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Leadership in Transition: Insights from Leadership Horizon 2024

Leadership in Transition: Insights from Leadership Horizon 2024

by Christoph Wirl | Jul 4, 2024 | Leadership and AI, Leadership Tips, MDI Inside | 0 comments

Photo credits: Jenny Theolin

 

Leadership in Transition: Insights from Leadership Horizon 2024

This was our Leadership Horizon Conference of 2024! Click here and immerse yourself in the Highlights.

Leadership in transition: Insights from Leadership Horizon 2024

Here you can find the original report by magazine training editor Christoph Wirl: 

A guide to the most effective strategies for integrating artificial intelligence – We report on the Leadership Horizon conference.

MDI’s Leadership Horizon Conference retook place this year on June 4 at SO/Vienna and was dedicated to the increasing fusion of leadership practices and Artificial Intelligence (AI). It served as a platform for the exchange of practical findings and strategies for integrating AI into management processes.

Around 160 HR experts and managers from various industries came together to share their experiences and visions. The event was English-language and hybrid, allowing international participants to attend both online and in person.

The impressive line-up of speakers was consistently compelling. The event offered a successful mix of inspiring keynotes, practice-oriented workshops, and insightful business cases.

The two sides of the AI coin

CEO Gunther Fürstberger opened the conference with a virtual avatar, created with the HeyGen program’s help, and looked very similar to the real speaker. He spoke about the importance of artificial intelligence for both companies and managers.

He showed both sides of the coin: For example, many people have already been killed through the use of AI-controlled drones in war zones. At the same time, however, the use of artificial intelligence in medicine has already saved the lives of millions of people or significantly improved their health.

AI therefore has a clear impact on our society, which is why we need to develop and use this technology responsibly. We need to harness the potential of AI for the benefit of humanity while carefully weighing up the potential risks and ethical challenges.

Photocredits: Jenny Theolin

AI is not magic

When the conference moderators asked the audience who was not yet sufficiently familiar with the topic of artificial intelligence, more than half of the attendees responded. This just goes to show that we need to engage more with this forward-looking topic.

Afterward, magician Tobias Grünfelder from the Abracademy fascinated the participants and drew parallels between the art of magic and artificial intelligence:

“AI is not magic – we just need to look behind the scenes. Just as professional magicians do not rely on a single trick, we should also take a holistic approach to the application of artificial intelligence. It is not enough to see AI as some kind of magic bullet that solves all problems by itself. Instead, it is important to understand the underlying mechanisms and functioning of AI systems to be able to use them effectively and responsibly.”

AI-powered leadership

Johannes von Mikulicz-Radecki also emphasized the complexity of using AI in leadership in his presentation “AI-Powered Leadership”:

“The time when you could experiment with AI and try out different use cases is over. Now it’s about putting what you’ve learned into practice.”

This requires managers to clearly understand the possibilities and limitations of artificial intelligence and the ability to strategically integrate this technology into their business processes. In addition, von Mikulicz-Radecki emphasized the general relevance of AI tools in companies:

“Artificial intelligence is too important to be left only to management.”

Photocredits: Jenny Theolin

An insight into UNIQA’s AI strategies

Later, keynote speaker Cristina Anculescu showed how UNIQA has optimized the employee experience with the help of AI tools. She reported that 47% of Gen Z employees surveyed said they received better career advice from AI than from their managers. For example, some upload their LinkedIn profile to ChatGPT and ask for suggestions for improvement.

In response, UNIQA has used AI to develop and promote individual career paths for its employees. Intelligent algorithms are used to create individual development plans. These are based on the strengths, interests, and goals of individual employees.

The downside of flexible home office arrangements

After the lunch break, renowned expert and speaker Ryan Jenkins was connected live from the USA. The technical implementation went smoothly so that both the participants on-site and the online participants were able to follow his presentation without any problems. He addressed the importance of interpersonal connections within a company:

“When employees feel isolated, they are up to seven times more likely to work inefficiently.”

He noted that due to excessive use of our smartphones and online media, we are often unable to build and maintain relationships with our colleagues. In this day and age, people are more independent of each other than ever before, making it harder to make and maintain connections. Jenkins therefore warned that the often overly flexible home office regulations should be critically scrutinized.

Photo credits: Jenny Theolin

Dangers and fears around AI

Rebecca Johnson presented the possibility of learning using AI avatars and introduced a specific tool that enables particularly effective practice of negotiation skills.

In her final presentation, Bailey Parnell tried to allay the audience’s fears of artificial intelligence. She explained basic concepts such as machine learning and deep learning and introduced various AI tools, including Canva, Suno, Copilot, and image generation software.

She also addressed the potential dangers of AI and discussed possible job losses due to automation, the loss of privacy and the problem of bias in AI systems.

Conclusion on Leadership in Transition: Insights from Leadership Horizon 2024

The Leadership Horizon Conference 2024 once again proved to be a great event for executives who want to integrate AI into their corporate strategies. It provided valuable insights into current trends and inspired thinking about the future role of technology in leadership.

Download our International Whitepaper:

 

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Challenges and Opportunities of AI in China

Challenges and Opportunities of AI in China

by Gunther Fürstberger | Jun 10, 2024 | Leadership and AI, MDI Inside, training new leader | 0 comments

Challenges and Opportunities in China

Do you prefer to listen to this article? Click here to listen to the AI-generated version!

Challenges and Opportunities of AI in China

While some see China’s intensive video surveillance as a realization of George Orwell’s bleak vision of the future in “1984”, others argue that China is a safer place as crimes are quickly detected due to these measures.

I, too, am concerned with the question of the benefits and harms of the use of artificial intelligence in public administration in China. In this blog post, I report on my experiences and observations on my recent trip to China.

Travel preparations with hurdles

I reactivated my WeChat account to prepare for my trip. This turned out to be more complicated than I had expected. Only after repeated attempts and several hours of effort did I manage to reactivate my WeChat account with the help of a WeChat friend from Taiwan.

This automatically sets up the WeChat payment service Weixin Pay. I could link it to my Mastercard after scanning my passport and approving a photo using my cell phone camera. I thought to myself: now the public authorities can track my payment activities if they are interested.

My experience with digital payment systems in China

However, WeChat payment did not work in China and the alternative Alipay also failed to verify my credit cards. However, I did meet Germans who had success with Alipay. My attempts to communicate with my credit card processors didn’t change anything.

To my relief, I realized that cash is usually accepted after all and that I could pay online for the high-speed train from Beijing to Shanghai with a foreign credit card. But the locals pay for everything with their phones.

Political moods in China

In personal interactions, my Chinese conversation partners also proved to be critical of the government. As long as people are talking and not typing virtually, they are relaxed. I mainly encountered a pragmatic attitude.
From a transactional analysis perspective, they are treated like children by the authorities.

However, they did not care much as long as they feel safe and can pursue their economic activities. My current view on this: The trend towards personal surveillance will continue despite attempts at regulation, and not just in China. More cameras are being used every year:

 

  • Many installed cameras by public administrations, businesses, and homeowners.
  • In addition, billions of cell phone cameras and big data analysis possibilities worldwide can monitor a large part of our lives.

The power of surveillance: AI, resistance and political stability

Whether in democracies, autocracies, or hybrid systems – those in political power have instruments in their hands that they can use to either benevolently or to maintain power. It is usually a combination. What seems most problematic to me is that potential resistance can be nipped in the bud. The more benevolent a system of rule is, the less resistance there will be.

Using AI, an autocratic government can protect itself almost to the point of unassailability. However, history has proven that a lot of power corrupts. The greater the differences in power and income, the stronger the resistance.

AI in different leadership systems

Even the most powerful autocrats are getting older and younger people are taking over their positions. These changes are often accompanied by power struggles and thus at least temporary destabilization. AI is a new and significant aspect of the leadership system, but not the only relevant one. Other aspects are e.g:

  • Collective benefit maximization and suffering minimization for all relevant stakeholders including minorities. If an authoritarian or democratic regime achieves sustainably good results in this respect, it has a better chance of remaining in office.
  • Intelligence and education of leaders and those being led
  • Beliefs of leaders and those being led (e.g. “only the collective counts” or “it’s safer with us”)
  • The legal and executive system
  • Incentive systems and social stratification

I also wanted to use my trip to China to further develop my views on the following 2 questions in particular:

1. Is democracy always the best form of government?

I remain a supporter of democracy, while at the same time maintaining the view that sometimes intelligent, benevolent autocrats can achieve better results than bad democratically legitimized governments. Over the past three decades, China has achieved amazing results in terms of prosperity, innovation, and security, for example.

My youthful conviction that democratic systems are economically superior to autocratic ones has long been called into question by China’s one-party system. On average, however, intelligent and benevolent parties come into government more often in democracies. Above all, problematic undesirable developments can be prevented more easily and quickly.

2. What are the benefits and harms of the new surveillance possibilities offered by AI?

It is strange for me to see cameras even on forest paths in the Wudang Mountains. At the same time, I have rarely felt as safe at night in cities with millions of inhabitants as I do in China. In addition to security, efficiency is also a strong argument in favor of biometric recognition methods.

I have been used to the idea for years that we are heading towards a transparent world. We are already ensuring that with our smartphones, Apple watches, etc. If we live in a society in which individual freedom and uniqueness are accepted within the harmful limits of others, transparency has little to threaten me.

But that brings us back to question 1: if my data is being used by government agencies to maintain power or execute ideological -isms, then it may already be too late.

Regulation with a sense of proportion

Unfortunately, we know that even liberal democracies can become dictatorships. In recent years, in particular, there have been ominous developments in various Western countries where attempts have been made to weaken democracies through violence or manipulation.

And we have also seen how quickly countries have become involved in wars. I therefore believe that regulation with a sense of proportion is necessary, especially when it comes to the use and storage of collected data.

A summary of my learning journey

For me, this learning journey was not about judging in the sense of right and wrong, but about interpreting developments in the context of history, culture, population density, religion, etc. I took one final inspiration from a leadership outcome that with me: China shows that switching to e-mobility and attractive public transportation is possible. Why are we going the other way again with combustion engines?

Mag. Gunther Fürstberger

Mag. Gunther Fürstberger

CEO | MDI Management Development International

Gunther Fürstberger is a management trainer, author and CEO of Metaforum and MDI – a global consulting company providing solutions for leadership development. His main interest is to make the world a better place through excellent leadership. He has worked for clients including ABB, Abbvie, Boehringer Ingelheim, DHL, Hornbach, PWC and Swarovski. His core competence is leadership in digital transformation. He gained his own leadership experience as HR Manager of McDonald’s Central Europe/Central Asia.  At the age of 20 he already started working as a trainer.

  • LinkedIn

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Why Should We Lead More Sustainably?

Why Should We Lead More Sustainably?

by Aline Depoorter, Jana Wölfl | Jun 26, 2023 | Leadership Impact, Leadership Tips, MDI Inside | 0 comments

Why Should We Lead More Sustainably?

It is hard to imagine most companies today without the concept of “sustainable leadership.” Leaders are not only becoming more privately aware of the impact of climate change but also want to fight it on a corporate level.

In this article, you will learn what exactly is meant by Sustainable Leadership and how we at MDI are doing our part.

What is Sustainable Leadership?

In the Journal of Corporate Citizenship, Sustainable Leadership is defined as a leadership style that incorporates social, economic, and environmental issues into its professional concepts. Sustainable leadership is the collaboration of multiple individuals striving to provide the best possible professional future for future generations.

It is important to have an eco-centric mindset (sustainable consumption both privately and as a company), to plan for the long term, and to innovate new, environmentally friendly methods and models.

This means, then, that in a sustainable management style, strong thought is given to the future generation of workers. By consciously paying attention to the environment and planning sustainably in the company, you directly contribute to a generally more sustainable leadership culture.

What Are the Benefits of Sustainable Leadership?

According to a Forbes article, two-thirds of international organizations are striving to be more sustainable in their business. They are focusing heavily on expanding sustainable approaches because, on the one hand, they are feeling the effects of climate change both physically and financially (especially companies in the agricultural sector).

On the other hand, sustainability strategies lead to better financial performance and thus higher profitability, as a Harvard Business Review study has found.

Another relevant aspect is the fact that many job applicants prefer a sustainable management style and would rather accept a job that shares their values and where they can make a difference. 69% of workers consider the aspect of sustainability when choosing a career.

Sustainable leadership is therefore not only a financial advantage for companies but also an attractive factor for applicants and employees.

Sustainable Leadership

Sustainable Leadership @ MDI

At MDI, we also take sustainability to heart. For starters, we conduct the majority of our seminars virtually, which significantly reduces our carbon footprint by saving our participants’ travel expenses and the company travel and hotel costs.

Since virtual conferences can also have a negative impact on the environment, the quality of the video does not have to be extremely high. The type of technology also plays a major role – according to this, a fiber optic line is a much more environmentally friendly alternative to standard 3G mobile internet.

In addition, when choosing the means of transport, it is also important to us that public connections are used, for example, in order to reduce the ecological footprint. We also make sure that the average of our participants does not have a long or far journey to the seminar location.

However, MDI still has an annual CO2 emission of 119 tons, which is why we offset our greenhouse gas emissions by purchasing certificates from the “VCS & CCBS Forest Conservation Brazil” project. We also strive to implement sustainable management strategies at our main site in Vienna.

In general, we are aware of the state of the environment and we always strive to do our part for a more sustainable leadership culture in the spirit of Sustainable Leadership.

Office Inner Development Goals (IDG) Collaboration Partner

As an official Inner Development Goals (IDG) collaborating partner, we at MDI are committed to actively engaging with other stakeholders, organizations, and individuals, to promote the integration of transformational skills for sustainable development into our Leadership Development. We aim to facilitate dialogue, knowledge sharing, and collaboration to advance the agenda of the IDGs.

Read more on our Inner Development Goals for a Better Leadership World

Sources:

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/263604448_Sustainable_Leadership_Towards_a_Workable_Definition

https://www.forbes.com/sites/forbeshumanresourcescouncil/2022/09/07/the-importance-of-sustainable-leadership/?sh=36805631b6ae

https://hbr.org/2017/09/how-to-quantify-sustainabilitys-impact-on-your-bottom-line

https://news.gallup.com/poll/346619/environmental-record-factor-job-seekers.aspx

Aline Depoorter

Aline Depoorter

Marketing Manager

Aline joined MDI in 2020 as a Marketing Manager with over 10 years of B2B marketing experience. She is primarily responsible for the overall coordinated organisation of MDI’s advertising activities and the management of marketing projects. This includes, among others, the MDI Business Unit SDI as well as Leadership Horizon and personalist.at. Aline is a strong marketing all-rounder with a passion for leadership development, digital transformation and event organisation.

  • LinkedIn
Jana Wölfl

Jana Wölfl

Marketing Assistant

Jana Wölfl works at MDI as a marketing assistant and writes blog posts for our site in addition to her studies at Leiden University.

She also works for SDI and supports us with writing content there as well.

  • LinkedIn

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How to Become a Compassionate Leader – 3 tools

How to Become a Compassionate Leader – 3 tools

by Gunther Fürstberger | Apr 18, 2023 | International leadership development, Leadership in the digital transformation, MDI Inside, Training Insights | 0 comments

How to Become a Compassionate Leader in 3 Steps

At MDI, we not only develop others, but also ourselves. That’s why our CEO Gunther Fürstberger attended a three-day seminar by systems researcher Peter Senge in Stockholm, where he gained some insights. He reports on his experiences in this blog post.

The Compassionate Leadership Masterclass

Peter Senge wrote a classic of leadership literature in 1990 with “The 5th Discipline”. When I read that he was giving a 3-day seminar in Stockholm as part of the Inner Development Goals Initiative, I knew I had to experience it. I thought about Marcus Aurelius who already said “You have to know the great ones of your time”.

The sold out Compassionate Systems Leadership Masterclass by Peter Senge and Gustav Böll took place in the artistic setting of Fotografiska Museum with about 100 participants from March 29 to 31, 2023.

The seminar title sounds a bit complicated. What is Compassionate Systems Leadership all about? A first key to understanding is the organizer: the Inner Development Initiative. In 2016, UN member states adopted the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. Since then, our planet has continued to deteriorate.

A new leadership system for a better planet

Us earthlings have obviously not yet developed the skills and attitude it takes to undo the damage of the industrial age.

This is where the Inner Development Initiative comes in: The change in attitude must begin with the individual. Engaging broadly and deeply with the Inner Development Goals in the 5 categories of Being, Thinking, Relating, Collaborating, and Acting will help achieve the UN Sustainable Development Goals.

Our planet now needs a different kind of leadership than we know from the industrial age. It starts with feeling nature and other people and should lead to some sense of connection with others or even all beings on the planet.

Hardly anyone wants to intentionally cause grievances, but who is really aware of the effects of their own actions? System thinking can help to understand both short- and long-term impacts and interactions a little better.

New findings on two levels

Learning for me has taken place on two levels during these days. On the one hand, I got to know new tools or deepened known tools. On the other hand, the trainers were an inspiration in their handling of the group and their use of methods.

From the numerous thinking tools I pick out the three that I found particularly typical for Compassionate Systems Leadership.

Tool 1

First, as an overview tool, there is the three-legged chair (see figure 1). The legs represent aspiration, reflective conversations, and systems awareness. If one leg is missing, the stool falls over.

Without a creative imagining of a better environment, there is no improvement. Without reflection or a deeper understanding of systems, we quickly end up in dead ends despite having good intentions. 

Three-legged chair

Tool 2

The ladder of connectedness

The second tool is the “ladder of connectedness” (see figure 2), which confused me initially: From bottom to top, the ladder levels are called “agape, neutral presence, altruism, cognitive empathy, in-group empathy, empathic stress, and emotional distance.”

We can harness gravity to move toward deeper connectedness, i.e., strive more toward the lower levels. Confusion can be a sign of real learning. I could not easily assign this idea to an already stored concept. It seemed to fit most closely with a Buddhist understanding.

We may not achieve agape, all-connected love, but we can create a neutral presence even in difficult situations. It also needs the higher levels: A surgeon should manage to distance themselves emotionally for self-protection.

Neutral instead of empathetic

Distance also helps sometimes in conflicts that go round in circles. Empathic stress is something I can relate to as a father of younger children. When my 8-year-old and my 6-year-old argue loudly with each other, it seems easier for me to demand that they stop for the short term because it helps me reduce my internal tension. But in the long run, it doesn’t help me.

In-group empathy may lead to good cooperation in the team, in the company or even in one’s own country, but at the same time it may exclude those who do not belong to the group. I take it upon myself to practice more neutral presence, which is enduring tension and contradiction.

Ladder of Connectedness

Tool 3

Creative Tension

Now our third and a simpler tool (see figure 3): The principle of creative tension. I already knew that a vision needs the right level of challenge, because something we have already achieved or something we can never achieve is not good as a vision.

I found the continuation of the thought interesting: We can imagine the tension between reality and vision as a rubber band. When that tension becomes too uncomfortable for us, we often tend to either lower our aspirations or not tell the whole truth about the current state.

An energy source for change

A good example are an organization’s sustainability goals. When we consciously seek and hold this tension, we tap into the energy source for change. This principle of creativity is also found in theater as drama, in music as tonus, and in the Greek rhetoric. In this respect, it is not a new idea, but it is effective when we strive for change.

I was also interested in what Peter Senge is like as a person. I have already met some of the “greats of the lecture scene” away from the stage and with some of them I had the impression that it was difficult for them to live the conveyed messages themselves. That is also human.

Peter with rubber band

Peter Senge as a Human

In the morning of Day three, there was an emotionally expressed resistance from a participant who questioned the usefulness of the whole seminar. She said Peter Senge held on to the statement that we always have a choice and do not have to be influenced by external circumstances, despite her doubts expressed the day before.

Now I was curious. Will he maybe feel attacked and defend himself or let it stand as an individual opinion? He did not react immediately, but let other participants speak first. Later, he resonated, apologized, thanked for the learning opportunity, and did so with an authenticity and elegance that really impressed me.

He always treated his much younger co-trainer at eye level and was so moved several times that tears came to his eyes.

My summary

In the spirit of Marcus Aurelius, I had the opportunity to meet two greats of our time. Especially the combination of two trainers from different generations fits the challenges of our time.

Even though I have not implemented all of the presented contexts and tools and I am also not sure whether the term Compassionate System Leadership will become widely accepted, I recommend every leader to deal with the basic idea. A more sustainable leadership culture would do us and the planet good.

Mag. Gunther Fürstberger

Mag. Gunther Fürstberger

CEO | MDI Management Development International

Gunther Fürstberger is a management trainer, author and CEO of MDI – a global consulting company providing solutions for leadership development. His main interest is to make the world a better place through sustainable leadership. He has worked for clients including ABB, Abbvie, Boehringer Ingelheim, DHL, Google, Hornbach, PWC and Swarovski. His core competence is leadership in digital transformation. At the age of 20 he already started working as a trainer and he also served as HR manager in international corporations.

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Being a servant leader – Servant Leadership

Being a servant leader – Servant Leadership

by Gunther Fürstberger | Feb 14, 2023 | Leadership Impact, Leadership Tips, MDI Inside | 0 comments

Being a servant leader

“Servant Leadership” is a concept by Robert Greenleaf that describes the manager as a servant to their employees. What this model is specifically about and what its strengths are, you can read in this article.

The origin of the approach

In Hermann Hesse’s “Morgenlandfahrt”, a spiritual seeker experiences how the disappearing servant turns out to be a true leader in retrospect. This story inspired Robert Greenleaf to develop his life’s work, the concept of serving as a leader. A number of well-known authors and CEOs of companies such as Starbucks, Nordstrom and SAS followed him in designing and practicing servant leadership.

A talent management executive at a large international corporation told me one day, “I don’t believe in the honest intent of servant leadership. To me, it seems more like a motivational ploy. In the end, the ‘servant leaders’ earn a lot more than the employees they seem to serve.”

 

Trick or mission? Manipulated motivation to high performance or the revolution of the working world that turns the hierarchy pyramid upside down?

Managers, especially CEOs, should ask themselves what kind of leadership culture they have and want in their own organization.

The purpose of leadership

What is the purpose of leadership? This is a good question to start a reflection on developing your own leadership culture. The why question is closely related to the „for whom” question. Which stakeholders in an organization are given priority? The shareholders, the employees, the customers? Customers, in a broader sense, can also be certain groups in society or even parts of nature for which the organization wants to create added value.

Focus on employees

Servant leadership is usually associated with a focus on employees. Greenleaf sees, among other things, employee growth as a hallmark of servant leadership. “Serving the community” is also found as a frequently mentioned goal. And then there’s the aspect of getting employees to perform at their best by serving. Shareholders understandably feel comfortable with the latter.

The desired leadership culture is derived from the purpose of the organization. If the purpose of the company is to maximize profit, then human resources tend to be seen as a mean. And servant leadership will consequently be a downstream mean to promote the purpose of “motivated, high-performing human resources.”

While the upside-down pyramid is well suited to question a culture of exploitation of the powerful over the subjugated that has been going on for ages, contradictions arise if taken to its logical conclusion. Institutionalized leadership almost always goes hand in hand with power, e.g. with the right to impose positive and negative sanctions. This makes it easier to achieve organizational goals and often also benefits the led, e.g. through higher security.

However, the history of mankind until today shows that power has often been used for one’s own advantage. And in order to maintain the privileged position of the leadership group, subtile and brutal suppression mechanisms have been used.

Leadership Development

For the common good

The inverted pyramid thus also expresses the desire that leadership does not exploit but support and that the leader put others before themselves. For at least 2000 years there have been rulers who have called themselves servants, from Marcus Aurelius to Joseph II, Frederick the Great to Queen Elizabeth.

In this way, they have expressed how they interpret their privileged right to rule for the common good. Even if they did not donate their castles to the poor, they may have done more for the wellbeing of the people with the servant attitude than absolutist rulers with a “the–state–is–me attitude.”

There are also good arguments why a radical reversal of ruling relations and privileges would not be fair: Those who make an above-average commitment to goals that benefit others should also be entitled to a reward. This commitment can be in terms of time, talent and resources. However, it is questionable whether this justifies a CEO earning 147 times as much as a typical worker in Germany and 300 times as much in the USA.

In addition, there is the legal perspective with the legally anchored liability of the CEO. Someone has to take personal responsibility for wrong decisions and this is normally the managing director registered in the commercial register. Payment defaults or accidents can result in liability. Who bears this liability risk if we turn the pyramid upside down?

In the end, it will probably remain with individuals and they must then also have the possibility to implement decisions. We can flatten the pyramid, we can supplement it with self-coordinating networks, we can develop an empowerment culture – employees and managers can service each other – but ultimate, personal responsibility will remain.

Servant leadership in companies

Companies associated with servant leadership include Nordstrom, Fedex, Starbucks, Southwest Airlines (Herb Kelleher), SAS, and Marriott. Let’s look at what each of these companies value. In most companies, the positive impact of employees being treated well is seen in good customer service:

  • For example, the first stated corporate value at Marriott is “Put people first.”
  • Nordstrom also placed a lot of emphasis on customer service 120 years ago. “Do whatever it takes to take care of the customer”. (John Nordstrom 1901). This attitude has been passed down generations in the entrepreneurial family and has been enriched with humility and employee service orientation.
  • FedEx has built a servant leadership culture. FedEx believes that engaged employees – individuals who trust the organizational goals and have a strong desire to contribute – will implement the organizational plan and ultimately ensure the success of the organization.
  • At Starbucks, long-term CEO Howard Schultz emphasizes the company’s purpose: “Servant leadership is about serving a higher purpose, and when that higher purpose is recognized by everyone in the organization, everyone is indeed a servant of that purpose.” Kelly Creighton describes the organizational culture at Starbucks as: “A culture of belonging, inclusion and diversity.” It also always puts its employees first and encourages everyone to grow into leadership roles within the company. At Starbucks, employees are encouraged to build strong relationships with each other and collaborate and communicate openly. Employees can ask questions and reach out to their supervisors. Ultimately, Starbucks takes the view that “how you treat your employees is how you treat your customers.“
  • Jim Goodnight, founder and CEO of SAS says “Treat employees as if they make a difference and they will.”
  • At Southwestern Airlines, the empowerment idea is especially held dear: Colleen Barrett, former president of Southwest Airlines, explained, “Our whole leadership philosophy is very simple: treat your employees right, and good things will happen.” She assumes that Southwest Airlines has created policies, procedures and rules, but ultimately empowers its employees to use their own common sense and good judgment when needed. It trusts its employees to do the right thing when necessary and does not reprimand them for doing so. For example, if a stranded customer needs a hotel room, employees are empowered to help them if they can. And when dealing with the public, employees are encouraged to find the best solutions and approaches that make sense for the situation at hand.
hackatons create innovations and ideas for leaders

Conclusion

The term “servant leadership” could be misunderstood in the sense of continuity and exclusivity. I.e., that the manager always acts as a servant to the employees and that therefore, there would be no room for the manager to be supported by the employees. This seems onesided and unrealistic. Robert Greenleaf also called his first publication “The servant as leader” and wanted to emphasize that the desire to serve should come before the desire to lead.

Just as the communist countermovement to industrial age capitalism did not yet represent the final chapter of economic history, servant leadership also offers itself more as a line of thought and less as the terminus of a leadership culture. If we understand leading and serving as polarity, then this makes it possible to find a suitable balance for the situation in the interaction between employees and managers.

Similarly, the misunderstanding would be that serving goes in one direction. Namely, that only managers should serve their employees. Transactionally, this would be a reversal of the parent-ego to child-ego relationship. Traditionally, leadership has been seen mostly patriarchal and sometimes matriarchal, i.e. the leader has to care for the children similar to parents, but can demand obedience.

The inversion of the parent-child relationship does not really work. The relationship of two adults who support each other would be more constructive. Especially nobles and rich people have servants. The term servant indicates a subordinate position. This could be resolved in a contemporary understanding of leadership: Employees and managers support each other, partly in different ways and with different means, but at eye level, with mutual appreciation.

“If you support your employees first, they will support you.”

This application of the reciprocity principle will often bring the desired, voluntary support from employees to leadership. But there is a more enduring motivation than this psychological barter: when leaders and employees pursue common goals or a shared mission out of inner conviction and support each other to the best of their ability.

Ultimately, it is the intent of the servant leader that makes the difference: Do they care at least as much about the well-being of others as they does about their own, or do they just want to make employees feel serviced so they will work harder?

The term “servant leadership” is misleading to many. But undoubtedly, one of the most important tasks of leaders is to support their employees. This starts with perceiving and listening to what the employees need from the leader.

In summary, the main meaning of Servant Leadership could be seen as a pendulum swinging away from autocratic and exploitative leadership, but not as a final leadership concept. Rather, partnership-based cooperation at eye level between employees and managers is more suitable for this in order to pursue the jointly shared corporate mission.

Sources:

• https://www.manager-magazin.de/unternehmen/karriere/ceos-verdienen-300-mal-so-viel-wie-arbeiter-a-1041409.html

• https://www.amazon.de/Spiele-Erwachsenen-Psychologie-menschlichen-Beziehungen/dp/3499613506

• https://www.amazon.de/Die-Psychologie-%C3%9Cberzeugens-Robert-Cialdini-ebook/dp/B01MUDPFCC

• https://www.marriott.com/about/culture-and-values/history.mi

• https://hrdailyadvisor.blr.com/2018/06/01/5- real-life-brands-embody-servant-leadership/ • https://www.pallikkutam.com/edu-news/servant-leadershipstories#:~:text=FedEx%20 believes%20that%20engaged%20employees,and%20ultimately%20ensure%20organi-

zational%20success.

Mag. Gunther Fürstberger

Mag. Gunther Fürstberger

CEO | MDI Management Development International

Gunther Fürstberger is a management trainer, author and CEO of Metaforum and MDI – a global consulting company providing solutions for leadership development. His main interest is to make the world a better place through excellent leadership. He has worked for clients including ABB, Abbvie, Boehringer Ingelheim, DHL, Hornbach, PWC and Swarovski. His core competence is leadership in digital transformation. He gained his own leadership experience as HR Manager of McDonald’s Central Europe/Central Asia.  At the age of 20 he already started working as a trainer.

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Workation evaluation – lessons we have learned so far

Workation evaluation – lessons we have learned so far

by Jana Wölfl | Nov 28, 2022 | Agile Leadership, Best Practice, MDI Inside | 0 comments

Vacation during working hours seems like a dream – but is it really?

We provide a workation evaluation, weigh the pros and cons and look at the lessons we have learned so far.

* Workation evaluation – Lessons Learned so far

Workation – Work and Vacation – has become a popular tool in recent years for companies to give employees a little relief. After all, who doesn’t want to escape the gray daily work life for a few weeks?

In this article, you’ll learn a little more about what we have learned from our workation experiences so far, and what possible consequences it could entail.

Work on vacation

At first glance, it seems strange to put the two words work and vacation together. Normally, when we are on vacation, we don’t want to think about our job, we want to switch off.

In the past, digital nomads in particular, i.e. remote workers, were not tied to a specific workplace. But in the age of digitalization and technological progress, more employees get the opportunity – regardless of the industry – to work from somewhere else.

Workation is about escaping your work routine.

For a limited time, employees can travel to a specific country and do their work from there. Whether from the beach, a big city or the mountains – the location doesn’t matter. The only important thing is that the Internet connection is stable enough and that the agreed times are adhered to. The rest is mostly up to the employees.

Is all that glitters gold?

Workation evaluation – Lessons Learned so far

Vacation during working hours seems like a dream at first. But is this concept really ideal? We weigh the pros and cons.

Pros:

  • The advantages are obvious. You discover new places and experience a different culture.
  • In addition to the usual work tasks, you can relax a little.
  • Change of scenery: Everyone needs a change from the usual four office walls.
  • Travel stimulates creativity. New impulses arise from new impressions.
  • Flexibility – employees are free to decide where they want to work from.
  • Traveling with other team members can additionally be a good way to get to know each other better and build a stronger team

2022 Facts and figures about workation

Clearly, the concept of Workation is extremely attractive to employees.

But we also come across some benefits for companies themselves. According to statistics from workation.com

  • 93% of employees are more productive than before.
  • This increases the performance of remote working by 20% overall.
  • In turn, the company saves per remote employee $11,000 per year.
  • In addition, 86% of Millennials want more flexibility in the workplace.
  • Workation can be a great solution to create more agility and increase employee satisfaction.

Cons:

  • Complete relaxation is not guaranteed. You probably think about work most of the time and so you can’t switch off completely. Especially when your job is hectic and you have a lot to do it’s hard to enjoy the vacation part of workation.
  • Your technical equipment – laptop, cables, etc. – adds extra baggage.
  • If the Internet connection is not stable, you can hardly do your job.

Maintaining a better work-life balance with workation

In the end, however, it is worth giving the concept of workation a chance. In most cases, employees return more relaxed and can continue working with renewed energy. Complications can’t be avoided, but after all, they also arise during normal travel.

We at MDI have already tested workation ourselves. If you want to know how it went, you can read about it here 🙂

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Learning in the agile age: waterfall or cycle?

Learning in the agile age: waterfall or cycle?

by Dominik Etzl | Jun 28, 2022 | Agile Leadership, Best Practice, MDI Inside | 0 comments

What is the reality of learning in large companies today?

We often see in a wide variety of companies that there is a department that is single-handedly responsible for designing training programs, then planning them through from A to Z in advance, with a strong focus on teaching abstract models.

What’s the problem with that? Firstly, the work context is too complex for any department to know what the employees’ real-world challenges are. Secondly, the pace of change is now too fast for training to be valid over time. And thirdly: Us humans are not purely rational beings who learn on the basis of theoretical models, but also need “heart” and “hand” to change.

About the author

​Dominik Etzl is Solution Development Manager and Trainer at MDI Management Development GmbH and Managing Director of Metaforum International. His focus is on topics of digital transformation, as well as OKR (Objectives & Key Results), agile leadership and lateral leadership. His goal is to support managers in leading a valuable contribution to their environment: on an individual, corporate and societal level.

Waterfall vs. cycle

It seems obvious: If employees are inefficient somewhere, we choose an expert on learning who is qualified by his long-time expertise to create the perfect learning program with the appropriate content.

Although this seems very obvious at first glance, this approach belongs to the outdated mindset of taylorism. This sees people as machines working on an assembly line, for which all that is needed is an engineer who knows which update will increase efficiency. Learning here resembles a waterfall, where from start to finish one thing leads causally to the next.

In theory, it looks like this:

  1. Pre-reading X leads to
  2. Aha-experience, leads to
  3. Interest in more, leads to
  4. Active involvement in the seminar, leads to
  5. Trying out in everyday life, leads to
  6. Better business results, …

Is learning even plannable?

This approach cannot be dismissed completely. After all, looking back on a learning experience, correlations can be seen! Entire models and companies have specialized in optimizing this approach. For example, Dr. Donald Kirkpatrick has made the valuable contributions with the “New World Model” that a training program must be designed “back to front”. One must derive the necessary behaviors etc. from the desired goal and not vice versa.

This has its merits. Nevertheless, these approaches are built on an assumption: Learning could be planned.

Thought exercise

But is it? Please think of one thing in which you have achieved mastery. Would your personal path to mastery, as it happened, have been predictable? Could an expert have given you a coherent chain of experiences that you just had to follow blindly to get really good at? Of course not. Nevertheless, in practice we see far too often that people compulsively try to understand learning as a complicated, i.e. mechanically transparent problem.

Learning is a profoundly complex problem

However, it is true that learning is a deeply complex problem and thus cannot be planned. Whenever we deal with people, especially knowledge workers, we find ourselves in the complex cynefin quadrant. Thus, the expert loses its validity. There are no more “good practices” to follow, only “emergent practices.” This means it takes an iterative, collaborative, and holistic approach to learning. So the metaphor for learning – especially in the digitized 21st century – is not the waterfall, but the circle.

The 3×3 Rule

In what follows, we don’t invent anything new, but let the effective laws of learning work for themselves. What we are doing is bringing 3 elements of agile learning, which have mostly been seen separately, into a coherent picture.

Element 1: 3 process steps

Agile has defined – in complex situations – iteration as the most efficient way to reach the goal. The mantra is: long planning is a waste of time because the context is in flux. It is more efficient to take small steps and to refocus on the goal at regular intervals. This applies to project management (e.g., SCRUM) or product development (e.g., design thinking) just as it does to learning: “What small learning iteration do I need right now to master tomorrow’s deadline better than yesterdays?”

Big Picture

At the same time, it’s important not to lose sight of the big picture in learning either. Similar to business strategies, there needs to be some sort of vision or north star to follow. This can also be questioned at regular intervals. In this way, short-term and long-term goals form a symbiosis that optimally supports the learner in the learning journey.

Thought Exercise

Join in: What’s a skill you’re proud of? How did you learn it? – Think through the process: Whatever you learned, at some early point you had at least a rough idea of what you wanted to learn next (planning). Then you jumped into the more or less deep end (acting). Finally, you were either happy because you managed one more pace in the water, or you pulled yourself out of the water exhausted and analyzed what could be better (evaluating). Then the cycle starts all over again.

Let’s take a figurative look at this – indeed, deeply human – movement: These 3 process steps form the outer framework of the MDI learning circle: plan, act & evaluate. They are the skeleton that gives the learning process its shape:

Element 2: 3 levels of action

Running in circles does not automatically make you better. Us humans are living beings and need stimulation on 3 levels, which only as a coherent whole results in change.

Mostly unconscious, but nevertheless present in every learning process, are these 3 effect levels of learning:

  1. Brain: understanding why and how something works
  2. Heart: feeling that the current situation is not good, or that another one would be better
  3. Hand: trying – only by doing the world changes

Learning can start at any point

Tip: The 3 levels of impact are not chronological, but learning can start at any point. What is important is not when, but that all 3 are stimulated. Think of a 3-legged stool: If one leg is missing – no matter which one – the stool tilts. Three of them create stability.

What happens if one of the three “legs” is missing?

  • A learner without “brain” (cognitive insight) is at best a “blind benefactor” – and at worst wasted potential because he does not see when, how and why action should be taken.
  • A learner without “heart” (emotional responsiveness) is at best a “rational optimizer” and at worst a narcissistic manipulator.
  • A learner without “hand” (practical experience) is at best a “benevolent theorist” and at worst an “aloof know-it-all”.

These three types are extreme expressions to illustrate the co-dependency of the 3 levels of effectiveness. In practice you will find these types in a weakened and mixed form. Do you recognize someone?

Example

But let’s also look at a positive example. For example, on the topic of giving feedback:
Giving critical feedback in such a way that the other person receives it as a gift is an art. It has to be learned. Are you good at it? If so, please recall a specific feedback situation. (If not: Choose another skill you have mastered.) – If you are a master of feedback, you have certainly given and received critical feedback frequently (hand). – You’ve felt at several moments how it works, how good authentic feedback feels, and how painful hidden or unfair criticism is (heart). And you cognitively understood that critical feedback is a value-add that moves you and your colleagues forward, even if it’s not always pleasant (brain).

Note: Often it’s not stand-alone learning moments, but many small “AHAs” that lead to the big “eureka.”

Element 3: 3 Stakeholders

The third part of the 3×3 rule is about stakeholders. Why? Learning success in business is proven to be a collaborative success. It takes several to pull together and make their respective contributions. Who is that specifically? Learning research clearly shows that 3 stakeholders in organizations are crucial for learning to actually work (cf. Weinbauer-Heidel, Ibeschitz-Manderbach):

  1. Learner
  2. Organization (especially HR & leadership)
  3. Trainer

The learner
he learner naturally bears a main responsibility for the interplay of learning and applying. What matters most is the learner’s own will and confidence to apply the content in the short and long term.

The organization
The organization’s learning lever lies primarily in providing a system for defining and evaluating short- and long-term learning objectives that learners can use as a guide.

The Trainer
The biggest levers to learning success on the trainer side are clearly communicating expectations, teaching relevant content, allowing active practice in the seminar and conducting implementation planning for applying what is learned in the work context.

Similar to the 3 levels of impact, all 3 stakeholders play essential roles in the success of learning in continuing education. If one of the 3 stakeholders does not fulfill his task, potentials remain unused and in the worst case the learning construct collapses like a house of cards.

The MDI Learning Circle

Finally, let’s take a step back and widen our view again from the individual element to the big picture. What does the 3×3 rule tell us? It sums up how learning works in an agile environment. Here you can find everything summarized in one picture:

  • The 3 process steps: plan, act, evaluate.
  • The 3 levels of action: Brain, Heart, Hand
  • The 3 stakeholders: Learner, Organization, Trainer

Take all 3 elements into account and you can be sure that the learning success in your organization will increase!  Note: This article addresses almost exclusively your brain – not your heart or your hand! ? So consider: what concrete next steps can you take to establish a more agile learning culture in your organization?

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Next Work Monopoly – Playfully design your new workplace culture

In recent years, the world of work has steadily evolved from static office workplaces to more flexible work options, and the effects of the last year have made this transformation even more rapid. Due to technological progress and, in particular, digitalization and widespread accessibility, employees are no longer tied to a fixed workplace, but can carry out their work from various locations.

For the sustainable development of hybrid working, this journey needs to be actively shaped – in other words, we need a workplace culture strategy.

We have been able to gather a lot of experience with mobile working in recent months – now at the very latest it is time to share this experience in the team and to determine how you want to implement “Next Work” together in your team.

Michael Weiss has developed “Playful Collaboration” for this purpose, in which the participants quickly work out possibilities for implementing these changed requirements together in the team using a playful approach!

Possible Topics:

  • What impact does mobile working have on organization, leadership and teams?
  • How do we master the transformation together?
  • How can we increase engagement and thus also the company’s success?
  • Which form of work is right for whom?
  • What values and attitudes are needed for mobile working?
  • What influence do different generations have on the change in collaboration?
  • How do we succeed in feeling and developing as a team, even at a distance?
  • How can we ensure the productive implementation of the changed ways of working by jointly designing our working environment?

Benefits:

  • You know what advantages Next Work offers and can use them for your company.
  • You know the most important requirements that have to be met in order to implement these new working environments.
  • You know about the different needs of the generations and can use them for your company.
  • You know the most important requirements for communication and collaboration that you can implement together in the digital working world.
  • You can support and use hybrid working for individual employees as well as for the entire team.

Interview with Michael Weiss –

Next Work Monopoly – a Playfully design your new workplace culture

Dear Michael, you created the Monopoly board game “Next Work – Playful Collaboration”. What’s behind it and why is it a game changer for the new world of work?

It enables teams to exchange their attitudes and perspectives on mobile working in a playful way. In this way, employees get to know each other better, and the respective manager can agree on rules and framework conditions for the implementation of mobile working that suit his or her team.

Why do organizations, managers and their teams need this game right now?

Many teams are working mobile very successfully, mostly forced by the pandemic. Organizations and leaders now often want to bring their employee:s back into the office, which many employees don’t really want to do. Therefore, it is now important to find viable implementations for ALL, that are easily enabled by this game.

Are there any special game or feedback rules that need to be observed?

The rules of the game are very simple, based on those of Monopoly. When answering the questions, it is important that there are no justifications or counter-arguments, but that there is a high interest in getting to know the different attitudes and points of view of the other players.

“Next Work” has already been used in various companies. What have been your most important lessons learned so far?

The game is a lot of fun for all participants, the answers are honest and informal, and there have been some “aha effects” and surprises when attitudes and perspectives are expressed that the others have not heard before. The keyword-like documentation of the answers is very important, so that the team can derive concrete implementation plans afterwards, and the leader recognizes which framework and rules of the game the team needs.

What criteria must be met in order to use this game successfully?

There must be an unconditional willingness on the part of the organization and the respective leader to actually implement the findings from the game. Therefore, time and financial resources should also be available to enable this implementation.

For whom is the game rather unsuitable?

For players who do not plan to implement the findings together afterwards. The exception here are executives who play together in order to get to know different approaches to mobile working, and who also form opinions in the process.

Is there a hybrid or online version of the game?

Yes, the game can be carried out both hybrid and online with a webcam transmission.

Michael Weiss

Michael Weiss

Management consultant, trainer and coach

Over 25 years as a manager in the field of human resources, 5 years as managing director of one of the largest in-house training academies, 20 years as an independent management consultant, trainer and coach for various companies, lecturer on human resources topics at the Vienna University of Economics and Business Administration, WIFI Vienna, bfi Vienna and ARS, long-standing human resources and organizational developer in the financial services sector. 

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By the way, Michael Weiss + “Next Work Monopoly” will also be attending our upcoming Leadership Horizon Conference 😉 

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