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Posts Tagged ‘changing’
Monday, August 9th, 2010 by Bev Benwick

“What happens if you walk out the door and get hit by a bus?” It is not unusual when dealing with leaders in our coaching conversations when a question similar to this surfaces. There’s usual a bit of chuckling involved and an exchange of humorous comments before we get down to where the client wants to go . . . the serious five-sixths of the iceberg below the surface of the initial discussion. There is a tendency for some leaders (not you of course) to feel infallible and indestructible. This can get in the way of building greater capacity in those who report to us.
The metaphor of ‘the bus’ comes in many forms. If a version of the bus does in fact unexpectantly run over you (note Schultz’s Law: Murphy’s an optimist), then who is able to seamlessly step into your shoes should you find yourself temporarily out of the game . . . on the sidelines as it were? Are you ready my friend for such an event? Quickly filling the leadership pipeline is one of your major responsibilities . . . your organization should not expect less! As an executive coach who works with clients around the world, I have the slight luxury of a broader perspective of organizations . . . both private, public and not-for-profit sectors. In fact, this year to date I have seen three key senior leaders be unexpectedly moved over to the sidelines in their respective organizations. One leader, a Vice President – Operations, recently reflected on just such an experience. They shared just how thankful they were for the executive coaching support that was in service of their ability to see the value of changing their leadership behavior of shifting from a high need for absolute control to that of developing a greater capacity in others to grow, develop and increase their skills and abilities to take on increased accountability and delivery of high quality results . . . not to mention dramatically enhanced levels of professional and personal satisfaction. The value of succession planning for this particular leader has taken on a whole new level of importance, not to mention for the organization.
Letting go of the reins of control can be exceptionally challenging for any leader, yet the return on the invested time and resources for the leader, key staff, other stakeholders and the organization typically exceeds all expectations when (not if) the inevitable reality of an unplanned highly stressful event occurs and readily takes the leader out of the game.
Should the inevitable surface for you, are you or your organization able to operate at you’re the most effective levels? Are you truly able to successfully step back and confidently address the presenting issue when temporarily sidelined? I would be most interested in hearing your thoughts, your truth, when the bus comes screaming through your world.
Tags: abilities, accountability, Bev Benwick, building, bus, Business Coaching, Capacity, challenging, change, changing, client, clients, coaching, control, conversations, develop, developing, effective, Executive Coaching, expectations, grow, hit, indestructible, invested, key staff, leaders, leaders infallible, leadership, leadership behavior, leadership pipeline, Murphy’s Law, need, not-for-profit, organization, organizations, personal, perspective, private, professional, public, quality, resources, responsibilities, results, satisfaction, Schultz’s Law, sectors, senior leaders, sideline, sidelined, sidelines, skills, stakeholders, strategic, strategy, stressful, succession planning, time, unexpectedly, unplanned, Vice President - Operations, world Posted in 360 Coaching, Business Coaching, Emotional Intelligence, Executive Coaching, Leadership Development, Leadership Transition, Organization Development, Personal Coaching | Add a Comment »
Friday, March 19th, 2010 by Bob and Bev Benwick

We received a call the other day from Tony, a CEO of a major oil and gas company, who shared with us that he was quite concerned about one of his key executives. He said that Frank had been recently promoted to replace a key member of the ELT (executive leadership team) who had retired about nine months ago. He bluntly stated, “Frank doesn’t appear to be working out the way I had hoped and is quite frankly derailing! Can we explore the situation and help me better understand why some leaders derail and and some don’t? What can I do about it?”
These are not uncommon questions that are raised by our corporate clients from time to time. In our executive coaching conversation with Tony, it was noted that The Centre for Creative Leadership found that approximately 50% of high potential managers and executives derail. Contributing to this is the fact that the initial technical and problem solving skills that had fomerly served a number of these derailed leaders well now can’t be relied on to address the increased complexity of operating at a more strategic leve, nor the resulting demands placed on their leadership that are typically changing from day to day, never mind month to month, or year to year.
Further, research has indicated that those leaders who are in fact successful in their leadership roles exhibit some of the following characteristics:
- They tend to be highly flexible and responsive to change
- They have a powerful ability to navigate through ambiguity and complexity
- They pick things up very quickly and in a variety of circumstances
- They are able to coach, facilitate, coordinate and develop their teams in a variety of circumstances with many different types of people
- They are highly grounded, self-manage themselves and work with others well under highly stressful circumstances
- One of their mottos is ‘Feedback is the breakfast of Champions’ and thus constantly seek it out from those all around them
- They are quite aware that their strengths when overused in fact become their weaknesses, and those identified become their primary focus of professional/personal development
- They readily acknowledge and champion their people, no matter how small the contribution or how challenging the initiative(s)
- They are able to authentically share their thoughts, feelings and wants in equal amounts with their staff, colleagues, boss(s) and customers/clients, encouraging reciprocation, and do so with a strong sense of empathy and compassion toward others
Leaders having the potential for derailment include: the overly ambitious, the perfectionist, those who go it alone, over-managing, over-loyal to the organization, those who are over-controlling and 0ver-results oriented, single minded, too focused on technical detail, unduly personable and relying solely on relationships to get things done, having excessive fire in the belly, having too many things on the go, overly dependent on others, won’t be pushed off the mark, caught up with escalating-commitment, the constant need to be right, and loves to scrap with others beyond having constructive differences.
To avoid derailment or to rerail, the leader needs to learn thoughtfully and constructively how to develop the team; strengthen strategic thinking and decision making; clarify specific expectations around deliverables and follow up; be self-aware and self manage under stress while at the same time being empathetic towards others; creating the right balance between collaboration, independent action and delegation; manage strategic alliances, assure functional strategic alignment and effectively manage differences vertically and horizontally.
What’s been your experience? What have you learned as result and what did you do with it? What have you done with these insights? We would love to hear your thoughts and feelings on the subject. Take care.
Tags: acknowledge, action, balance, Bev Benwick, Bob Benwick, boss(s), Centre for Creative Leadership, ceo, champion, change, changing, client, clients, coach, collaboration, colleagues, compassion, competencies, competency, complexity, conflict, contribution, coordinate, corporate clients, customers, decision making, delegation, demand, demands, derail, derailment, development, differences, empathy, executive, executives, expectations, facilitate, feedback, feels, flexible, group, high-potential, initiative, lead, leader, leadership, leading, learning, manager, oil and gas industry, operating, people, personal, problem solving, professional, relationships, rerail, research, roles, self-aware, self-manage, skills, staff, strategic, strategic alignments, strategic thinking, strategy, strengths, stress, stressful, success, successful, team, teams, technical, thoughts, wants, weaknesss Posted in 360 Coaching, Business Coaching, Career Transitions, Emotional Intelligence, Executive Coaching, Leadership Development, Leadership Transition, Organization Development, Personal Coaching, Team & Group Coaching | 2 Comments »
Friday, November 13th, 2009 by Bob Benwick

Every now and then a gift is given to the world, and that is just what Paul Hawken gave us in an unforgettable commencement address to the Class of 2009, at the University of Portland. It was recently passed on to me and I want to gift it forward so you too can enjoy his powerful message. Enjoy.
“When I was invited to give this speech, I was asked if I could give a simple short talk that was “direct, naked, taut, honest, passionate, lean, shivering, startling, and graceful.” No pressure there.
Let’s begin with the startling part. Class of 2009: you are going to have to figure out what it means to be a human being on earth at a time when every living system is declining, and the rate of decline is accelerating. Kind of a mind-boggling situation . . . but not one peer-reviewed paper published in the last thirty years can refute that statement. Basically, civilization needs a new operating system, you are the programmers, and we need it within a few decades.
This planet came with a set of instructions, but we seem to have misplaced them. Important rules like don’t poison the water, soil or air, don’t let the earth get overcrowded, and don’t touch the thermostat have been broken. Buckminster Fuller said that spaceship earth was so ingeniously designed that no one has a clue that we are on one, flying through the universe at a million miles per hour, with no need for seat-belts, lots of room in coach, and really good food – but all that is changing
There is invisible writing on the back of the diploma you will receive, and in case you didn’t bring lemon juice to decode it, I can tell you what it says: You are Brilliant and the Earth is Hiring. The earth couldn’t afford to send recruiters or limos to your school. It sent you rain, sunsets, ripe cherries, night blooming jasmine, and that unbelievably cute person you are dating. Take the hint. And here’s the deal: Forget that this task of planet-saving is not possible in the time required. Don’t be put off by people who know what is not possible. Do what needs to be done, and check to see if it was impossible only after you are done.”. For the rest of the address go to http://youarebrilliant.org/. “ It is well worth the few additional minutes to read the balance of this wonderful commencement address. Then I invite you to gift it forward!
Paul Hawken is a noted visionary and entrepreneur whose many books can be found on Amazon.com. We would enjoy hearing what your gold nuggets are from reading his comments and observations. Who are you becoming? What are you willing to change? What’s next?
Tags: .rich, Adrienne Rich, air, and graceful, artists, atoms, Bob Benwick, Bono, brilliant, Buckminster Fuller, business people, campuses, caring, cellular, change, changing, Charles Darwin, children, civil society, civilization, Class of 2009, companies, confront, conservation, cynic, David James Duncan, declining, deforestation, deserts, despair, diploma, direct, doctors without borders, dreamer, earth, economy, engineers, failed assets, failed bankers, failed regulators, farms, fisherfolk, fisheries, future, government workers, graduating, Granville Sharp, grieving Christians, groups, heart. Janine Benyus, hint, hiring, honest, human being, human rights, humanity, hunger, incorrigible writers, instructions, Josiah Wedgwood, jungles, lean, life, limos, living system, Mercy Corps, molecules, Moses, Mother Teresa, mothers, Muslims, naked, nature, night blooming jasmine, non-governmental organizations companies, non-profits, nuns, odds, on climate change, operating system, optimistic, organic farmers, organizations, overcrowded, passionate, Paul Hawken, peace, peasants, pessimistic, planet, planet-saving, poets, poison, poverty, power, processes, programmers, rabbinical, Ralph Waldo Emerson, rappers, re-imagine, rebuild, reconsider, recover, recruiters, redress, reform, refugee camps, restore, ripe cherries, rules, school rooms, school. rain, schools, science, shivering, slums, social entrepreneurship, soil, spaceship, species, startling, street musicians, students, suffering, sunsets, taut, teachers, teaching restore, the President of the United States of America, Thomas Clarkson, universe, University of Portland, villages, water, working Posted in Business Coaching, Emotional Intelligence, Leadership Development, Organization Development, Personal Coaching | Add a Comment »
Sunday, February 1st, 2009 by Bev Benwick

Recently I had the opportunity to lunch and celebrate the New Year with a former professor of mine, Marilyn Hamilton, whom I met while doing my graduate work. I have enormous respect for Marilyn and realized I was absolutely pumped following our lunch together. She has become a very special person in my life and a valued ‘advisor’.
Following two years of hard work Marilyn recently completed and published an intriguing book! She enthusiastically shared her exciting research encompassing a ‘whole system view’ of creating productive cities that had enormous potential for addressing the diverse needs of the today’s diverse populations. The result was publication of an exceptionally worthy and forward thinking book entitled ‘Integral Cities, Evolutionary Intelligences for the Human Hive’ . Powerfully aligned with the field of urban studies, Marilyn mentioned, “It’s been extremely interesting to hear the many unsolicited and exciting responses to my book and how its application and meaning have actually extended far beyond what my intent had initially been” (listen Marilyn.)
I’ve read with delight an interview that Marilyn had engaged in while promoting her book. It was obvious from the content of the interview that the application of her model was totally applicable to a diversity of today’s public and private sector organizations. Using two of her favorite expressions, Marilyn and I engaged in our rich conversation around conformity enforcers and diversity generators. What great terms! She had been able to capture the blinding glimpse of the obvious around how readily the bee community and their various roles truly show up in all organizations.
Marilyn made note of the fact that the energy of conformity enforcers, that she claims make up 90 % of a hive community, quickly diminishes over the course of each season as the bees gather resources from the same flower patch. She explained that the inner judges of a hive, measure the return and withhold and/or reallocate limited and precious fuel as pollen amounts decrease. Adjusting the budget mid-stream so to speak? She went on to explain that as the conformity enforcers eventually accept the need to change, they make the necessary shift to new resources and adjust to the new findings of the diversity generators….a new flower patch. The outcome for the hive……. new found energy! The roles of both the conformity enforcers and diversity generators are vital to the survival of the hive….and to any business community for that matter! Presto, explaining the behavior of many an organization in today’s world of white water change and transition.
I’ve found the ‘hive’ metaphor an exciting prism to view organizational leadership from with huge possibilities for further exploration and study. Clearly, bees must be doing something right to coexist in a container the size of my shoulder bag and yet readily adapt to change!
How readily do the conformity enforcers in your organization embrace the work of your diversity generators? How critical in today’s world is the role of diversity generators who hold enormous potential for revitalizing the energy of others in each and every organization trying to survive and prosper? I would love to hear your thoughts and feelings. Go for it!
Tags: adapt to change, advisor, bee, bees, benwick, bev, Bev Benwick, book, budget, budgets, business, business community, business survival, buzz, change, changing, Cities, conformity, conformity enforcers, diversity, diversity generators, energy, Evolutionary, Evolutionary Intelligences, flower, flower patch, graduate, graduate work, hive, Human Hive, inner, inner judges, Integral, Integral Cities, Integral Cities Evolutionary Intelligences for the Human Hive Human, Intelligences, judges, leader, leaders, leadership, Marilyn Hamilton, organization, organization change, organizational change, organizational leadership, organizations, other, others, potential, private, prosper, prosperous, public, publication, research, resource, resources, revitalize, revitalizing, sector, survival, survive, transition, transitioning, transitions, urban, urban development, urban studies, water change, white water, whole system, whole systems, whole systems view Posted in Business Coaching, Emotional Intelligence, Executive Coaching, Leadership Development, Leadership Transition, Organization Development, Team & Group Coaching | 1 Comment »
Friday, December 5th, 2008 by Bev Benwick
I’m quite excited to share a recent newletter created by Jake Jacobs, a global leader in the field of organization development, specifically in the area of large-scale, real-time system change. It’s a pleasure to share with you his comments on ‘Collaborating to Create More Value: Leadership Coaching and Large Scale Change’. Enjoy!
“Given my focus on collaboration, I wanted to share with you one way in which my clients and I have benefited from partnering with others. I have known Bob Benwick for 15 years. We first worked together on a Real Time Strategic Change effort at a bank where he was the senior HR executive. Now he and his wife Bev have a global corporate coaching practice based out of Vancouver.
I recently had the opportunity to sit down with Bob and Bev to talk about synergies between their coaching practice and my large-scale change work. Bob, Bev and I share the same goal: people and organizations achieving their full potential. The difference is in how we do it. Bob and Bev (and other coaches) focus on individual leaders’ development. I (and other large-scale change consultants) focus on the overall organization’s development. When we partner, our clients get the best of both worlds.
Bob explains, “I had exposure to the RTSC approach many years ago. It helps businesses that need to turn on a dime (competitively) like the bank I worked at. It is absolutely crystal clear to me how much coaching and large-scale change complement each other.”
Bev continues, “A goal of our coaching is for leaders to bring greater depth to their relationships. Organizations that use us a lot want to make big changes and make them fast. We often get asked to help leaders work together across departments.”
It’s tough to tell whether Bev is talking about her coaching practice or my large-scale change work.
Bob adds, “We contract with leaders for a minimum of six months. There has to be serious commitment or it won’t work. Leaders (and all of us) have taken years to develop our current habits. It will take time to change them. The more people change, the easier and faster it is for the system they work in to change.”
My take on Bob’s comment: the more the system changes, the easier and faster it is for the people in it to change.
Putting leadership coaching and large-scale change together is a “win-win-win.” Leaders can make big changes happen faster – and sustain them over time. And we do a better job for them than either of us could do alone. “
Jake Jacobs is co-founder and partner of Winds of Change Group — a consulting firm specializing in fast and lasting change.
What are your feelings about change and coaching? What intrigues you the most about Jake’s comments? What are the possibilities?
Tags: bank, banking, banks, benwick, big, Bob, Bob Benwick, change, changes, changing, client, clients, coach, coaches, coachings, collaborate, collaborating, collaboration, consultant, consultants, contract, contracting, Dannemiller, department, departments, development, easier, easy, executive, executives, fast, faster, HR, HRM, human resource, human resource management, human resources, jacobs, Jake, Jake Jacobs, Kathie, Kathie Dannemiller, large, large change, large scale, large scale change, lasting, leader, leaders, leadership, OD, organizaitons, organization, Organization Development, organizations, partner, partnering, people, potential, real time, real time change, relationships, relatonship, Robert Jacobs, RTSC, strategic, strategic change, strategy, synergy, syneries, system, systems, time, value, vancouver, vancouver bc, win, win-win, win-win-win, winds of change, winds of change group Posted in 360 Coaching, Business Coaching, Emotional Intelligence, Executive Coaching, Leadership Development, Leadership Transition, Organization Development, Team & Group Coaching | 1 Comment »
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