perspectives. That’s still going to be important, 

Kate: …hearing from all parts of the system. 

Nelis: Exactly. So the challenge is, of course, that the changes are often so fast that you can’t do it. You can’t expect the same outcome of full agreement, but you still need to pattern your response on the same kind of ideas. And that’s why I think the merging of the two is not bad. It gives you tools.

Kate: So maybe it will help us if we contrast sensing with knowing. And that’s when you don’t have the certainty. We don’t know, necessarily, what the right response is going to be to the next decision we have to make. Say, on the situation we’re facing currently, we can’t know exactly but what does it mean to sense? There’s a tentativeness, isn’t there? There’s a – and I like how you said – bringing those two closer together. Sensing and acting, experimentation: “Well, let’s probe. Let’s take a step in this direction. See what happens. Okay. That’s not going to work. Take a step back. Let’s try another”. I don’t know, I’m just exploring, obviously. We always say to each other, “I’m verbally processing right now”. And that is totally what we’re doing here. 

Nelis: Yes, and I love that.

Kate: And we’re not feeling anxious at all, are we?

Nelis: But I think it actually touches on something that I think is important. We have enough trust, and we have enough patterns to fall back on in our podcast, trust between us. Key things are in place that allow us…

Kate: We have signals that we use when we want to speak, when I want to tell you you’ve gone on for too long. 

Nelis: Exactly.

Kate: We have a history. We have patterns. We have expectations of how this is going to go.

Nelis: And that allows us to go into that chaotic zone with some sense of trust that will go well. It’ll all be well. And I think that organizationally actually works as well. If there is enough trust in leadership, if you have patterns of convening and sharing with people sometimes, when that’s not possible, you’ve got to make snap decisions. You can’t come to agreement. You have a leader who basically is going to say, we’re going to do those three experiments. And I’ve got no idea whether any of them will work. There is enough trust in the system , enough patterns to fall back on that you’re okay. And I think that is going to be key. So trust, relationships, are still going to be absolutely important.

Kate: I think that’s a really key point. But how can we prepare ourselves? Just as we were preparing for this podcast, we were talking about borrowing from other domains such as crisis response. We talked about how people working in crisis response, in medical emergency response, have scenarios, they have templates, they’ve prepared for different scenarios. And I’m not sure that we could actually do that. But, knowing your systems well enough that you can actually improvise, thinking through what are the kind of crises that we could anticipate. And I think we’ve done that a little bit in the past, around issues that come up, we might have media exposure coming. We’ll prepare press releases, we’ll make sure we know who our spokespeople are in those scenarios, and who our spokespeople are not. And you know, those are some chaotic scenarios that we have prepared for in the past. 

Nelis: Yes, and I think that what you started saying here is really important. So when you look at crisis response, the three Ps that you’re referring to – plan, prepare, and practice – still apply. So you don’t know what the situation is going to be, it’s completely chaotic. The unpredictability is the norm in some ways. At the same time, if you have a foundation of elements that you are agreed on, you sort of deconstruct it. What do we agree on, and what are we ready to do? What are we ready to practise? So that when the chaos ensues we’re ready to deal with that. I find that a really helpful concept. Because at the higher level, to reiterate what we do believe in, the kind of leadership we want to provide. Having the practice of quickly convening on the things we can convene on is going to be key to actually survive. And that preparedness, the sense of having practised that, having done that enough, having planned for the unplannable, I think, is going to be really helpful when you enter into that zone of chaos.

Kate: I think, looking back at the pandemic is quite interesting, because that was chaotic at the beginning. We had to pivot very quickly on a number of things and because we had already practised convening quite a lot, because we had already moved into hybrid events, into

Zoom meetings, I think we were able to pivot a lot more quickly than other people.

and I think that relational foundation of trust that we’d spent quite a long time building…

Our relationships were good at that point, and I think when the chaos hit, I think that helped us to move quite swiftly. For example, pivoting our international conference in 6 weeks from an in person meeting in April, to a hybrid event. No, not hybrid, to a completely online event.

Nelis: Yes, I love that, what you’re saying about relationships. And often we equate relationship with agreement. And I think they’re completely different things. And so you can have complete disagreement, but have really strong relationships. And I think that is going to be key to survive the chaotic zone well, because you are allowing yourself and the group to do the give and take when you disagree, because the relational foundations are in place. So I think that is, that’s actually as we’re talking, I realise how important that is to disconnect agreement from relationship.

Kate: That’s really interesting. And I know that you and our colleague Karsten, as fellow Dutch men, often say that you agree to disagree. That’s always been a good example to me of how you can be really good friends with someone, even if you disagree with them on a given matter. And I think, you know, the thing we have certainty on is that we are committed to the cause. We are committed to good relationships. We are committed to trust and seeking to understand and walk forward together.

Nelis: Yes. And I think that is another part of what we are discovering together as we talk about it. So in some ways you need to disentangle or analyse what is it that we have low certainty and low agreement on? And what is it that we actually have lots of agreement on? And what are we certain about? And pulling that apart and saying, yeah, it’s not everything. It probably is only certain things. And that allows you then to actually have a foundation of agreement, certainty, execution, that helps to survive the chaotic parts.

Kate: Yes, I really like that. I wonder if that’s something we need to do as a leadership team-  around this current situation that we’ve been discussing – is actually get together and state the things that we are certain about, the things we have agreement about and in a sense doing the planning and the preparation, putting that foundation in that, these are non-negotiables for us. In whichever of the multitude of ways this situation may unfold, here’s our sort of bedrock, these are the things we agree on. These are the things we’re committed to. And that will provide us a bit more certainty and agreement actually, from which to operate.

Nelis: Yes. And I think if you do that, you allow the trust to stay intact. And actually, if you disentangle what is chaotic and what is complex, you also continue to have the right kind of leadership approach, convening people, having the right kind of dialogue that shows people that you haven’t abandoned that. You are still committed to your principles. It’s just on certain things, something else is needed. 

Kate: And it’s really important to stress, I think, in a time of chaos and crisis, it’s important to stress those fundamentals, to reassert the things that we hold to as an organisation, our values, you know, our mission, our vision and say, “We’re still about this, even though all of this is changing. This is who we are. This is what we do. This is where we’re going”. And that’s part of holding the anxiety, is giving people that security and stability.

Nelis: Yes, because people need that. Because we had earlier in our conversation, some people like change, but I don’t think anyone loves chaos, and if you sort of contain that by showing, “Okay, this is the chaotic part. But here is what we do control. This is, yes, this is complex, but we have a handle on it”. You allow yourself to contain it and not give the impression that the whole world is falling apart. Which is what happens when people panic, they hone in so much on the not-knowing that it feels like everything is falling apart, which may not be the case actually.

Kate: And so as a leadership team, we need to do our planning, preparing our scenario planning, etc., so that we can lead confidently into the unknown, and yes, be there for our staff.

Nelis: Yes, and be able to have enough of that trust that you’re going to make the highly unpopular decisions that half the group disagrees with. Because you need to be able to do that.

Kate: Well, Nelis, I think that we have not only a plan for one of our future team meetings there, talking about this. I think we have a podcast.

Nelis: I think we do. One of the things we didn’t discuss is how speed relates all of that. 

Kate: Oh yes. Do you want to just talk about that before we wrap up?

Nelis: As I was looking at this whole matrix, I realised that speed is not one of the axes. And at the same time, when you think about chaos, speed is so much a factor in that, because change happens so quickly that you don’t have time to convene and decisions are needed now, and they change every two months. And that kind of situation. So it is interesting that a lack of certainty and lack of agreement sort of has as a by-product the speed of change, because things go in different directions very suddenly. So it’s just an interesting observation that when you get into that mode you also need to have, you need to be ready to turn on a dime, and do a quick turnaround, pivot very quickly. And again, I think that crisis preparedness helps you to also deal with the question of speed. And one of the things that I was thinking about is in the chaotic zone, do you actually have data to do sensing or is… if your data is always 3 or 6 months old, it may be completely irrelevant. So I think as a leader, you need to create systems – and that’s again planning and preparing and practising – that the data you have is actually up-to-date, so that you can make quick decisions.

Kate King: So I think that’s a wrap for today, Nelis.

Nelis: I agree. And I’m excited about this. Actually, there are more outcomes than I expected. It is actually quite actionable. We have some ideas that you can actually take into leading in chaos. And I hope that our listeners find this helpful as well.

Kate King: And just linking back to conversational leadership, I think what we’ve done today is, we started out with a topic, we started out with a kind of stimulus, this matrix from Ralph Stacey, and said, “Let’s have a conversation about this, and see where it goes”. And actually in building off each other and having no boundaries for the conversation, and just yeah, bouncing off each other’s ideas we’ve actually come up with some actionable steps for ourselves as a leadership team, which is kind of good, kind of shows…

Nelis: … that conversational leadership actually works!

Kate: Sometimes when we’re facing big new things like this, we just need to clear some space and say, let’s just talk, let’s have no limits on this, and let’s just brainstorm together. See where it goes. Thanks, Nelis. This was fun.

Nelis: Thank you, Kate. And I’m looking forward to our next one with, I think, a guest again.

Kate King:  Yes, we have a couple of guests lined up. So that’s going to be fun. Happy Christmas, and best wishes for the New Year to you all.

Season 2, Episode 1

Leading in Conversation
Leading in Conversation
Leading in conversation Season 2, Episode 1
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Shownotes

Lipmanowicz H. and McCandless K. (2013) The Surprising Power of Liberating Structures. Liberating Structures Press.

Kaner, S. (2014) Facilitator’s guide to participatory decision-making. Jossey-Bass.

Transcript

Kate: Welcome to season 2 of Leading in Conversation. I’m excited to be back for a second season, but sadly I’ll be kicking off without Nelis, who is unable to join us today. However, I’m really glad to be joined by Josiah Watters. Hello Josiah!

Josiah: Hi Kate. Good to be with you.

Kate: Thank you. Josiah is from the US, but living in Thailand, and he works in people development and organisation development and also does consulting and coaching across Asia. Nelis and I both met Josiah through a leadership course where he’s on Faculty. One of the first things I noticed about Josiah is his stellar facilitation skills. He always asks really interesting questions to get people talking. So, I guess I want to kick off with that, Josiah. When did you first get interested in facilitation, and why? 

Josiah: I think the first part of that journey for me was actually watching my dad. So my dad is a linguist by training, but he is also a teacher. And I remember, as a kid, watching him in different contexts, the difference in the engagement in the room when he would get up to teach, compared to others. Oftentimes people seem to be tuning out when I would watch other people speaking. And then when my dad would get up, people would lean in. And I realised, looking back, a lot of that had to do with the fact that he asked questions. From his perspective, it was maybe more of a Socratic method that influenced him. But he would ask great questions and his method of teaching involved a lot of dialogue among those he was teaching, and between him and his pupils. So that shaped me early on, and in university, I got involved in an outdoor education program on the side of my studies. And that’s where I really first began to facilitate groups. So we would take groups of people ranging from students, young students, all the way up to professional corporate groups, that would come and have these outdoor experiences together. And then we would facilitate discussion and discovery and dialogue. And so that whole process of learning to facilitate those groups really shaped how I went from then on.

Kate: That’s really fascinating. So, something you picked up almost subconsciously, maybe, as a child watching your dad, but then had an opportunity to hone as you got older. So, conversational leadership… when we were chatting the other day, you mentioned how discovering dialogic organisation development was transformational for you. Can you tell us a bit about that? What was so impactful for you? 

Josiah: Yeah, it was, it was a bit of a slow unveiling is how I experienced it. I was working with an organisation in Asia. We were trying to see more engagement among all the members in shaping the future together. We were thinking about how to involve people in co-creating the future. We were using that kind of language. And I came across a book called Liberating Structures, it’s actually The Surprising Power of Liberating Structures and it talks about how often we think of changing organisations by changing the macro structures. But they said actually, what is even more important is to look at the micro structures, the way that interactions happen in organisational life every day. And if we see change happen there, in those micro structures, all kinds of things become possible. And so, I was really intrigued by this book. We began to implement a lot of the Liberating Structure practices in our organisational life, and saw a great impact from that. And then I was at a little bookstore in Calcutta, India, and I came across this book that was on the shelf, called Dialogic Organisation Development. And I just picked it out. I thought I’d look through it and I began to read through it on the plane. And I realised it was the underpinnings of everything behind the Liberating Structures, why they were having the kind of impact that they were. 

Kate: Was that the book by Bushe and Marshak, that came out in 2015? That book was really impactful for me too. When I found it, it was like, oh, this is what I’ve been looking for, this makes sense. I’d read a lot of Ralph Stacy’s work before and I found it a little bit lacking in the practical application for leaders. And then when I came across Dialogic OD, and particularly that book, it was like a light bulb turning on for me. 

Josiah: So we had already begun with processes and practices that reflect the mindset and values of dialogic OD, without knowing the term dialogical yet. But we were recognising that all transformation is linguistic, that change happens through language. Everything in the one sense that we consider as an organisation occurs to us or rises through the medium of language. And how we began to explore that and that actually shifting what was happening in organisational life together requires different kinds of processes than what we had previously experimented with or become accustomed to. 

Kate: Absolutely. I think the power of language, the power of narrative, how you talk about things, changing how you talk about things can then change everything else within an organisation, and like you say, going from the macro to the micro. We often think that, where traditionally change has been viewed as a sort of top-down approach, that’s going to be successful. The leaders decide what the change will be and it’s usually the big stuff. But actually, seventy five percent of change processes fail, partly because they don’t involve the people at the micro level. I’d love to hear more about this. How have you been using these processes in your organisation? Can you tell us some stories? Give us some examples? 

Josiah: Sure. You know, I think one of the first things we ran into was the sense that the more people were involved in helping create something, the more they had a sense of ownership and engagement. And at the same time there seemed to be real limits on how many people you could have meaningfully involved, at least with the traditional structures, the traditional micro structures, things like a presentation or a facilitated discussion. Facilitated in the sense that I’m managing the discussion as the facilitator. There’s real limits to what’s possible there. You might only be able to work with, you know, six or nine, maybe twelve people at the most. 

Kate, Yes, otherwise, meaningful conversation sort of breaks down and you get question and response and comment…

Josiah: Right, and so what we loved about the Liberating Structures practices were that they allowed any size of group to meaningfully participate. And so we begin to use those. One early example was, I was in charge of organising our regional conference for our organisation and those conferences have been pretty traditional like any other conference you might imagine and in the preparation for it, we started talking to lots of people who had been previously to that kind of conference and asking them what were the best parts for them. What was the most meaningful, what would make it worth it for them to attend again, and so just really listening. And over and over, we heard, you know, the best was the things that happened in the margins. So we said, what if we move those things out of the margin and put them front and centre. So that was one of our first experiences was redesigning this conference. Really, it became an unconference, some might call it.

Kate: Can you explain what an unconference is? 

Josiah: Well, I don’t know a formal definition but it’s a conference without a planned agenda, without plenary speakers, without specific experts coming in to deliver certain topics. What we did was we tried to get the kinds of people there that we wanted interacting with our personnel. But we had to come up with a different contract with them. So, we invited them but we said, we’re not inviting you to come and teach a session. We’re not inviting you to come and speak in a plenary talk. What we’d like is for you to come and just engage, be there, be available. Engage in conversation with the participants and… 

Kate: That’s really important, isn’t it? Framing, setting expectations. You used the word “contracting”, you mean setting expectations, framing their role, telling them how you want them to interact, especially if they’ve traditionally been used to downloading information on people, sharing presentations. It takes some deliberate thought and action, to help people shift into a different mode of interacting, particularly when you’re using something like Open Space Technology. I’ve observed, it can be quite destabilising for leaders who are used to a traditional role in such events. Where is their opportunity to speak, to share, to download the information? And sometimes participants feel a little bit shaky. Like where are all the presentations? What, you mean, we’ve got to come up with the content? How did people receive it? How did it go down? 

Josiah: Well I think you’re exactly right. We had some of the guests that we invited that declined because they weren’t interested in that expectation that we were setting. And then others that accepted but did struggle during the event to adapt to a different way of being useful. And then others that really thrived. And for the participants by and large there was a very positive response. There was so much energy unleashed in the room across those few days. And some people that also struggled with running out of energy, which was interesting because they said, can we just actually, one person came up to me and said, can we just have one session with a talking head? Because I’m getting exhausted, from all this engagement there! 

Kate: Especially the introverts, it’s huge for introverts. If you’re doing all the engaging, you come to an event, you’re used to just sitting and listening, it can actually be quite relaxing, just letting the words wash over you… but, no, this is a very different…

So we kind of need to set the expectations for participants as well, you’re coming and it all depends on you. You’re coming to engage, to share your wisdom, to set directions, etc.

Josiah: Yes, that’s right. And I’m an introvert actually  myself and I’m going to actually encourage and try to model managing your own energy during the event and so there were some sessions where I just needed to go have a rest and have some quiet because then I had something more to contribute in the next session. 

Kate: I’ve had to do that, as well as you know, I’ve got Long Covid and sometimes I just have to say to myself, “Right, Kate, take a step back. You can’t actively participate in this session. You just need to rest while still being present and listening.” That’s quite hard for me as an extrovert. So, that was your first event, this conference, and did that go down well enough that you have repeated this? 

Josiah: We have, we’ve repeated it with some modifications over the years, so we’ve done more of a blend in recent years, between some kind of traditional, plenary types of sessions  but then with Liberated Structure processes for everyone to engage around the content and around the topics and then we still had places that were opened up for anyone to continue conversations. 

Kate: Yeah, that’s really interesting. So I literally just heard today of an event in our organization where they were using open space technology and they’ve actually just decided at the request of the participants to put a few presentations back in. I think it’s getting that balance between sharing information because the information you share frames and sets up the conversations, gives some input. So getting the balance is really important isn’t it.

Josiah: That’s right.

Kate: What have you learned in the process, what has worked, what hasn’t worked?

Josiah: We have experimented widely and one of my strengths is like discovering, learning, exploring, and so I was really gifted to partner  with some other leaders who were great at taking things from idea to action. I love the world of ideas and on my own I could probably stay there at times but I was working with some partners who were very action-oriented. So anytime I would come across a new idea, they would say, “How about we start it… today?” And I would feel the need to get more proficient, to learn more before we tried to put it into practice, but we would usually jump right in and start learning as we went. So we have learned a lot along the way experimenting with different processes but I think a foundational piece for all of these is listening. We started doing some coaching training, received some coaching training, began to be involved in individual coaching, one-on-one coaching. And the power of just practicing intentional listening as a gift to another stuck with us and we saw that over and over being the foundation for all these other kinds of group processes that we wanted to engage in together. 

Kate: Definitely, because if you’re not listening to what someone else is saying, and I think we see this happen a lot in those kinds of conference contexts, you’re actually sitting there preparing the thing you want to say. And I think, often in the old style conferences you used to have people speak from the floor at the mic and everyone would be lined up with their thing to say. It wasn’t really a conversation, it didn’t necessarily build, because people were coming with their different things. And what I love about a conversational approach is what happens when people do listen and build on each other and you get this whole different thing growing rather than everyone just coming up with their own idea. 

Josiah: Yeah. I think for me and my role as a leader in our organisation at the time a real challenge was that I wanted to model being a learner. I wanted to open up the space for the unexpected to emerge. I knew that the things that mattered most to us couldn’t be directed and planned in a linear way. And yet I was functioning in this role that often, I felt like I needed to live up to a sense of expertise or a sense of knowing the answers. 

Kate: I can so relate to that. Could you say a little bit more about the things needing to emerge rather than being planned? 

Josiah: Well, I think the difference for me is someone that’s trying to create a learning environment where they have a destination that they want the learners to arrive at, that presumes, you know the right destination and you know the path to get there. And that works for some kinds of situations and some kinds of challenges. But the things we were engaged in there wasn’t a proven, right answer or a proven path of how to get there. And so as a leader in that space the temptation to knowing the answer is a leader is still there. And culturally there’s a lot of bias towards that, like I felt pressured to have the answer but I knew that none of, no one of us have the answer. Somehow together we needed to discover it and that wasn’t going to happen if I was playing this role of the person with the answer or a person with a plan. And yet it was very destabilizing at times for people, for me in the leader role not to acknowledget having the plan, not having the answer. So we had to learn how to kind of create a sense of safety, or enough safety within the group to explore together. And that was a journey and it was, I think I’m still learning how to do that. And one of the challenges I think is that you can’t teach someone who already knows. So this idea of leaders being lifelong learners sometimes feels like a dichotomy because the more you lead, the more experience you have to draw from. It can be easy to stop learning because you think you already know and the feeling of not knowing, the feeling of learning can actually be really disorienting and uncomfortable. I’d much rather know the answer than not know the answer. 

Kate: How have you found this in the Asian context where I think it’s particularly harder for leaders to embrace this kind of leading as learners, as co-participants when culturally they’re expected to know everything and be that sort of more hierarchical leader.

Josiah: One thing I’ve seen is leaders that are able to have that top voice, to frame a direction of travel without saying this is the exact path to get there, that we’re going to need to discover it together. And so they’ve been able to have that voice and that influence from the top and then allow a process to emerge within the group they’re leading, as they figure out how to move forward towards that goal. That’s one way I’ve seen and then another would be a bit more subversive or indirect. For example, I got hired as a coach for an organization that was working in the eastern part of India developing different factories and it was growing pretty rapidly. And they were trying to train a whole layer of middle management to keep up with their growth. And so they wanted me to be a coach. Now, in my mind coach has a certain framework around it, it is very facilitative. For these clients that I was working with, they saw me as the guru. So rather than fighting that role I embraced it, I owned it, but then I engaged them in a facilitative way. So, for example, I would say “You’re so fortunate, you found me. I’m going to teach you everything you need to know. You’re going to be such a better leader after working with me”.

Kate: That must have felt uncomfortable for you?

Josiah: Maybe not quite that extreme but along those lines, you know, that’s what they were looking for, that reassurance. And then I would say, “But for me to help you I really  have to understand more about what you are working with, what you are experiencing and then I would just start asking all these questions. And things would start to be unearthed and I would ask them what they saw the possibilities to be, what their sense of the right move forward. And so over time, then they were able to see, well, actually we did this ourselves, but it didn’t start that way. I couldn’t convince them just by describing it. They had to experience it. 

Kate: Yes. Absolutely. And that leads me on to the element that’s really important, I think, in conversational leadership Is creating a sense of safety, psychological safety for people, holding their anxiety. I think Stacey talks about holding anxiety for people. Can you tell me a little bit about how you’ve done that? You gave one great example there. 

Josiah: Yeah. So for me, I think it starts with being more aware of my own anxiety, and acknowledging that and being able to hold that. Because it’s easy, I think, for me to come into a group that I’m working with and bring some of that anxiety myself. And so I need to be aware of my own and then I can be able to start to hold that for others. And I love the framework in the Dialogic OD book that talks about moving from… they talk about a container. And so the idea that a container is useful because of what it contains. So my coffee cup, it’s not so much about the cup, it’s about what it contains inside that gives it value. So the container could be temporary, it could be a discussion group, it could be a working team. But the process they describe is instability of the container, where it’s just starting to take shape, and then instability in the container, as a group that’s starting to work out how they relate to each other. And then you can start to get to real movement, interaction, after you get to stability within the container. And so, for my role, as a facilitator of a conversation or a group, I start off as as, in many ways, as the container for the group. I’m containing the anxieties, I’m aware of them. And people are looking to me to help manage the anxieties that they’re bringing. But as the group begins to form together, my role starts to move to the periphery. And so, instead of being front and centre, I’m starting to move to the edge more, as the group begins to do its work.

Kate: What do you do practically to hold anxiety in session? You gave the example from when you were working in India. You sort of framed your role and kind of met them halfway with their expectations of you. What else might you do to make people feel safe. They are coming to something quite new, maybe they’re discussing a topic which is destabilising for them. What will you actually do in the room?

Josiah: Well, some of it can be very simple in conversation. So at the beginning of a gathering, we might have people get into pairs for conversation and just briefly discuss what might keep you from being fully present today, fully present in this next session. What is it that matters to you most about this topic or about what we’re going to discuss and what might get in the way of you fully showing up? Just pausing to acknowledge that, to recognize, we’ll even do some brief things like a body scan, depending on the type of group. Just to notice, you know, what are you feeling, what are you bringing in with you? You know, tension in your shoulders, is your chest tight? You’re kind of holding your breath, not getting full, deep breaths? Some groups are more or less comfortable with that but I think it still can be useful to practice. But then for myself, being able to pay attention to what I’m sensing, internally, has been a learning process for me because oftentimes that gives me clues about what’s going on in the room. And then I can verbalize that, not project it on the people but I can say “I noticed this happening inside of me. I don’t know what that’s about. Does anybody have any thoughts about that? Or any comment, or…?” You know, I open it up, open up my own internal experience to the group and oftentimes then that will surface from the group, something that’s happening. And if the anxiety is pushed down and not acknowledged and we just try to move forward, it still leaks out. 

Kate: Yes, it reminds me of, we’ve been in this book group, talking about this book Organization Development by Mee-Yan Cheung Judge, who I know has been one of your mentors and teachers. And she talks about the ‘use of self’. And I think that’s what you’re touching on, and something I’m really interested in. And in that kind of setting, that’s a huge amount of vulnerability and transparency, that people may not be comfortable with. Do you not introduce more anxiety when you ask people to be that vulnerable, to talk about feelings? I’m particularly thinking about, working with Western men, who might not be so comfortable talking about their emotions. 

Josiah: Yeah. So you have to really try to understand your group, where they’re at, who you’re working with. And there’s a variety of things I’ve done to help make it a smoother on ramp for people. One would be if they’re people you have a particular concern for prior to a session to be able to have have some conversational engagement with them, to sense what might be helpful for them to fully show up and engage. It is going to be risky. And one of the ways that we deal with that is to move slowly, I think of it, kind of like a spiral or a funnel, like you cam slowly progress. So there was a famous study done. These people that said if you get strangers together and you get them to answer these, I think it was 35 questions, together over 45 minutes, they had a high likelihood of falling in love with each other. 

Kate: Wow, okay. 

Josiah: You know, the psychology study that was done. The concept behind it was, deepening mutual reciprocal self- disclosure. So that you’re slowly sharing a bit more about yourself and then hearing a bit more about the other person. So we do that in threes and you get people sitting close together, knees touching, really close proximity. And then you have several rounds of questions. It doesn’t have to be 35 and we’re not trying to get them to fall in love, but we’re getting them past the point of anxiety and to really starting to see each other as humans, so, there is a human to human connection instead of seeing each other as a role or as a persona.

Kate: That’s really special actually. That human connection at a deep level is something that we all naturally crave, we need, we’re made to need it, and yet our society, education, our cultures have sort of put barriers between us. But actually if you’re going to get anywhere in a conversation, in work, if you’re going to bring about change, then you need to, you need to get rid of those barriers. There’s walls that we put up between ourselves and put yourself in a vulnerable place. But I know that’s really hard for people. How has this all gone down in your organization?

Josiah: One thing that has helped us for us to model it. If I model it, if I do that hard work, and if I’m doing that learning and growing, then what I bring is a different presence to the room and that’s where the facilitator is as container can start to happen, where you’re creating a sense of safety just by your presence in the room, in your ‘use of self’ like Mee-Yan would say. But then also working with others that I had already gone deep with, we were able to model together a different kind of interaction and a different kind of conversation that would be different than what people had experienced before, especially like you said in certain cultural groups, that maybe don’t share that much, about their inner world. And so for us, we recognize that, some authors said, most people in an organization are doing a second job, no one is paying them for and that’s covering up their weaknesses. If you really pay attention , so much energy  under the surface goes into managing or as they would say, covering up our weaknesses and when you are able in a group, in a team or an organization, to increase the safety it frees up some of that energy for other things, for creativity and productivity. It’s amazing what can happen.

Kate: Before the pandemic we used to have a lot more in-person meetings. A product of the pandemic is we do a lot more stuff online. Has that been the same for you? And if so, how do you go about creating that container in an online space?

Josiah: I think it takes more time online. It can take more time has been our experience, but having opportunities for people to connect personally and to begin to share from their world and finding small way to bring each other into your world. And there’s lots of creative, simple ways out there to do that. But one of the things we’ve seen is that it does take extra time in the meeting space or in the conversation to make that happen and sometimes we do that in the context of the large medium, sometimes we do it sequentially where there might be a series of smaller interactions that lead into a bigger conversation. 

Kate: You almost have to create that margin time you were referring to earlier, like, when you meet in person you have the coffee breaks, you have the meal times, you have the evenings, you have the “Oh, I just bumped into you in the corridor and we were chatting for 10 minutes” kind of things, which you don’t have in online meetings, you sort of show up, you’re there and then you leave. I think we need to explore much more creating those margin opportunities and making them manageable for people, because often the last thing you want to do if you’ve been in several  hours of online meeting is hang around and eat lunch with someone online as well.

Josiah: Yeah, and we found that people often need some support to know how to engage. Almost that good conversation can feel like a lost art at times. So just the fact that you arranged for three people to get together and have a small group conversation, they might not be sure what to talk about or they might just play out common scripts in a conversation without really sharing at a personal level or a meaningful level and so we try to give a bit of prompting for people to choose. They can still choose what they want to talk about, but it takes it another level deeper. But I’ve also found it’s important to verbalize and externalize what we’re experiencing online. Because body language is not as visible and so on. 

Kate: If I’ve got my arms crossed and tense when you can only see my head and shoulders. 

Josiah: Yeah. So it’s just stopping to ask people, to check in and say, “I’m curious after I said that what was going on for you Kate, you know, what were you experiencing?”. And just simple check-ins like that. And also for me to model doing that. I’ve had to learn to do that anyway because I tend to be not very expressive externally. And often people struggle to know what I’m thinking or what I’m feeling. So I have to work extra hard to let them know. So actually I was already practising that when we had to move online, but I found that it’s helpful for others to do that as well.

Kate: There’s a whole lot more intentionality and verbalizing things, and showing up in a different way, I think, is what I’m hearing you say, whether in person or online. 

Josiah: That’s right. And it opens up a lot of possibilities at the same time. I mean, it has constraints for sure, but it has also allowed us to do a lot of things we wouldn’t have been able to do before. And working asynchronously. We do a lot through exchanging voice conversations that aren’t happening live in real time and actually find it really interesting to listen to a ten minute recording of a co-worker talking compared to listening to them talking for 10 minutes. In a meeting I might – if there’s five of us sitting around – I might start to get impatient or feel like we’re not equally sharing the space, I’m thinking about what I’m going to say. But if I know I’m just listening and I’ve got 10 minutes to hear them and I’m trying to really remember what I’m listening to so that I can respond in an hour or two – I’ll often do this on walks and will just listen to the recordings on the walk. I find myself really engaging in a deeper kind of listening. 

Kate: Oh, I really like that. That’s not a tool that I’ve used – I mean, obviously we send Whatsapp messages to each other but actually asking people to record themselves, say on WhatsApp or Signal, share that with the rest of the group. And then you each, you take the time to listen, That’s s quite a lot of listening time. If you’ve got a, like, our leadership team of seven people, if we all chat, right, 10 minutes. That’s quite a lot of listening. But still, it’s something when you’re in a different time zones, especially, you can do it asynchronously and then come to the meeting and you’ve already heard what other people bringing and then you start at a different place in the process.

Josiah: Exactly, that synchronous time is so precious especially for global calls where we’re going from the West coast of the US to Asia, you know, we’ve got about an hour an a half window. And so if we’re using that for each person to start off with their update or where they’re coming from, we don’t really get to much of the conversation and the follow-up questions and dialogue, that could happen. 

Kate: And you know what I also love? Those of you in Asia, at least in our organisation, often end up being in meetings late at night… and it gives you a chance to record your thoughts at a time of day when you are awake!

Kate: I think one final question for you – although I talk for a lot longer on this topic – but the big question for us is always, how do you move from conversation to action? It’s not just talk is it? And that’s sometimes the accusation we get, “Well, conversational leadership is just talk. How’s that different?” How do you make that leap to actually making a decision, doing something? 

Josiah: This is really an interesting one because I would say there’s an assumption in the question itself, that those are two different things or that they are separate and in our experience, oftentimes, they’re really not that separate. You know, would people be willing to consider that talk is action. And for us, we work with a lot of leaders who are fairly activist in their leaning, you know, they want to produce something, they want to see something happen, and at the same time, there’s a lot of energy that gets expended and then we have to start over again. And so the process of action and conversation being held together, I think, is really important for us. That we are starting to move forward based on the conversations we’ve had but we are paying attention as we go. We’re continuing to listen to each other and we’re expecting that there’s going to be a lot of adjustments and course corrections and things we didn’t anticipate that we need to learn from it, and be ready to adapt to. So it’s really both together in our experience that are important. The other thing I would say is so much of our focus has been moving to action. And when we move too quickly to action, we found it takes so much more effort to sustain that action. Whereas sometimes if we stay longer in the conversation, or some of our leaders are getting impatient, what happens is, coming out of that, the people involved move so much faster, and are so much more self-organised that they execute much more quickly. And it’s interesting, I remember reading a case study from the company WL Gore that makes goretex and other products. They talked about how they take way longer than other companies to explore possibilities. But then once they move to action, they outperform other companies by far, like their speed keeps their advantage. But their speed actually comes from slowing down long enough to explore together, to surface things that would have been missed otherwise, and for the energy of everyone in the room to be fully unleashed.

Kate: That’s really significant and it takes, again, a very conscious, deliberate patience to slow yourself down, to resist that temptation to jump too quickly to a decision. Sam Kaner talks about the groan zone, staying in the groan zone. You’re probably familiar with that and I think we’ve mentioned that on the podcast before. Don’t jump to the convergence, the decision-making, too fast because you might miss the thing you really need. 

Josiah: Yeah, that’s right. I like that, the groan zone. Somebody else calls it the zone of productive disequilibrium. 

Kate: That’s a mouthful, I’ll stick with the groan zone!

Josiah: But that’s really key, being able to stay there. And so for us, it’s the idea that you come up with a good enough plan and then you can just act it out, that hasn’t held true and so we have to keep the conversation open because we expect to be learning as we go and so we move from plans to planning as an ongoing reality.

Kate: Because things will emerge and then you need to respond and then you’ll move further and further away from the original plan. But it might actually be better, it might be where you really needed to go. I think the era of strategic plans that are in cement, or on the shelf, you know, that’s long gone, isn’t it? I think emergent  planning is where we really need to be because things move so fast and we need to be responsive.

Josiah: That’s right. That’s been our experience.

Kate: Well, as I said, Josiah, I could talk for a lot longer, but I think we’ll wrap this up for today. Thank you so much for giving me your time today. Really enjoyed talking to you.

Josiah: It’s been fun to be with you, thanks Kate.

Kate: And thanks too to our listeners for joining us as we start our second season. As always please leave us your thoughts and comments at leadinginconversation.net. That’s all for now. See you soon! 

Episode 9

Leading in Conversation
Leading in Conversation
Episode 9
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Transcript

Kate: This is our ninth episode. Can you believe it, Nelis?

Nelis: No,  it’s come fast, hasn’t it, and it’s also one that closes this season.

Kate: Yes, you just stole the words out of my mouth. I was just going to say this is the concluding episode of Season 1. And just to let you know upfront, Nelis is going on sabbatical for 3 months, so we will be back in April hopefully. But first we wanted to do a little bit of a review of the journey of Season 1 and what we’ve learned, what we are learning on this journey into conversational leadership.

Nelis: Yes, it’s exciting to look back, isn’t it? Because when I look at the comments we’ve received from people as we talk, not so much on the website, but as we converse with people, as we hear some of the emails we’ve got, and it’s actually very exciting to see it’s had an impact. It’s being used, it’s shaping the thinking of at least some people. And that’s exciting to see. That’s the reason we did this, 

Kate: And people are pushing back as well. People are asking good questions. People are challenging us, holding us accountable, which is great. Part of why we started this really is to create a conversation in our organisation but also wider. I know you’ve had some friends that have listened to it who aren’t colleagues of ours, as have I, and that’s fun to see, it’s spreading more widely.

Nelis: Yeah, we got this email a month ago or so ago from somebody in the US, who said “ I shared it with my boss, and we’re talking about it as a leadership team and we’re thinking about how to apply this in our context. And that’s the kind of stuff that really floats my boat.

Kate: Love it! And we’ve had some great guests all the way, haven’t we? That’s been fun.

Nelis: Yes, and it’s exciting to see how different people then think about it with us. I’ve really appreciated those podcasts where we were together with guests. The first one we did was after our first experimentation with this, the big event. 

Kate: Yes, we had three colleagues join us.

Nelis: It was fun to see there, too, what you just mentioned, the combination of feedback and real excitement, thinking about especially how context shapes the conversation.

Kate: Yes, and then we had Reinhold join us. Who was a key speaker at that event and part of our experiment, and it was great to hear some of his experience and perspective and understanding of conversational leadership from working in quite a different organisation.

Nelis: Yes. I appreciated his bringing in that sense of how do you bring in the people who are disadvantaged, who don’t dare to speak up normally, who are from minority contact cultures. That was really really helpful to talk about, and I think it’s something that needs to continue to be part of the conversation, because so often the conversation is with the people who already are speaking up anyway.

Kate: The people who already have power, who already have voice. Conversational leadership is a great way to include others. At the heart of it you need everyone. You need the wisdom of everyone. You need that diversity. And so I think it can definitely be leveraged to increase inclusion and diversity in your organisation.

Nelis: But it requires thoughtful involvement of these people and and to me that that was a really powerful conversation to have to think about. Because often I think a lot of leaders try to be conversational, to some extent at least, but then do it with the usual suspects.

Kate: And it was great to talk to Meera and Albert, who, I think, really changed my perspective on what conversational leadership might look like in other cultures. Obviously, they were coming from Asia, two different contexts in Asia, and I had thought on the basis of previous conversations with some colleagues from Asia that maybe conversational leadership wouldn’t work in a hierarchical setting, but actually they explained how it works differently there.

Nelis: Fascinating isn’t it how that hierarchy maintains, but it changes the role of a leader. And in some ways I think that’s actually just as true in a Western context, it plays out differently, but it does not undermine leadership in any way. It actually changes the shape of it, and it becomes more – dare I say – effective. Not effective only, but also affective.

Kate: But also the locus of the conversations changes. I thought that was really interesting, that the conversations were more likely to happen outside of the formal meeting context, outside the boardroom, probably over a meal, but they still happen. And they are just as important. But you wouldn’t probably be having this all together, in a free for all in the meeting room.

Nelis: Yes, that’s fascinating. And I think that even in a Western context there’s something to learn from that, because how often is it said, even in a Western context, that the real stuff happens during coffee breaks. So even there, can you embrace that and do conversational leadership outside the official?

Kate: Yes. We also had Jason and what I loved about that conversation with Jason is that the focus of his Phd and his particular interest is how we can use conversational leadership to improve our decision making. Because, as we said in that episode, one of the critiques of conversational leadership is often that it’s just talk, it doesn’t actually lead to anything. And I think that’s conversational leadership not done well, when you leave it open ended. But I love that he’s wanting to focus on how it can improve the decisions we make through including more people.

Nelis: Yes, and that is an area that needs more research. And I think all of us can benefit from that. And I think we’ll come back to that later in our conversation today, as to how does it influence decision making? One other thing we talked about, I think, in several of the episodes, is the importance of paying attention and listening well, that we, as leaders are careful not to speak up too quickly, to resist the temptation to tie it up all neatly with a bow, and to say, okay, here it is. But to sit with the uncomfortable situation of unresolved issues.

Kate: Yes. I still find that very hard. But it’s worthwhile. It’s really worthwhile. If you can tolerate that ambiguity, that lack of decision, that lack of certainty, and just let people talk things out. I think you come to things in a whole new way.

Nelis: And that’s the tension, isn’t it? You need to come to decisions. You can’t just sit with it forever. But to sit with it longer than we’re used to  is, I think, a really really helpful discipline. But then also to know when to say, okay, this is it this the decision, we’re moving forward with that

Kate: I think it’s particularly hard. I’ve just been reflecting on this recently how you do conversational leadership in a remote working setting when you’ve got an hour or 90 min for a meeting and you know every 5 min of your meeting is earmarked for something. And that really squashes the conversation, kills the sort of creativity and generative potential of a meeting. And I’m still not quite sure what to do about that, and how to manage that, because an hour goes very quickly when that’s all you’ve got, and then you all leave and go on to another meeting or something else. You don’t have the milling around in the corridor afterwards, and things like that. It puts a lot of pressure on that time, that one hour.

Nelis: Yes, we’ve experienced this a little bit. I think there is a there is a need to

distinguish that somewhat from the quick decision making things you need to do, when you earmark your time well, you’ve got a set agenda, you go through that. That is never going to be pure conversational leadership. There’s just no way you can’t do that well. But then to also have some meetings – and we’ve done that as a leadership team – where you actually give yourself an hour to explore and to be generative. And, I’ve actually loved that our board has tried to do some of that as well. And so to do that, I think, is very possible, but you need to make a conscious decision to set some time aside to do that, where you keep it open ended, and you don’t build it full, and you don’t expect to necessarily have the results in that very session.

Kate: Yeah. And maybe expanding expectations. Say, “We’re going to take two hours, not our normal sixty minutes”. And explain to people upfront, “This is what we’re going to do. We’re going to explore together”. So that expectations are framed helpfully for that time. 

Nelis: Yeah, I think we need to come back to that idea of expectations later in our conversation, because some of my experiences looking back over the year have revealed that that is a really important aspect, setting expectations beforehand.

Kate: Another thing I think I wanted to mention reflecting on what we’ve learned is that the real distinctive of conversational leadership is this making meaning together part. The co-creation.

Nelis: Yes. And I think that touches on what we just discussed about purpose. So there are times when that is absolutely key, where you are in this situation that there is no obvious solution, and you need to work together to really make sense of the situation, and then explore where that’s leading you. It’s going into the unknown and explore that from every angle, and that’s where a co-creative process really works well. And that’s where conversational leadership, I think, is exceptionally helpful.

Kate: Okay, Well, let’s move on. Our second question for ourselves today was, what has it been like practically to figure out how to do conversational leadership in the midst of a busy working life, where we don’t have the luxury of being external consultants who can plan a nice, neat intervention that has a beginning, middle, and end. We’re living in the middle of multiple conversations, all going on at the same time, sort of dancing from one to the other and putting one on hold until the next time we meet. How’s that been, Nelis?

Nelis: That’s interesting. Just before I try to answer that, together with you, part of the challenge I think we’re constantly feeling is, how do you combine it with other things, other approaches? Because it’s not like conversational leadership is the only way to do leadership suddenly. And so it’s this constantly going back in and out of different tools and different approaches, and using it as a both/and.

Kate King: You are answering the question, by the way! And I think that’s the answer. I don’t think we can do conversational leadership all the time. There are times when we need to make quick decisions without consultation. So if you commit to using conversation leadership does that mean you have to use it for everything, or not? I think not. But we’ve also said in the past that conversational leadership is a way of seeing organisations differently, as the many conversations that happen.

Nelis: I think you’re bringing up a really neat point. So I think you’re right. I mean, it depends on your definition of conversational leadership. In some ways it influences everything we do. And it has started more and more to influence everything I do. I look at everything that happens in the organisation somewhat from that angle and say, what’s happening here? How are people talking to each other? How can I be part of that? At the same time, when you look at it as a tool – which it is also – then sometimes it’s more appropriate than other times. So yes, when we talked about this earlier, we talked about it, really depends on the definition, and I think that’s becoming more and more clear to me that that’s helpful to think about. 

Nelis: So you made an interesting comment just a second ago about external consultants, and I think that is part of the distinctive of our approach is that we’re trying to do it as leaders and not as outsiders. And that to me is something that we need to constantly keep in mind -it’s very different from outside interventions -and help people think about what that means in their daily lives. And that’s what these conversations are about. And that’s exciting.

Kate: So one example of one of my working relationships with one of my team leaders: we did an annual review recently, and I realised that our meetings have become a really highly productive space where we co-create solutions together. It’s really interesting. We’ll often each bring a problem that we didn’t know how to solve on our own, and by the end of the meeting we’ve come up with a great solution. I know that’s not revolutionary or anything but it just keeps happening, and it’s really interesting, I think, to see how we have the conditions present for quality conversation: where we feel free with each other to just bat around ideas. There’s a lot of trust. Nothing’s too stupid to suggest. That’s been really exciting to see that happen actually.

Nelis: Which is interesting because it’s in a hierarchical kind of situation. You are her boss but that falls away obviously, and I think that’s part of your conversational leadership approach. You work as peers in many ways.

Kate King: Very much so. I don’t really see myself as people’s boss. I forget that quite often. We’re peers, we’re working together on this.

Nelis: I think that is really neat, because I think that is part of conversational leadership. You are the leader, but in the end most of the time you’re working together.

Kate King: And it doesn’t really make a difference. I don’t really have a monopoly on wisdom or answers, or anything. I might have access to information that she doesn’t have that helps us to come to a conclusion, because as a leader, my access to information is wider than hers or I have a bigger picture perspective because I’m invited into other spaces. But she also has greater experience at other levels of the organisation, which is often what we need to make decisions.

Nelis: Yeah. I think that is part of conversational leadership just made very concrete in a one-on-one situation. 

Kate: So do you have any examples from your working life, Nelis?

Nelis:  Yeah, quite a few actually. There have been several very sticky situations over the course of the year where I had to deal with complex conflictual issues. I wanted to do that conversationally. And I think that ended up being very, very helpful, because it allowed the people involved to be part of the process of coming to resolution. At the same time there are limitations to that, in the sense that I had certain things that were non-negotiable, certain things that weren’t on the table. And what I’m learning in all of this is how important expectations are in that. So, in some cases I communicated that more clearly than in others. What was the non-negotiable, and where the open space was, and how we could explore that together. And I think that is key. I saw the power of the conversation, otherwise I think the situations would have ended up much worse. We were able to come to reasonable solutions. But I think there was also some frustration with the fact that you come with those non-negotiables, and you are not necessarily clear about it. And that is something that I’m learning is, okay here, here are the non-negotiables, and this is why. And here is the space we need to explore together and then really frame well. And I think part of conversational leadership, I’m learning is how to do that framing appropriately, and how to combine the responsibility with the open-endedness. It’s powerful to see that. But it’s also an art that you need to learn, that I certainly very much need to learn.

Kate: We are still learning. It’s hard. I’ve found myself, you know, kicking, picking myself after a situation, going “Oh, that should have been, I should have done that differently. I should have done that conversationally”. You know it’s not yet ingrained. I think, for the big events, the things we plan. We’re getting there now. But it’s the less planned, more organic moments, yes, just constantly being aware. And I think, like you say, framing is really helpful, but it does take figuring out for yourself first the frame, what is this space that we can be conversational in? And where are the boundaries? What are the non-negotiables?

Nelis: And an interesting question there is, to what extent is that frame negotiable? Because I am making those decisions by myself, non conversationally, about the frame, and that’s a tension.

Kate: Yes, so you probably need to do that framing in conversation with others. And we’ve both had times we failed to do this right, haven’t we? Let’s just get that out. We all need to be wearing L plates, learner plates.

Nelis: I love that image. Visualise that and actually say that, because that combines actually with something that I’ve become aware of over the course of the year, because of this podcast, because of what we’re sharing in the organisation, people have certain expectations of us now. Which becomes both a gift and a burden.

Kate King: Yes! That’s what happens if you put yourself out there on a podcast, people actually hold you to the standard, and that’s good. That’s good. It helps us to sharpen our leadership. But it’s also quite a pressure as well.

Nelis: Because we’re going to disappoint people.

Kate King: Yes, because we’re human.

Nelis: We’re human, and we’re still learning. As you said, those big L plates. And at the same time, people see you and me as the experts on the topic. It’s hard to be both the big L and the expert. 

Kate: We’re not experts, we’re just learning. We’ve said that all along. We want this to be a conversation where we learn, together with others. Disclaimer everyone: We’re still learning, and we will mess up. Thank you.

Kate: So are there any situations where you haven’t been able to use conversational leadership?

Nelis: In some ways, no. Because, as you said earlier, it’s a way of looking at the organisation, and I think it’s influenced all of my interactions. But as a tool – you talked about those meetings where you’ve got an agenda you’ve got to go through – no, can’t use that. With my regular meetings, with those who report to me, a lot of it is not necessarily conversational, even though there’s aspects to where I switch into that conversation. But then quickly you step out of it as well, and you just need to get things done. So yeah, that’s part of it.

Kate: Is conversational leadership mostly in use when we want to co-create something together, to do that shared meaning-making? 

Nelis: No, not just. But I think that’s where it shines most. Why, it’s the most natural to use. And yes, that’s where I’ve used it. But then there’s also places where you’re just training people or you’re sharing information, and that isn’t necessarily conversational. I’ve done training events that weren’t necessarily conversational. Had some conversational aspects, but mostly not.

Nelis: I just did a three day mentoring event with six people. And the first two days were not that conversational. We had some conversational elements. Of course we used conversation as a tool, but it was not conversational leadership as such, and interestingly enough, on the third day we went into that and started having a little bit of an open space conversation. We went into appreciative inquiry, and then got into some shared meaning-making about what’s happening in our organisation. And that was very much conversational. It’s kind of neat to see how you sometimes need just a lot of time to set the stage. You need to build trust. It’s not necessarily conversational leadership, but it sets the stage for it. So are there situations you can’t use it? I think you can always use it, but sometimes it takes more time, or it’s not the moment yet.

Kate: Yes. And I think we discussed in a previous episode, in a crisis situation, life or death decisions that need to be made, you have to act quicker. You can’t have a lengthy drawn out conversational process, but you can bear in mind some of the elements we’ve talked about in conversational leadership is having the right people in the room having a diversity of people.

making sure that you’re including the wisdom of all, not just a few top leaders. I think you can do that quicker.

Nelis: Yeah, sometimes. As I said before, you’ve got those non-negotiables, and it just wouldn’t make sense to move into conversational leadership, because in some ways that would be cheating people because it’s already been decided. And you’ve got to accept that and just pass it on and say, this is a decision. You may like it, or you may not like it. This is what it is, because then, to invite people into a process in something that’s already been decided really, is wrong. Actually, we’ve got a conversational process organisation wide right now, and it’s interesting, some people think that actually that’s the case, the decision has already been made. So you’ve got to be very clear that if you have made a decision, you’re not going to do this, because that would be unreal.

Kate: Even though we’ve stated it. We’ve said the Board has not made a decision yet. They’ve expressed a preference. People still come –  and I think that’s a trust issue – thinking, “Well, this is just rubber stamping, this conversational process is just rubber stamping a decision they’ve already made”. And actually it’s not. And I don’t know how you can convince people, really.

Nelis: I don’t think you necessarily can, because it’s part of the culture where leadership is often distrusted in our society. Just look around us.

Kate: Well, with good reason, sometimes, when you look around us in our society.

Nelis: And leaders often don’t exactly really invite you in. They act as if, and in reality they don’t. So you’ve got to gradually build up that trust, that in this case it’s different. I think that’s what we’re still doing. Building up that trust in this first year of talking about it, sharing about it, practising it.

Kate King: So we are going to take a break. And looking forward to our next season, hopefully starting in April, what do we still want to explore around conversational leadership? What are the questions we still have? Any thoughts from you?

Nelis van den Berg: I think we are going to continue to discover those as we go, like we have this year. But one that’s interesting to me because of my experience this last year is, how do you use conversational leadership in conflict situations? What can we learn from that?

Kate King: One I have is conversation killers. What are they? And how can we avoid them? What are the things that we do, even in the middle of the process, or a meeting, that will just suddenly shut down conversation. I’d like to look at those sometime.

Nelis van den Berg: Yeah, that’d be great. Also would like to explore what conversation leadership looks like in other contexts, say hospitals, church. Think of a variety of contexts.

Nelis van den Berg: I think it’d be great to continue to have a significant number of guests in our conversation and widen our horizons as a result.

Kate King: Yes, definitely. And we’d love to  hear from you, our listeners. What are your questions? Please do send them to us at info@leadinginconversation.net. Just a practical note. We’ve had to close off comments for now, because we suddenly started getting a huge amount of spam comments. We’re hoping to sort that out and get the comments opened up again for Season 2.

Nelis van den Berg: Even with those comments closed, I’m looking forward to continuing the conversation. When we meet people, but also through email, and hopefully again through comments soon.

Kate: Thanks. It’s been fun, hasn’t it?

Nelis: It has, and I hope it will continue to be.

Kate: Have a good sabbatical. And hopefully we’ll see you all again and talk to you all again soon. 

Episode 7

Leading in Conversation
Leading in Conversation
Leading in Conversation – Episode 7
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Show notes

Barry Oshry, Seeing Systems

Transcript

Kate: Hello and welcome to another episode of Leading in Conversation. We’re really excited today to have another guest with us, a colleague of ours, Jason Griffiths. Thanks for coming along, Jason.

Jason: It’s great to join you Kate, thanks for inviting me.

Nelis: Jason, why don’t you start off with sharing a little bit of your background and why you’re interested in conversational leadership?

Jason: Thanks Nelis. Yeah, it’s been an interest I’ve had for a while, but it wasn’t until around 2018 that I was able to put a term on it, as I began to learn about conversational leadership. But prior to that, it was really an interest in allowing people to talk to one another. And I had this idea about teams, that a really important approach was that teams could work together, talking to one another to enable them to make good decisions and that teams should talk to other teams in the organisation. And that way we have better outcomes, better decisions, we can hear one another, things like that. So I was thinking in terms of teams. So it wasn’t until 2018 I heard the term conversational leadership and I thought “Wow! This is a term that captures the kinds of things I’ve been trying to do”.

Nelis: Is that for you just another term or does it actually shape your thinking?

Jason: Yeah, definitely, as I heard the term it really did help to shape the kind of initial aha moment, “Oh, this is a term to use for what I’ve been trying to achieve”. And then it begins to sharpen it to say, “Yeah, so what does a conversational way of leading actually look like in practice?” and I began to experiment more in that space.

Kate: What are some of the values in conversational leadership that appeal to you? What is it particularly that grabs you, resonates with you?

Jason: Yeah, I think that it’s this idea that you take time to hear each other. So you’re valuing other people, being able to set a space to hear other people. Also this idea that we actually co-create together in ways that we couldn’t imagine on our own. The added value of other people’s input just increases all the different nodes, adding in and we can increase all the possibilities from there. So that’s pretty exciting, that we’re not only doing something that helps people to feel valued but we’re doing something that actually makes our result better as well.

Kate: Absolutely. And we should add at this point, we didn’t give any introduction to Jason other than his name! Jason has been a senior leader in our organisation for many years, at the country level and now he oversees one of our global regions. How do you see conversational leadership contrasting with traditional models of leadership?

Jason: I guess it depends on your perception. You might be able to tell from my accent, but being Australian we’re fairly egalitarian, maybe like many others, you and others listening. So this idea of people being on the same level and sharing together is a cultural value that I grew up in as well. Finding ways of leadership that bring that kind of “we do it together” value has always been something I’ve tried to do. It’s part of how I’ve done leadership in the past, and so working in a way that kind of creates teams, because that way you’re bringing people together to lead together, that was very appealing to me. So that’s in each leadership situation I found myself in, the idea of inviting others to join a team, to do it together, was always really appealing. And so that led to, “So how do we do this kind of conversation as a team, how do we then talk to other teams that might be linked to ours?” and, so yeah, it’s part of the process. So I think the, the kind of leadership style where a leader might be expected to have all the answers or to have the right knowledge or skill set or the right whatever, to be able to meet all the needs that there are in leadership is just a fallacy, and so being able to access knowledge from people around us that are working in different contexts and have various realities that they’ve lived through, to be able to say “What do you think about this, and how does this situation look to you?” and give their insights, that’s just a much better way to do leadership. And that’s what conversational leadership can bring.

Nelis: It’s interesting, you say that culturally for you this is a really good match, but you’ve also led in much more hierarchical cultural contexts, both colleagues who are from a hierarchical culture or an overall environment where it’s different. How have you seen that play out in cross-cultural settings where the expectation is actually very different?

Jason: That’s a good question. I think in various cultures it will look quite different. I’ve found that conversation seems to be a common element. People talk to each other. They do it in different ways. So I think in a very hierarchical culture you probably wouldn’t find the boardroom where executives sit and decisions are being made, that’s less likely to be the place where there is free-flowing co-sharing, meaning-making conversation happening. In a hierarchical context that might not be it. But the conversations happen. It’s possible that they may happen a few days before or a few hours before, where people are having all these conversations to make meaning together, so that the decisions that come in that boardroom context would be the right decisions. And so I think they still happen, the conversations still take place. It’s just the process, the table setting, if you like, for how you invite those conversations might look a bit different in an egalitarian context versus a very hierarchical one.

Nelis: You talked about this interest of yours. It’s actually become so concrete you said that you want to do some research and writing about that. Can you share a bit more about that?

Jason: Part of my Masters research that I did  a couple of years ago, finished a couple of years ago, found that in many contexts in which I was doing research, people wanted to get together, they wanted to have their voices heard, they wanted to have ways of participating in creating the decisions that are made. It was just really interesting to see how people expressed that in their own words. And so that was another reason that I thought, I’ve been experiencing anyway. I didn’t ask people in the research about conversational leadership, that wasn’t the focus of that research but it came out from what people said… not the terminology, but the experience of wanting to make meaning together and to be heard and valued for what they had to share from their lived experience. And I thought, “Wow this is quite strong in what people want to do and share in an organisation”. So I was thinking more about that, what would I do next leading from that, and conversational leadership is getting sharper in our organisation, we’re talking more about it and we’re trying to practise it more and so I began thinking about doing a PhD in this area of conversational leadership. And so something in the area of conversational leadership as an effective methodology to increase the quality of leadership decisions. That space, of how do we use this to enable things to be better for all stakeholders, for the staff, for other stakeholders outside, for leaders, how could conversational leadership be a tool to make it better? So, yeah, I’m just in the process of starting that journey at the moment.

Kate: Really interesting subject there for your PhD, especially as one of the critiques of conversational leadership from people is, “It’s just talk. When do we actually make a decision?”. So I love that you’re planning to look at how we can use it to improve our decision-making. Can you share a little bit about your thoughts there? 

Jason: Yes, I think this very thing of, how do we make conversational leadership into something that actually is shaping and is moving somewhere is a critique that I’ve heard too. That people are like, “Well you can just talk and talk and that’s fine, but is that really a way of doing leadership? Is that really a way of actually moving us somewhere?”. That’s why I chose this particular area of research because I think there are ways that we can work on that. I’d love to be able to have some data to say actually, here’s some ideas and here’s some basis from research that says yes, it’s an effective way of actually doing leadership better. It’s more, a quality outcome can arise from conversational leadership. 

Nelis: I loved your earlier comment, Jason, where you said “making meaning together”. I think that’s what you said, and I’m just taken by that comment because that is, I think, the core of what conversational leadership is about in many ways, in a very pithy way. Have you seen that happen in practice? So, you talk about that desire that in your Master’s research came out. Have you seen that happening in practice? That meaning-making together? 

Jason: One of the ways I’ve seen meaning-making happen together is in the Area in which I worked. The various department heads, I would in the past ask for reports to be sent in, it might be a regular report about activity, measuring something, indicators. In the past it would be a report I’d ask for, might be a one or two-page report. And you get the data of what’s going on. But more recently, I’ve been asking for a conversation around those with each of the department heads and sometimes part of their team. And so each time there’s a reporting cycle, we’ve not only received, we do receive a written report, but it’s quite brief, and then by inviting a conversation and setting up a series of conversations with different department heads and their teams, you really begin to get not only why the data’s there, but what’s behind the data, the value behind that as well. And you can kind of share together, on “”hy did you report that? And what do you think happened to lead to that going on?”. And you’re kind of creating understanding together. And both the department and myself, we’re learning, we’re both learning something, both able to contribute, it’s so much more meaningful than just receiving a piece of paper and going, “Oh, that’s, that looks good.” You could write a half page response but you’re still not really getting to what’s behind that. And how can we understand that in an even greater extent through the conversation of exchanging ideas. That’s one way of something going from the very almost, one directional space of just a report being submitted, to allowing it to be a starting place, to create a whole nother level of meaning, which happens together. 

Kate: Yes, we’ve often talked about the generative elements of conversational leadership before. It opens up space to go in new directions, whereas a report would be a very static thing: “Here’s what’s happened”. Perhaps, “Here’s why”. When you have a conversation together, you know, as you say you can dig deeper and look at why things happen, but also you can spark off, novelty, new thoughts, new directions. And it becomes a whole different experience with a lot more generative energy in it. I love that. That’s really exciting to hear. 

Jason: Yeah, I’ve found it’s both more interesting for the participants and it does generate these new ideas just as you described. And so you go away going, “Huh, there’s new things we can do just because we had that conversation”. They might not have percolated without having this catalyst of a conversation about it, to actually create these new ideas.

Kate: And you might not have arrived at the end of that meeting with definite decisions or action items, but there’s those things percolating which will then go on to make a difference and lead to new things. And it’s that tension, isn’t it, we’ve talked about before, between making a decision and saying, “This is the way we’re going to go”, and leaving space for things to grow, that are in effect a decision. You take a step in a certain direction because of the conversation and that in itself is a decision. It’s just not a decision that we write on paper and highlight and, you know, share with others or write a memo about, but it’s still a decision. And, as I said, looking forward to hearing more about your research in this area.

Nelis: It sounds that it also changes the dynamic of your relationship with the people you report to.  It’s less, they are reporting to you to accomplish the goals that you have set. And it’s more, setting goals together, bi-directional empowering. Is that correct? 

Jason: That’s right. I think so. I guess it’s going back to this idea of novelty, that new ideas come up that might end up in the report and then in future conversations – because they were generated here at this point – there’s a certain way of novelty coming out of the conversation, new ideas spring up, and they become then included in future conversations. So it’s, it can become greater and like more and more happens, more and more comes out of a conversation, with lots of threads that come out. Now some of those will continue on, be stronger, other ones, they might not be the things that have the energy in them and they maybe, laid down, laid aside, and that’s okay. 

Nelis: You once told me, Jason, about a staff conference that was planned as a big formal event and that for some reason was not possible, I think it had to do with Covid. Then as a result, you ended up with lots of informal meetings. Can you tell more about that? Because you shared that that was actually quite powerful and that might have even been more effective than the formal conference ever could have been. So, can you share about what happened? And how you see that as an illustration of conversational leadership? 

Jason: So, this little thing called Covid… There was a planned conference of all of the department and quite a lot of people involved. And I travelled to that location. And then it was all looking good. We’d set up all these ways of having a large group conversation with the whole department. And then rules changed, as we are all familiar with that process of, you plan something, then the rules changed. And the gathering size decreased and actually, stepped down over a couple of days. It ended up being you could only meet in quite a small group. And so just thinking, “Oh, wow, what do you do in a situation like this when you have all these really creative conversations with large groups planned and then it just isn’t possible?”. And so we kind of switched and said, “Well, the people are here. The people are gathered in some form. They can’t all be in one space altogether, but people are around. Could we have just very small conversations instead, the same kind of topics, thinking about change, thinking about what’s next, thinking about goals. Things like that. Can we have those same conversations but just in very much smaller groups and do it in lots of different iterations?”. And so we did that and it was interesting because each time we had just a small group conversation in this iterative process, we would learn that… there’s a little group, I think it was only two of us that went from from small group to small group, kind of bringing some of the learning from one group to the next group and learning about the process as we did it. And so changing slightly because it was this two-way conversation. Not only were we asking questions and receiving responses, but we’re both learning together, all the participants learning together. 

Kate: Sounds a bit like a World Cafe, but done not simultaneously, but done sequentially. And in fact, if you’re taking what you’re hearing from one group on to the next. Interesting. 

Jason: Yeah. We weren’t taking everything. We were letting each group discover for themselves. But we were taking some of the process learnings like, “Oh, we wouldn’t do that again”. “That’s not a good way to elicit questions or to get good responses”. And then redefining some of the things we were doing because we learnt that that’s not a good way to engage people. So it was a little bit like that, we were bringing some of the learnings, certainly the process learnings, to each group, but in the end it was a much, probably a more powerful experience of learning together than it would have been had it been the large group that we had originally planned. So that was a really interesting learning, that these small conversations could be as effective as a large conversation that we might hope for. 

Kate: Yeah. If you think about that, people’s level of engagement in small groups is much more focused. In a big group you can kind of switch off – especially when it’s a couple of hundred people – you switch off and just let the usual people speak. Whereas if you’re in smaller groups, you feel more inclined to speak up, it’s not quite so nerve wracking to speak in a small group than if you’re standing up at a microphone. That’s really interesting. And that releases a whole different level of discussion and thinking and creativity. 

Jason: Yeah, a lot more intimate conversation because you’re in these quite small groups and you can share more deeply from your own lived experience. And so I think much more meaningful all around really. 

Nelis: How did you come up with conclusions out of that process? Did you end up with formal decisions or was the sense that the conversations themselves were the impacts that you were looking for? How did it land in some way? 

Jason: I think both. So the conversations themselves and the generative capacity of those conversations, of people thinking of new things and engaging in the topics in a different way than they had before. That in itself was of great value. But there were also some outcomes that through the various conversations, there was some synthesis of those inputs that actually came to some conclusion as well, so you can across all the conversations: “This is what all the different iterations said, in a synthesised form”. So there was some output like that but there was also this value of we’ve engaged together, we’ve been creating some meaning together, we’ve had these small group conversations, which were just very powerful. 

Kate: So, is there anything else that you’d like to share with us, that you’ve been doing, differently to traditional leadership models? 

Jason: There’s another way we’ve been using conversational leadership. In a sense where the topics could be quite a motive or deeply held. Where there’s conflict, really, among a group. And so there’s a way of using conversational leadership, where over a period of time, you can create some space and a feeling of safety in the group and being able to share and really listen. The key is to listen carefully to what each other is saying. And over a period of time through that listening carefully and honouring each of the participants by listening carefully to their perspective and what they had to say. Being able to sit with those different stories and different voices and kind of make meaning as a group together to decide on a particular outcome. So it’s another way of using conversational leadership that allows that space and it’s more of a, it’s a longer process, I guess, that would be the difference. And you’re also recognizing that there’s some tricky things going on, there’s some deeply held things happening, things that people hold. And so giving space and creating safety so people can share those and bring those. And, as in a Christian group, we also say that we’re listening carefully to God in that process. So not only listening to each other but we would say that we’re listening to God so that the process of listening to one another and listening to God together can bring us to an outcome, which might be quite different than if we just had a quick conversation or made a quick decision. So this process of discernment through conversation is another way that we’ve been using conversational leadership. 

Kate: We’ve done similar discernment processes, as a leadership team, haven’t we Nelis? It really takes you into a different kind of space, when you stop and you say, okay, we’re you know, we, we’ve approached this from sort of a businesslike way and a very intellectual, cognitive way. Now, we want to step back and we want to acknowledge our emotions, acknowledge all the different influences, dig deeper and see what are the values? And then just take some time to sort of give all that up and wait and reflect. And as you say as a faith-based organisation, we value listening to God. And actually there’s something incredibly powerful in doing that as a leadership team and just stopping and saying we don’t have all the perspectives. Obviously, conversational leadership says we need the perspectives of all and as we’ve said in previous episodes, for us as a faith-based organisation that includes making space for God to speak in. And others who don’t share the same faith as us but acknowledge the value of spirituality in their work, will – I think – recognize this element as well. And recognize that we haven’t got all that it takes in our brains. 

Jason: I think it can be quite a remarkable process to go down. What you said there, that not only are we making space to listen to others but also we are really recognizing that we don’t have the answers and we need one another and there’s something quite powerful in that. 

Nelis: I just finished yesterday, a book by Barry Oshery,  Seeing Systems and one of his points is embracing uncertainty. And in some ways, realising that the opposing view and your view are both needed to maintain balance and to keep a robust system in place. Otherwise you just get fragmentation, in ossified positions, and things like that. I think what you’re describing is a way, is one of the ways to break out of that, to step back and say, why do we feel the way we feel and embrace each other’s position and get to a sense of shared understanding, which is, I think incredibly powerful and important to maintain a robust system. 

Kate: And as a really kind of unique thing in a discernment process, the stage that is often referred to as “indifference”. You know, which when I first encountered this, I was like, “How can I be indifferent to this? You know, I’m fully invested in this!”. I think the essence of it is being willing to give up that investment, that commitment to a certain angle, the kind of obsession with the outcome you want and just say, you know, I may not be right here and I need to be willing to just… 

Nelis: I’m aware that there are other positions that are just as valid and being willing to do what’s right instead of doing what I want. 

Jason: That’s right. When we sometimes we hear the word indifference, we think, “I don’t care”, but we’re not talking about that meaning of “I don’t  care”, we’re saying “I can lay down my deeply held conviction on this topic because I want what’s best for the group”. But I think that’s the essence of conversation leadership, isn’t it? That we are able to lay down this idea that I can do it by myself and we’re embracing others and inviting them into the process? I think that’s what conversational leadership is. 

Nelis: I think you just gave a wonderful definition. Well with that, I’d almost say we should stop, but we had a few more thoughts. It’s not all rosy and perfect and everything always works. So, two questions? Have you run into struggles, where it didn’t work, and how have you sought to overcome those? 

Jason: Definitely, I would say that it’s two things in my mind where it’s a struggle. One is just the busyness and the pace in leadership. There’s so much going on, there’s so much call on our time, there’s so many meetings to line up, all the things that we all know about as leaders, all happening. And so, how do we create the space required to really have a meaningful conversation with others? And so I think that’s the first thing, is in this tyranny of the urgent, how do we actually create the space? Because it needs space. We can’t invite others into a meaningful conversation if we only have a few minutes to give to it, it does require space. And so that’s the first thing, I think, is actually being able to put value to this sufficiently that we can say, it needs the space that it needs to be able to have this important conversation with others.

Nelis: And that’s kind of countercultural for us, isn’t it? Because we tend to want to do things quickly, rush on, and so yeah, we … to be able to step back and say, let’s create room, for this is important. 

Kate: Accepting that we might have to slow down in order to make progress is hard. And also, how do you find that space when you’re meeting by Zoom? Because we have these very structured meetings, an hour and then we go on to another meeting and it’s that lingering between meetings, it’s the mealtime conversations, it’s the empty spaces. That’s where the real stuff happens. So we’ve still got to work at creating that space, I think, in this digital way of working. 

Jason. Yeah, exactly. I think we all struggle with that, this hour is this meeting, the next half hour’s that meeting. How do you really create a space in that Zoom or Skype or whatever technology you’re using, in that environment, how do you create the space? So I think we have to be very intentional about that, of paying attention to the agendas we’re creating and in making some space for things, just generating conversation together. And keeping time in the meeting, or that, But it’s, it’s not as easy as face-to-face conversation where you can be a bit more relaxed. So I think you have to, I think it can be done, but it takes more attention to be able to do it. Once you’ve got the space, whether you’re trying to do it virtually or whether you’re trying to do it in person, the next thing is actually to invite conversation, so that you’ve got that creative generative conversation of really listening to each other, where the different participants can actually contribute. Because you can create the space and kill it by starting a monologue or asking questions in such a way as you know, there’s shame or… there’s all these ways that we kill conversation. So not only create the space but then really create that trust by starting the creative and generative conversations, which we want to listen, we value the listening, listening to others.

Nelis: It’s neat, the way you’re saying that. That it requires practice and skill and it’s an ongoing learning process, just creating space is not enough. It’s something that we all need to learn how to do that, to not kill the conversation. And I catch myself doing it wrong. I see it around me happening all the time with all the best intentions of the world. Space has been created and conversations killed.

Jason: Yes. And there’s so much that goes into that. There’s probably a whole research degree here about how we show interest in the other person and in other participants, the body language, the eye contact, the facial expression. All of that would go into this thing, which is creating a place of safety to value and to listen to others. 

Nelis: I think there’s a third one that you wanted to mention?

Jason: The other part of it is that the idea of conversational leadership is that it is leadership. That we’re not just having a conversation. You know, we’re not just talking about the weather and that was interesting. Or we’re learning something new and that was also fun. But actually there’s an element of leadership to this which means that the process is going somewhere and that might be obvious soon or it might not. It might take some time, might take a struggle. And you guys have talked about this before in your podcast, about how that you’re struggling, you’re struggling, you’re trying to get through this period of confusion to get to the point of meaning making. I was reading something recently, talked about a similar concept, they called it the ‘edge of chaos’. You go to the edge of chaos and you kind of drag it back into some place of meaning. And that’s a critical part of this process too. Is that not only creating space and in allowing the generative conversation, the creative conversation to happen. But actually, it does need to go somewhere or people can just get frustrated that we’ve had a great conversation. And then next month, we meet again, have another great conversation. But what, what’s going on? Where’s the process leading us? And so there has to be over a period of time, there has to be some movement, that people can see that meaning is being made and that is shaping the direction. 

Kate: I love that you mentioned the edge of chaos. I think this is one of the things that really appealed to me when I was doing my master studies and encountered applications of complexity science to leadership. It was talking about the place that novelty created is exactly that edge of chaos, because that’s where everything’s kind of up for grabs. That’s where things change. I think that’s why we need to pay attention to who we include in our conversations. If they’re all the usual suspects we’re not going to get the diversity we need, we’re not going to get the new perspectives. So you bring in the people on the fringes, but you also have to tolerate that chaos for a little bit. You can’t have productive conversations if you just stay in the safe zones of what we know and believe and do already. You have to have safety and freedom to ask the wild questions, the things, you know, to tread on sacred ground and raise those things that we don’t really talk about and create that chaos and live in that place of uncertainty and chaos and awkwardness and just be okay with it. And as leaders, that’s hard. And I know that leaders from hierarchical cultures have said that’s really hard for them because you’re expected to know and give direction. 

Nelis: But you also need to drag it back. You have that tension. 

Jason: You can’t live there can you? It wears people out, that ambiguity all the time. Although some of us like ambiguity too, we can’t stay there as an organisation. You have to bring it back into shape and actually have some process leading somewhere and I think that’s this other element, that conversation leadership honours people, invites the participation and the meaning-making together. And this chaos, then leads over time to some new things and some good things. And this is the progress. This is the movement that we want to see.

Kate: And leaders have a special role to play in, both in framing the conversation, helping it to keep going in productive directions, and then helping people to reach some conclusions without pinning it down and killing it. Allowing space for the conversations to keep generating new things, as I think we were talking about at the beginning, we’ve come full circle. 

Nelis: And that might be a good time to actually come to an end. Jason, is there anything that we haven’t covered that you would like to sort of bring out, or some concluding comments? 

Jason: I think one thing is, is just that from my perspective experimenting with conversational leadership has been a really rich experience. So people who might be listening to this and going, it sounds a little bit uncomfortable, sounds a bit strange. I would really encourage you to embrace this and to experiment with conversational leadership because I think that in the process we ourselves are learning. We’re becoming better leaders in the process by including others in it. It has the potential to make better decisions. And yeah, as we were saying before, there’s something of that, humility, recognizing we haven’t got all the answers, that is also character-building in us. And so, I think that people who are a little bit cautious, of “Should we give this a try? What would it look like”? I’d encourage you to try and experiment with conversational leadership in your sphere of influence.

Nelis:  And I couldn’t agree more and that’s one of the reasons we’re doing this podcast, is for people to hear the stories, to get a sense of “Yes, I could try this and start to experiment”. So, I’m excited about you doing that. And I’m also looking forward, we are looking forward, Jason, to what will come out of your research, and learning stuff that will contribute also, in academia, on this topic, because, I feel that there is still a whole world to be won, also at the research level. So I’m excited that you’re doing that. 

Jason: Yeah. Thanks very much. It’s been a delight to join you for this podcast. 

Kate: Thanks Jason. And as always, if our listeners have any questions or comments, thoughts to add to the conversation, head over to leadinginconversation.net and let’s keep talking. Thanks guys.

Episode 6

Leading in Conversation
Leading in Conversation
Leading in Conversation – Episode 6
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Transcript

Kate: Hello and welcome to another episode of Leading in Conversation! Today we thought we’d do something a little bit different and answer some questions. As we’ve been doing quite a lot of talking and presenting recently in our organisation about conversational leadership at a couple of different events and as more people have been listening to our podcast, we’re collecting quite a few excellent questions and we thought we’d just take some time to tackle them today. 

Nelis: I wish we had the people themselves asking it, and that we truly had a conversation and not just the sterile conversation between the two of us, but it’ll have to do! 

Kate: Absolutely. That would be way more fun wouldn’t it? We really enjoy it when people join us. But today, it’s just us. Bit boring, hey? Okay, so Nelis, are you ready for the first question? 

Nelis: Let’s try it!

Kate: Is conversational leadership just another tool in a leaders toolbox or is it more than that? 

Nelis: It’s definitely more than that. It is a tool. It’s actually a very useful tool, but it goes way beyond that. It is really about understanding how organisations work: this idea that an organisation is a network of conversations and how change actually happens. It is embracing the idea that the conversation triggers the change, and the conversation in many ways is the change. It really contrasts the organisation as a machine that you need to tinker with and that is how traditionally organisations have been seen. And so, if you really embrace this idea of organisations as networks of people who relate to each other, that’s where decisions are being made in context, and conversational leadership is about joining that but triggering those new ideas, etc. 

Kate: Yes. I like to pair conversational leadership with co-creational. Conversational and co-creational leadership because I think therein is the difference. It’s not just about talking, it’s not about pulling out a participatory methods tool. It’s not just saying, “Well, now we’re going to be conversational about this and talk more”. It’s actually about bringing more people into discussion, into a space where you need some direction, to co-create a solution together. And it’s operating with that mindset all the time.

Nelis: Which is exactly quite a challenge because then broadening the network of decision-makers and assuming that decisions are going to be made at every level of the organisation, that’s what conversational leadership is about. But that’s also something that takes time, and it’s hard to maintain. That’s why we keep talking about it. 

Kate: And as we always say, we’re not experts, we’re still figuring this out as we go. Definitely. Okay, next question. 

Nelis. So Kate, after talking about what it really is, the question then comes up, and somebody asked us that, what is actually new about this? What is new about conversational leadership compared to other approaches? 

Kate: That’s a good question. I think for me, one of the biggest things is that the focus in conversational leadership is not on leaders, ironically. It’s on the wisdom of all. Conversational leadership fits into that paradigm of post-heroic leadership. It’s not just about a leader isolated, making the decision even with a small group of other leaders at the top, but it’s… the word is heterarchical, not hierarchical. You want to get as many people as possible and leaders and consultants are part of the process, not standing outside it, acting on the organisation, you know, as you said as a machine.

Nelis: So let me add to that, and I’ve said this before, it’s kind of my hobby horse, but what I think is key to it is also that it really embraces the emergent nature of change. It really embraces this idea that organisations are always in movement and that setting a vision from the top doesn’t work because it’s always fluid. It embraces that fluidity and uses it actually as something really powerful, by having more people involved in the whole decision-making process, by freeing people up to make their own decisions and to look for novelty, and to leverage that. 

Kate: Yes, so instead of imposing a decision about where we are going in a process, you know, leaders imposing a decision:  “This is what we’re aiming for, everyone”, it’s like, “What’s the problem? Where do we want to go?”, getting people together, getting the diversity in the room, creating conditions for novelty to emerge in conversation. 

Nelis: Yes, and really, being okay with the idea that there is not one right answer or that the right answer for now, may not be the right answer in the future. Even a lot of facilitated processes have in the past been or continue to often focus on getting the right answer, getting the best answer. Well, conversational leadership assumes that there is no best answer. There are lots of answers and some work better than others and what works well now may not work well tomorrow. And it’s that constant going-with-the flow of working it out in community. 

Kate: In fact, just yesterday, I was meeting with my team leaders and we’re doing our FY23 planning and really trying to wrestle with, you know, what does this look like – emergent planning, doing this conversationally, in an emergent way, because you know, we made plans for the last couple of years and many of them didn’t happen because of Covid. So how therefore do we now plan for the next year not knowing what will happen, but being okay with that. I think we’re all becoming a little bit more comfortable with that emergent planning. We’ll start some things and see what happens, see what emerges. And I think that’s quite new. I think that still takes a lot of getting used to. 

Nelis: Yes, and that creates resistance as well. Although some of this and I think it’s good to point out. This is not the unique domain of conversational leadership. The idea that you quickly change, the fact that you bring in more people. All of these things are not in that sense unique. But I think  conversational leadership brings those elements together in a coherent way of thinking that combines things in new ways. 

Kate: So, another question we’ve had, Nelis, is: what do you think makes a particular method conversational or not conversational? I like this one.

Nelis: Yes, I like that too. It’s a difficult question because there are so many different tools out there that use conversation. It’s not black and white, let me put it that way. There are a lot of methods that use conversation and you could call those conversational, you wouldn’t be wrong, but I think what really is key for something to be truly conversational, is that it pools the wisdom from the whole group and doesn’t assume an answer ahead of time. That it doesn’t try to push the group into a certain direction, but that it’s truly coming in without a predefined answer. And too often I’ve seen facilitated processes that are trying to get a group to buy in. And what makes a method truly conversational, is when the answer is completely unknown going into it. You may have a suspicion of what might come out, but you just don’t know and you’re totally okay with that. And I think that is a key element in a method truly being conversational. 

Kate: Is there something also about the nature of the conversation? 

Nelis: I think there is. So, let’s explore that together. 

Kate: Yes, I mean, so with my team yesterday, I was leading a conversation about, a discussion about what are our big picture priorities going to be for our overall unit for the next three years. It’s something about the quality of conversation, something about keeping the conversation free-flowing, helping people to make associations. So as the facilitator, the leader in that situation, I was very much trying to hold back, to listen, to make connections but not impose anything, any sense making too prematurely. And actually as a leader it felt a little bit sort of random and chaotic to me but by the time we got to the end, everyone was like, “Wow that was a really significant conversation, that was so rich” and I was just like “Oh but I need some things, some words, to put in the plan!”. We’re not there yet. It was just a brainstorm. But there’s a piece there about the quality, the flow, the sense-making in a conversational process, compared to non-conversational. 

NElis: Yes, and I think that is really helpful but there’s another element in the nature of the conversation that it is focused on finding answers together. So it’s not just a random conversation between friends. A conversational leadership conversation has to be focused on moving the organisation of the group further into a decision, into a new product, into new developments, into new understandings. It’s not a random conversation.

Kate: There’s definitely an element of discernment in there. And actually, what we did at the end of yesterday’s meeting was said, “Okay, press pause on this. Let’s all go away, let’s reflect. Let’s see what else comes, make notes on this between now and our next meeting”. And then we’ll pick it up again and then try to do some synthesis or sense-making. But really being open to what is developing, what is emerging. And trying to pin that down at a certain point, but not too soon. Which actually leads us on to another question. You can try this one. How do decisions get made in a conversational leadership approach? 

Nelis: Yes, we often get asked this because there’s this fear that you get bogged down and no decisions get made or it gets way too slow. So how decisions get made is really important. And I think it is a key part of leadership to hold the group accountable for decision-making at some point.  You can do that in some kind of predetermined but flexible time frame, by you saying, “We’ve got to come to a decision at this point.” And you can say, “Okay, we’re not there yet. We need a little bit more time”. But it’s not endlessly flexible. So I think that is the role of leadership to either let the consensus emerge and basically say, “Okay, I think we’ve got a decision”. 

Kate: “Does that resonate with you?  Are you hearing what I’m saying?” Etc. So that the leader does kind of step in, or the facilitator steps in, and has a sensemaking role – to pull things out and say, “Well, this is what I’m hearing,  is this correct?” 

Nelis: Or even when it is still quite divergent and you need to come to a decision, to propose something and say “For now I propose that we go with this, hold this lightly, revisit it if it turns out to be wrong, but is everyone okay, moving ahead with this in the meantime?” And I think that is an important aspect where you don’t impose it but you give it as a best answer for now that we can arrive at. 

Kate: Yes, another thing that we came across when we were reading about dialogic processes was this idea of the conversation leading to what they call “probes”. Which is a kind of decision-making.  Say you gather together as a team and you’ve got a problem and you want to find different solutions. At the end of a conversation process, you might say, “Well, here’s a couple of things we’re going to try”. As a leader you give permission, you give budget, you open up gateways for people to then experiment with those probes. And that’s a form of decision-making. It’s an emergent way. “Let’s try this out and see a pilot project. Let’s keep going down this road a little bit and see if this leads somewhere”.

Nelis: And to me that has all to do with this embrace of emergence. We don’t know what the right answer is, but we’ve got to move forward with something and some things will work out, may work out for now, but not forever. And you constantly readjust. And so probes, tentative plans, tentative decisions are, I think, absolutely essential. It creates freedom for people to participate and to try things out, which I think we don’t do often enough

Kate: And it may not be the perfect decision. I think the critical thing is that it’s a good enough decision. This is something I came up against in my research, coming from Ralph Stacey and colleagues, this sense of “good enough”. You know, often, we’re in our strategic planning, we’re just trying to pin everything down and get everything just right. This really resonated with me because so much of the time we can’t know what the future is going to hold. And I think as leaders it’s hard to embrace that “not knowing” and sometimes we just need to settle for a good enough decision, not a perfect one. And then time and practice reveals whether that was the right decision or not, and you make adjustments. And that obviously takes humility to be willing to adjust and actually admit that wasn’t the right decision, but here’s what we’ve learned in the process.

Nelis: And again, this is not unique – it’s good to keep pointing that out – to conversational leadership. I’m right now reading a book by Carla Johnson about Innovation. One of her things is there is not this one thing that will be “The Innovation”. You should come with 30 different ideas in your pocket. There are hundreds of them out there that could work. It’s just finding them. And she has this method for finding them, which is very much also, one of the methods is crowdsourced. And so, just pointing out that there are overlaps with other ideas in current management literature. 

Kate: Things like this don’t come from nowhere, they develop because of the sea change in society or because of a change in our access to information or our ability to connect. We can do crowdsourcing now, we can do participatory things in a way that we couldn’t do previously because we didn’t have the internet, we didn’t have Zoom, etc. Or even getting everyone in the room, in the same room at the same time. Did  we answer the question then? “How do decisions get made in a conversational leadership approach?”. I think we did.And “Collectively” is probably a one-word answer. How do decisions get made? “Together!” 

Nelis: Collectively, tentatively. And holding it lightly. Yes.

Nelis: Another question that has come up is that we have used – in our organisation – participatory methods quite a lot already. So what does it actually add when you talk about conversational leadership? 

Kate: Yes, good question, actually. So, yes in SIL – because of the nature of our work with communities – we have already used participatory methods a lot. We have a lot of people who are very well trained in how to do this. And  is conversational leadership something new? In a sense, no. I think they share a philosophical basis in social constructionism, that together we create reality, we create understanding, we create meaning, as well as some of the principles that, you know, listening is very important. The quality of the conversation is very important. The power of language, narrative, stories, etc. I’d say that there are lots of participatory tools that you can use to facilitate conversations. And we’ve certainly used some of them. I think we’ve talked in the past about World Cafe, Focused Conversation, Appreciative Inquiry, others like that. And the Bushe and Marshak book that I have added onto our resources page, has a long list of different participatory methods that can be used. And you can Google that if that’s new to you

Nelis:  What I think is also new in the way we’ve approached this recently is to take the facilitator more out of the central role. A lot of participatory methods are very facilitation heavy and the facilitator has everything sorted out ahead of time. It’s like a hub-and-spoke. So the facilitator is the hub. Everything flows through that facilitator. Whereas, I believe that what we’re seeing in truly conversational leadership is the role of the facilitator is much less pronounced. We’ve called it the host. It’s the idea that leadership flows to different parts of the organisation, different people and it doesn’t have to be all neatly methodical and sorted out ahead of time. I think that that is a key part of conversational leadership that in traditional participatory methods is less in focus. 

Kate: And of course, we may be completely misrepresenting participatory methods here. So if you are a practitioner please write and let us know. 

Kate: Okay, here’s a bit of a fun one to end on then. Is conversational leadership just for extroverts and people who like talking? I love this! We are both extroverts, verbal processors, and we like talking. So we may be a little bit biased here. What do you think, Nelis? 

Nelis: I wonder if introverts wouldn’t actually be better at it? Because yes, extroverts love talking, but I think the key thing in conversational leadership is the listening part. And listening is so absolutely essential. I think a lot of introverts have this to contribute, that they listen well. They get all the different viewpoints, they don’t come in with their ideas already sorted out ready to roll. The pitfall for an extrovert is that you’re wanting to jump in and guide it and bring your wonderful idea out there. And actually that’s not what it’s about at all. So I’m not sure that it’s just for extroverts actually, because they [introverts] may be more qualified. 

Kate: Yes, I agree. I think it’s not about quantity of talking either – which we may be guilty of – but quality of conversation. It’s an important distinction there. So no, it’s not just for extroverts or some people who like conversation but it’s probably a little bit easier for us. 

Nelis: So again, love to hear comments and responses from people who are introverts and who have participated in those kinds of processes and share your thoughts.

Kate: A final question which we’re not actually going to answer now is one that does come up a lot. It comes up so much that we’re actually going to devote a whole podcast episode and invite some friends and colleagues to join us for this one. This is, how does conversational leadership work in different cultural settings? We’ll be setting up another podcast and look out for that one. It’s a critical question, as many of us work in multicultural environments with people from different cultures. How do we make it work across cultures when some people are more culturally inclined to speak up first and voice their own opinions and speak as individuals, and others will hold back, are thinking about how to honour and respect others in the room, they’re aware of things like age and seniority, hierarchy. And also for leaders in some cultures, where leaders are really thought to be weak if they don’t have the answer already on the tip of their tongues. How do you use conversational leadership in that kind of environment without looking weak? 

Nelis: Great, Kate, that is a wonderful cliffhanger for a future episode. This is like an episode in a series…

Kate: Tune in for the answers… 

Nelis: Exactly, but we’re hoping to do that in a way that we as two westerners are not going to provide the answers. We need to do this in dialogue with actually people from those cultures otherwise we’re falling into the trap of answering for others, and I don’t think we should do that.

We’re looking forward to seeing you next time on Leading in Conversation. It’s fun to be with you all! 

Episode 5

Shownotes

Reinhold recommended three short articles to introduce people to conversational leadership:

Suchman, A. L. (2017) ‘Avoiding the most common and fatal pitfalls of organizational change’, on Relationship Centered Health Care website. 

Part 1: Change how you think about change!

Part 2: Attend to the losses that are part of every change

Part 3: Hold the tension of change

A longer article:

Suchman, A. (2011) ‘Organizations as Machines, Organizations as Conversations: Two Core Metaphors and Their Consequences’, in Medical Care  Vol 49, No 12 Suppl 1

And a book: Winters, M. F. (2020), Inclusive Conversations: Fostering Equity, Empathy and Belonging Across Differences.

Transcript

Nelis: I’m really pleased to introduce a guest into our podcast, Reinhold Titus. He has agreed to walk with us through his experience in his organisational context around conversational leadership and doing that cross-culturally. So, Reinhold, why don’t you introduce yourself a little bit? 

Reinhold: Thanks so much Nelis, and Kate, for having me. Looking forward to the next few minutes together. My name is Reinhold Titus. I am from Namibia. That’s my primary passport country. I grew up in a cross-cultural context and in Namibia mostly, a few of my childhood years in South Africa. My first career was in the medical field in radiology, and then left and joined an international NGO and have been involved in that for over 20 years now. Lived in six different countries. Actually my family and I are currently living in Germany. So, this is the sixth country that we’re living in. Been involved with NGO work in leadership and strategy and leadership development, but also lived in South Africa for just over 10 years and during that time ran an intercultural consultancy, so working with profit and nonprofit sector around the whole issue of cultural intelligence, diversity and inclusion, coaching expats who were relocating around the world. And so some of the multinational companies were bringing me in to coach them, just as they were navigating their own sense of identity, transitions and leading in a very different context and so forth. But yeah, currently living in Germany involved in an organisation where I am responsible for our strategy alignment. And then also looking at what we just term inclusion, but the whole diversity and inclusion within the organisation. 

Nelis: We’re looking forward to hearing from that incredibly rich background.

Kate: Yes, and I must add that Reinhold and I met in England during our Master studies. We both encountered conversational leadership there and were very interested in each other’s research topics so stayed in touch. And we recently invited Reinhold to speak at a leaders event on his research into the inclusion of majority world staff into Western-founded organisations. And for those of you who’ve listened to episode 4, you might have picked up that the group there was referring to the outsider who came and spoke, and that was Reinhold!

Reinhold: I actually still have to listen to that, Kate. 

Kate: Yes, you should listen to that episode. They’re very complimentary about your input into our time together. But Reinhold’s also interested in conversational approaches to change in the intersection of that with inclusion and belonging. So I’m really looking forward to what he has to say today. 

Nelis: Yes, I am too. Let’s start off. Kate just said you’re interested in conversational leadership as well. So, what interests you there? 

Reinhold: I think there were three things for me that triggered my interest around conversational leadership. One was, just as I looked at the world, and then of course for me personally, faith is an integral aspect of my life. But even as I look at it from a faith perspective, I realised that conversations have so much potential in terms of helping us cross divides, overcome differences, political, whatever it might be. If we can get to healthy places of conversations, honest, vulnerable conversations, it has a potential for bringing so much healing and change and all of that. So that was certainly an aspect that interested me. But also from a cultural perspective. I’m an African and many of our cultures are oral cultures. Generally, knowledge is transferred, sense is made, in conversation rather than reading a book and sitting there by myself and reflecting, then writing another chapter about what I think. It’s in the conversation that we sense what’s happening, that we connect relationally with one another, at a heart, human fundamental needs level. And then, just what the future holds and sensing that together. So, in fact, in my father’s language, which is Xhosa, and Zulu, we have a word that we call, that is, indaba. And indaba is really a time and space where people come together to talk together as a community, or even as representatives of a community to solve issues or find ways forward and strengthen community. It just resonated with me from where I come from, culturally in the world.

Kate: That’s very much the case in other parts of the world as well, not just Africa. I experienced that in Papua New Guinea: everything is done through conversation, through storying, as they call it. “Let’s sit down and stori”. And for me coming from the West, when we were sitting by the fire and someone first said “Stori!”, I was like, do I have to tell a story, you know, thinking of fictitious… No, it’s just that conversational “let’s just sit here and talk things out”. I love that about the culture there.

Nelis: Yeah, so that’s interesting because often I hear that conversational leadership is difficult in a non-western context because it assumes a sort of egalitarian way of approaching things. You’re saying the opposite. You’re saying, actually, oral cultures are incredibly well suited for conversational leadership. 

Reinhold: Well, now you’re talking about conversations and you’re bringing leadership into it. And those are two that we then bring together in terms of conversations and leadership. And of course, leadership  is culturally constructed. What leadership looks like in context, you know, again, this is where I can critique some of our literature a little bit. But often, when we read books about leadership, there’s a prescribed way about how leadership works and what leadership looks like and all of that. But no, it comes out of a particular cultural paradigm that defines leadership and then we try and uncritically export it around the world and say this is the way you should lead and so on. And there are equally legitimate, perhaps different, but equally legitimate ways of leading in different contexts. And so when you put that together, yes, there’s often a bit more hierarchical ways of leadership in some of the majority world cultures, but you also have leaders who perhaps in a different way, will engage in conversation. And of course, for many of us from that part of the world Nelson Mandela would be an amazing example of an African leader who employed conversational styles of leadership and yet, understood the hierarchical issues. There is, of course, the cultural element to that and hierarchy that needs to be navigated, but there are many leaders who are employing this and just finding the culturally appropriate ways of doing it. So again, even with conversational leadership that we don’t try and uncritically export that to the rest of the world and say, this is the way it should be done. It’s to recognize what is in the culture, leverage that which is already in the culture that can actually help you to get there, but also be aware of those elements that may not be the same as where people come from the West, how they would do things. So for me, in a sense, is it again you cannot do this well in a global multicultural context without some level of cultural intelligence or savvy, to be able to do this well, in different contexts, or with diverse groups. 

Nelis: Yeah, and I hope that this podcast will be sort of an encouragement for that research, for that exploration and actually the practice of leadership cross-culturally and conversational leadership bringing that together would be fascinating and I’m hoping for more of that. 

Nelis: You said there are three things that sort of interested you. I’ve heard two, if I’m not mistaken. 

Reinhold: Yeah. So the third one for me would be the opportunity that it presents to us to get input from the outside of the hierarchical spaces, where if you just had a certain group of people: just what it unleashes, you know, in terms of creativity, innovation, the engagement it creates when people are involved in that process. So it’s just what it unleashes is something that triggered me because I’ve seen it whenever we employ in culturally relevant ways, but it energises people. And so for me, that was the third one, that inspires me towards exploring this, that wisdom exists throughout organisations. Insights, perspectives, different ways of doing things, understanding of contexts, exist in places in our organisations that leadership have no idea of and no access to. And so how do we tap into that? I can give you examples… Just speaking to my teenage goddaughter, many years ago and asking her questions and she gave me an answer that I would never have thought about as an adult and it sort of guided my parenting just getting wisdom from an 11 year old at the time. So you know, just wisdom that exists within the organisation that you often do not tap into. 

Kate: Absolutely–and we’ve discussed that in previous episodes–that actually when we stick to a small group of leaders with just one perspective or one set of experiences we limit ourselves and we limit the potential for change as well. And you need diversity in order to be able to discern the way forward often as a leader because you don’t have the perspective that others have. So yeah, that resonated with me as well that the wisdom of all is really needed. 

Nelis: Just yesterday I was in a conversation where I was confronted again with the fact that we as leaders tend to look at just one layer of the organisation: the one hundred people that we always go to. And it is quite a challenge to try to really reach well beyond that. You’re right, conversational leadership opens those kinds of avenues if we employ it well. 

Kate: Reinhold, would you share a little bit about, what are your experiences using conversational leadership in your organisational context, in your NGO? 

Reinhold: Yeah, and again, context is important and I’m glad to be using that word because it would look differently in different contexts. I wouldn’t say we are there not by any means at all. And in fact, what is “there”? It always depends. I’ve studied strategic management before and I’ve been involved in strategic management. And when I took on this particular role in the organisation, there was a level of complexity there that was just beyond anything that I’d experienced before. We have people from within the wider organisation, more than 100 different countries. In one of the units that we run, over 60 different countries. So that level of diversity and that’s just nationalities, you’re not even talking about the languages, the ethnicities, and the life experiences that everybody brings with them. So we were dealing with a very diverse staff, we were engaging with people in national and regional contexts who are very, very different from each other. And so our organisational strategy needs to be set up in such a way that we can have that flexibility and not just, “This is the Five-Year Plan and this is how we’re going to work”. And then, of course, the awareness of the fast and continuous changes in the world. And of course Covid over the last two years ago, that that has exponentially enhanced that sense of the VUCA world that we often talk about that we live in. So I just realised, even my skill set was not suited for what I needed to do. And so what do I do? Do I just go back to the toolbox I have and use the tools I have even though the job requires different tools, because that’s what I know. And quite, frankly that’s what people expect. That’s what makes people feel comfortable as well, the traditional change management approaches. When I got introduced to this and I think what was helpful is, it takes a lot of self worth for a leader because it takes you into a lot of uncertainty, insecurity, questioning, opening yourself up for questioning, the traditional change management leaders come and stand up, advisors would come in stand in front of you and say, “Okay. This is how we’re going to do things”. Now, this would say “We don’t know, you know, I don’t know. We need to sense this together”. “Well, what are we paying you for if you come and tell us you don’t know?”. So I think it took a lot of self-worth for me to be comfortable with what was required of me, comfortable with “I don’t know” and it’s okay if people know, I don’t know. That sense of humility and embrace of my own insecurities and all of that. So I think that that was one of the biggest things that I needed to work through, is to be comfortable with this. 

I remember one of our earlier conversations. I wanted to get a much wider part of engagement, much wider groups and people involved. But as I was sensing the organisation, I realised perhaps I was trying to push too much too soon. If I could just get a sector or group of the organisation together, it would be more than what we’ve ever done before. And then even thinking about that group that we get together. Can we intentionally work diversity into that instead of, as you said, we go to the hundred people that we always go to. It’s “No, who are the other voices out there that would not automatically end up on that list of 100 people?” And how do we get them into the conversation?

Nelis: You say that you realised you needed to start with a subsection of the organisation because biting off everything at the same time was too much. Can you say a bit more on that, is that like an experiment? Or is that something that you see as gradually expanding outward? How does that work from your perspective? 

Reinhold: I think it comes back to leadership again. What I realised that will provide the greatest leverage is not for me to try and push that we do this throughout the organisation, but to take leaders on a journey to help them see the value of it because they lead in spaces that I will never get to, to help them see the value to help give them some kind of language and tools on how to do that. And some leaders have caught on to this more so than others. Particularly one of our leaders I just found incredibly encouraging to see, as he started working with me and there was even a period during the Covid time in lockdown, that I couldn’t travel to get to a significant group of our people. And he travelled, and we talked about it beforehand, how to engage. And then hearing him afterwards talking about how he facilitated, constantly just using the conversational language that he used. And even a few days ago we had a conversation and he just goes back again to the conversational way of engaging and leading. And so for me, that was a win, that some of the leaders really caught on to it then and then started doing that wherever they found themselves. 

Kate: Yes, that was very much something we were trying to do with the event a couple of weeks ago that you joined us at, that is pass on the vision for using a conversational approach in the organisation. And I do think that people got that in a new way from having spent a couple of days working with a different approach to how to do a meeting, for example. But also to continue the conversation after they leave with others and use a conversational approach with their staff. One question I have is that, I guess, you like us have globally scattered staff and you can’t possibly be with everyone all at once. You can’t gather everyone into one room. And I envy people who work in organisations, where everyone’s in the same building or on the same site, or maybe they have three sites. And they think that’s difficult! We have, you know, over 4,000 staff scattered around the world and we can never get everyone in one room, or even on one Zoom call. So I’m interested to hear how other people engage and create these conversations, whether virtually or by travelling around? 

Reinhold: I think it’s about leaders, and taking leaders on a journey, and equipping them to do that and they need to discern their own contexts as well. You know, because the global context is also different from what people experience in regions, or on a national level.[21:13] One of the things that I realised as I reflected back on those earlier days and even that initial intervention, debriefing the intervention, reflecting on the intervention myself and also with others. And you always ask yourself “How could you have done this better?”. And one of the things that I realised was I could have given people who are coming to this for the first time… because there was quite a bit of tension because people didn’t know what to expect, it wasn’t the normal way of doing things. And sometimes the tension is good because it brings out things. And I later on came across just a few short articles that describe this a little bit more. And I realised even if I had access to that and just had given that to them beforehand to start framing what conversational leadership, conversational organisations, are all about, that may have helped a little bit. When we debriefed afterwards, people then said, “Okay, I understand now to a degree”. And then, even the ones that I spoke to, they still pushed back and had questions. I then sent them these articles, and then we had conversations, again and they said, “Now some of these things make sense to me”. So I realised, leadership and some of the equipping resources, language, that we give to leaders as they do this is critical for them to do that and make sure that it actually goes throughout the organisation. 

Kate: It’s very much a process, a journey of learning, of adjusting, to seeing things differently.

Nelis:  I find it fascinating, what you are saying Reinhold, that it’s got to be done sort of in dialogue with people with whom we actually have contact. You can’t you can’t just mandate this across the organisation from a distance. It requires a sense of proximity and that’s of course immediately the challenge  because the topic you’re dealing with, of inclusion and diversity, these are deeply personal topics that you can’t just mandate. Can you share some of your practical stories of some of how that works in your organisation?

Reinhold: At the moment I say a lot of that revolves around interventions. For me, the whole diversity is important, who do we have in the room? Even looking at it from a hierarchical point of view, to make sure that it’s not just your executive or middle-level leaders. That actually, I’m inviting some of the people who just joined a few months ago, younger people, into this conversation. Even with this intervention, one of the key things that we will be working on is leadership, leadership styles, how do we see leadership? Just the whole transactional versus relational leadership. And, again, if you grow in terms of relational leadership, then it opens up spaces for conversation. Then you do this more, more and more. So for me a big part of that is just looking at how we model this, but also in tension with our leadership development, to help expand their understanding of what leadership is and how to make sense as leaders and how to navigate things as leaders] So right now it’s around these interventions and then, and trusting, we’re always talking about capacity building, we’re talk about multiplication. How can we multiply people who can do this throughout the organisation rather than, again, being dependent on a few experts that can facilitate more conversational approaches to organisational life.

Kate: Can you share something with us about your experience, your organisation’s experience, of change processes, the positives and the negatives, whether traditional or conversational, how have you seen that working out? 

Reinhold: Yeah, and that’s an important question Kate. Because again if we study this, there are proponents of conversational leadership and then there are those  who are more traditional change management approaches, and then there are people who are perhaps more in the middle between those two. And I think, you know, the traditional approaches – whether that’s a reality or an assumption– but the predictability that it provides the people know, how we are going to do this process, you know, there’s a research phase, and then you come up with a strategic plan and a rollout and measurement and all of that. And so it gives people that sense of, they know what to expect, the predictability. And then there’s often for some humans a need for them.

Nelis: For safety? 

Reinhold: For safety, yes. I realised with our organisations that some of our structures and systems and processes are so deeply embedded, that to just have a conversational approach it will always raise questions about, “Okay, what does this mean in terms of our structures or processes? How do we measure these things, particularly, how do we evaluate this?” You know, which is a little bit more difficult with conversational approaches. So I think it gives people that sense of predictability. Whereas the conversational approach, some of the benefits, is that it enables wider participation, it enables creativity, greater creativity within an organisation, innovation, novelty, new ways of things coming up. I think it must be Suchman who wrote about this, that one person makes a suggestion, somebody else, person B, hears the suggestion and then they add to that, and it takes on a new form. And person C takes that suggestion, it takes on a whole new form. None of them on their own would have come up with this, but because the conversation takes place there’s novelty that emerges, that you couldn’t even say one person would have come up with this genius idea. Just the fact that it allows space for that. But I think there’s also challenges with a conversational approach. It takes a lot of time. It can provoke resistance because, you know, time is money. People want to plan. People want to know exactly. And so the uncertainty can provoke resistance, and how to navigate that. And just a willingness to sit with the unknown. I think those are some of the challenges for me with the conversational approaches.

Kate: I’m interested that you mentioned speed there. Clare raised an issue in our last episode about what do you do when things are urgent?  A conversational approach takes time. And sometimes you just can’t take the time to do that, and you have to make decisions urgently. I just wanted to ask for your perspective on that. 

Reinhold: Of course, there are times that, you know, an urgent issue can mean life or death and you need to make those decisions. But sometimes, whose “urgent” is it, you know, how urgent is it, really? Can we take a few more days? Or is it just because we’re used to this is the way it should be done? So who assesses, who determines how urgent something is? So one of the things that I’ve done in this includes just coming to terms with who I am in leadership and working in a context where there’s a certain defined way of leadership that I’m not comfortable with, but I’ve assimilated and done it that way many times, or for a long time. I remember having to facilitate a conversation with our leadership team. And I know what our expectations at the end of those discussions are: “Okay. Now, we need to summarise it. What are the key points? What are the action points? What is the timeline? When is this going to happen?” That’s the expectation. And I said to the team, you know, I’m grateful for all of the input. I’ve heard that, but I also want to be transparent that I’m not ready to actually come to that point of saying, okay summarise this and next steps and all of that. Because even as I sat there, I recognized that there were voices in the meeting that I have not heard on this issue that I believe have something to say. And maybe it’s because of the fact that we speak in English sometimes. Sometimes, it’s a personality issue, that some of us need a little bit more time to process and then we just feel we need to make this rushed decision. So I said, “Well for one, I feel there’s a few people, other people I want to engage with and get their input, before I can actually make this decision”. But at the same time I can’t keep them waiting indefinitely. So my arrangement with them was, “I will come back to you in a week and have it summarised and give some kind of way forward, rather than doing it now. And we leave it where it is right now.” And once they heard me explain this to them, it was “Okay, no, we can live with that”. 

Kate: And even if something is urgent we need to make sure we have the right people speaking into this. You know, we can often default to just getting into a little huddle of leaders when we have an urgent decision to be made quickly. And actually, we would benefit from taking a few more hours, maybe a few more days to reach out and ask people at different levels in the organisation for their input on the decision and then it will be a better decision as a result. 

Reinhold: It helps people to at least have some time frame, that is what I find. You can say to them, “Okay. We will come back to you in a certain period of time”. Then, at least for those who are more linear, they have some marker. And then you can do the work that needs to be done and then get to that particular space. And even if it requires more conversation because sometimes it’s not that urgent anymore, but at least they have some kind of idea as to when we get feedback, or take a look at next steps. 

Nelis: I like your balance there, maintaining forward movement, but also framing the time, but also creating space for the right voices to speak into that. And I was fascinated by your comment about language being an issue there, or people who need more time to think. I think there’s a huge cultural component, actually. I constantly see that. You’ve got, often, the loud dominant Western voices who speak up first. And if you don’t give it more time, those will be the only voices. 

Reinhold: Conversational approaches have inherent biases built into them. And sometimes they are unconscious and we need to surface them in order to help us. So one of them would be the language bias that we talked about, the fact that we speak in English, you know, even for somebody like me English is my third language. I can express myself reasonably well in English. But English speakers don’t see the mental energy that it takes, you know, to be able to engage with them on a conversation around the table and having to quickly make a decision. You’re global leaders, you are aware of this. And, Nelis, English is not your first language, either. 

Nelis: So, Kate is the only one who doesn’t have to think right now!

Kate: I’ve lived in other countries and I’m aware of the strain and the tiredness of speaking in another language that’s not your own. One thing we’ve done is when we’ve had global staff conversations where we haven’t all been in the same space and we’ve asked people to group in their organisational units having conversations. Some of those have taken place in French, or Spanish or Korean, and then we ask for the feedback, and feedback is usually in English. We ask for all the groups to feed back to the leadership. So that is one way around it, having language specific groupings. 

Nelis: Are there other aspects than language that you would like to bring out when you look at those cultural dynamics? 

Reinhold: Yes, so language would be one. And I like what you said Kate, and I think, you know, just the issue of affinity group conversations. So, even if you have a larger group, larger conversation, can you have affinity group conversations? And how that is fed back, whether that affinity group being a language group, but it could be a gender issue as well. And so, the other issue at play here is the power issue. Particularly in multicultural, diverse contexts, we come in with an assumption of a very egalitarian worldview that everybody’s equal because we’re in the room, but that’s not true. We need to discern when we are together in these rooms, what are the power factors at play in this room that would affect how well we engage in this conversation. And I just mentioned gender. In some places being a man, it implicitly carries a certain weight, what I say. And so what does it mean for women in that room? Well, how do we create space for them perhaps to have a conversation around their own table? And say, this is how we feel, but one woman cannot necessarily speak up on behalf of all, you know, so…  Or, generationally as well, you know, one of the things that I’ve learned even in these diverse conversations is, there would be younger people there who feel that they can speak up because perhaps they even come from an egalitarian worldview. So they’ve always been encouraged in their families with their parents and so on. And this is just how it’s nurtured over the years. But then there are young people who are in that room, that just because of how they grew up, that they would not speak up. So for me, just during those coffee breaks or lunch breaks to go and sit with them or take them aside or go for a walk and say, “What do you make of this meeting? What do you sense in all of that?”. And I always get incredible insights from them. And I may challenge and encourage them and say I will create space and safety for you in the room to actually come and say what you just said, depending on where the person is at. But you know, just between a leader, when they feel affirmed, “Oh, this matters, this is important. Oh, I can say it in the meeting”. So we build people up. So to be aware of the power dynamics in the room, and again, power dynamics can be diverse. Race is a power, and I speak to many people in the majority world… Being from a particular ethnic group, can mean you have power in a group. So whether you’re white or whether you’re, black African, but from a particular ethnic background in a certain group, you know. So the issue of racism can be a power issue. The issue of socio-economic background and where we come from, and money can be a power issue. So, it’s important to be aware of what are the power dynamics at play that determines who speaks up. This is the work that I’m really leaning into, that as we create these inclusive conversations, I believe that certain conditions need to be in place for truly inclusive conversations to take place, because merely having diversity in the room doesn’t mean it’s inclusive. 

Kate: No, not at all. In fact, one of the things we’re doing in our organisation right now is wanting to have a conversation around inclusion and belonging. But knowing if we open that up, we would probably mostly hear the Western voices. So we’re starting out with what we’re calling a Listening Project, deliberately going to our majority world colleagues, and interviewing around 50 actually, and making sure we create space to hear their voices, before we start the conversation. And I hope that that will give people the confidence to speak up when we have the whole staff conversation. But also we will then be able to bring those voices to the whole and sort of amplify them, because of those power issues that you mentioned.

Nelis: I realise often how invisible power is to the person who actually has it, because it’s sort of the air you breathe, and to be aware of that takes time and effort. I was just at an elders’ meeting of our church, and we talked about a very sensitive issue about a younger female person. It’s like well, do you realise that you go as the pastor, as the man, as the older person… It’s that sense of you don’t even know, you’re not even aware of how power plays into this conversation. I think it’s really important to bring that out and often across races, as you said… 

Kate: …and genders. I’ve definitely experienced that.

Nelis: And genders. Exactly, we’ve got to learn to see that, as the ones who have it, and I think every leader has to wrestle with that. 

Reinhold: Absolutely. And de-centre power, acknowledge it, recognize it, and power is not a bad thing in itself, it’s how power is used. Somebody once said, “Power needs to turn up trustworthy”. Can we trust power for the good of all? So, it’s a recognising it exists, but then de-centre it. And there’s a number of other conditions that are critical for us to consider if we are to have really inclusive conversations. 

Nelis: We need to start closing off. Is there any final piece that you would like to mention, an insight, you would like to share with our listeners, that you’re like, wow, if only they retain that we’re good? 

Reinhold: Conversational leadership, it opens up space for so much change in ourselves, in interpersonal relationships, in communities. We are in a very unhealthy space, virtual space, that we are in, where we see a lot of toxicity in terms of how we engage with one another. We need to foster this. And maybe just to the story, Nelis, when I’m in these international diverse meetings that we talk about certain issues. And yet when I walk out of the room and I find people from my affinity group, whatever that might be, then we talk about the meeting in the room. And we say, “Did you hear this? Did you notice this? This should have been talked about”. And somehow we don’t feel the freedom to have these conversations in the room. And really, those are the things that are generative, that will take us forward, get us to grow. And so, really to ask ourselves, “Why don’t we feel we can have these conversations?”. And it goes back to these issues around power in the room, around psychological safety. How do we create psychological safe spaces for us to have these conversations? But being brave to speak up.  I love the work of Mary Frances Winters. If there’s one resource that I’d recommend it’s a book that she wrote around inclusive conversations. She talks about grace and forgiveness, that we are going to make mistakes, we are going to step on each other’s toes. How do we extend that to each other? Facing our fear, our fragility. So, we need to work on those things in order to really have interpersonal relationships and team and organisational conversations that really take us forward. It’s focus on that but recognise that there need to be certain things in place to really generate inclusive generative conversations. 

Kate: Thank you Reinhold. I think we could talk for several more hours, but we’ll stop for now. We really appreciate you coming and sharing with us today, particularly on this intersection between conversational processes and inclusivity, which is so critical. 

Thank you for listening, everyone. We will be adding more resources and links to the show notes. So do check that out. And as always the transcript will be there as well. Thank you, Reinhold. Nelis, until next time! Thank you.