Transcript Slide 1

Chairs and
Directors Training
Workshop:
Leadership and
Communication
Todd Norton,
Associate Professor, Murrow
College of Communication
Recording date of this workshop is
October 23, 2014.
Some of the rules and procedures
discussed in this workshop are
subject to change.
Please check university resources
before relying exclusively
on this recorded presentation.
Choose an image that best describes
your idea of a “leader”
•
Which leadership style best
suits you? Why?
 What convictions are
associated with this ideal
leader?
 What actions do you expect
from this leader
Leadership Communication
Styles
Please suggest contexts when the
•
Concern for people vs.
production/task
following styles are effective and
ineffective
•
Country club: emotionally supportive
 Work assignments are “suggested”
•
Impoverished: effectively absent
 workers can “Fend for themselves” b/c
they “know jobs better than anyone”
•
Middle of the road: balances
demands
•
Team leader: collaborates
 Jointly formulate goals, schedules,
responsibilities
•
Authority/obedience: Directs
 good in a pinch, but criticizes and
assigns blame
Aspects of building an
adaptive culture
Strong/Weak Cultures
•
Adaptive cultures are nimble, they build employees and
momentum to grow and change as needed to achieve its goals.
 Avoid lay-offs, focus on long-term career paths (promotion),
support employee training & development, empower
employees through innovative use of organizational structure
and resources. As a result, lower turn-over and reduced costs.
•
Inert cultures are static, they tend not to motivate or inspire
employees, leading to stagnation over time (negative entropy).
 Short-term employment according to org needs, minimal
investment in employees, performance is not clearly tied to
reward. As a result, increased cost from turn-over and loafing.
Consistency is key!!
Three Building Blocks of Organizational Culture – Andy Freire:
1)
Behavior: e.g., how much time do we really spend
incorporating the things we say are core to our
organization?
2)
Symbols: e.g., how much time is spent on the things we
say are core? What stories do we tell about ourselves?
3)
Processes: e.g., how much does contribution to what we
claim are core activities impact raises?
Leadership in Adaptive Culture
Organizations:
•
Defines a core mission through simple words (easy to understand
and explain)
•
Aligns words with actions
•
Serves the customer (stakeholder)
•
Grows the business
•
Develops employees
Leadership in Inert Culture
Organizations
•
Articulates a confusing and complex mission
•
Places member needs ahead of customer needs
•
Emphasizes personal gain over team achievement
(example is Enron’s Rank & Yank team assessment)
Boeing Vision Statement
•
The Boeing Vision is: People working together as a global enterprise for aerospace
leadership. How will we get there?
• Run healthy core businesses
• Leverage our strengths into new products and services
• Open new frontiers
•
In order to realize our vision, we consider where we are today and where we would
like to be tomorrow. There are certain business imperatives on which Boeing
places a very strong emphasis.
• Detailed customer knowledge and focus that understand, anticipate and respond to customer
needs.
• Large-scale systems integration that continually develops and advances technical excellence.
• A lean enterprise characterized by efficiency, supplier management, short cycle times, high
quality and low transaction costs.
5 Steps to Create/Redefine
Organizational Culture
1.
Define 3-4 guiding principles or values that define
who you are as an organization.
2.
Use the principles to guide every business
discussion and decision.
 Words are meaningless unless they spur new
behavior
 Use guiding principles to guide discussions and
decisions
3.
Build the principles into all your performance and
management systems.
 Make sure that your people and performance
management systems measure reward behaviors
consistent with guiding principles
5 Steps to Create/Redefine Corp.
Culture
Create a 2-3 day leadership development experience that
reinforces the behavior and values consistent with the
principles, and insist all senior leaders attend.
4.


You need to constantly reinforce words with action
Create an experience based leadership development program that
reinforces the values and behaviors consistent with guiding
principles
Expect resistance, involve stay the course with passion and
patience.
5.

Expect some cynicism at first
Mission vs. Vision vs. Slogan vs.
Objectives
•
Principles, values and convictions are the commitments driving
your organization
•
Mission is a clear, concise statement about why your
organization exists.
•
Vision is the overall picture of where we are headed, what is
possible and what the future looks like
•
Slogan = public messages to represent organizational mission to
public
•
Strategic Objectives are deliverable outcomes of your Mission
CEREO “About” page
Building on grassroots energy and passion, CEREO serves as a progressive hub for
environmental research, education and outreach at Washington State University.
With a reputation for excellence and international reach, CEREO seeks to apply
innovative technologies and management tools to the ever-growing challenges of climate
change and environmental sustainability.
CEREO’s dynamic network of faculty, staff, students, and industry leaders works to
resolve environmental issues through the power of collaborative partnerships. Guided by a
roster of distinguished scientists, center members explore the connections between natural
ecosystems and the human aspects that underlie environmental change.
CEREO operates as a clearinghouse for a wide range of environmental projects such as
watershed management, tracking the nitrogen cycle, and studying urban socio-ecological
systems. Projects are initiated and conducted by a diverse community of people with
expertise reaching from agriculture, biology, and communication to engineering and
education. CEREO also brings a strong social science component into play, providing
perspectives from experts in economics, political science, philosophy, anthropology, and
more.
CEREO offers timely interdisciplinary expertise and problem-solving skills. For example,
the center can help researchers better incorporate computer science skills into their
environmental studies by merging data with informatics. CEREO hopes to prepare WSU
students for real-world careers in the environmental arena by providing training and
workshops unavailable elsewhere on campus.
Project ideas and involvement are welcome from anyone in the WSU community.
Crisis Communication
The term “crisis communication” is generally used in two ways:
1.
It describes the communication activities of an organization or
agency facing a crisis. They need to communicate about that
crisis to their organization, various partners, and the public.
2.
The term “crisis communication” is associated more with
emergency management and the need to inform and alert the
public about an event. In this case, crisis communication
might refer to the community leaders’ efforts to inform the
public.
Typically:
Occurs unexpectedly
May not be in the organization’s control
Requires an immediate response
May cause harm to the organization’s reputation, image, or
viability (CDC Crisis & Emergency Risk Communication, 2012)
Crisis Communication
Examples
KSC continues investigation into employee fired for
misconduct, releases emails
Amy Bishop, former professor at University of Alabama,
Huntsville, …fatally shooting three colleagues and wounding
three others at the school in 2010
Syracuse University bravely saves students from exposure to
journalism
Crisis Communication:
do’s and do not’s
University Considerations &
Resources
•
As appropriate coordinate with College Dean,
Emergency Management, University Communications,
Facility Operations, Environmental Health & Safety,
Human Resources, Washington Attorney General –
WSU Office
•
Build relationships with at least some of these critical
resources before you are in a crisis, including contact
information
•
Scan your environment for potential crises—the bulk of
crises are ‘smoldering’ crises
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