Friday, July 22, 2016

A520.8.2RB_LeeDarrell - Polyarchic Principles


As this course begins to wind down, we are left with one final blog entry. This one is proving to be the hardest that I have had to complete yet. That is for two reasons that I will address momentarily. First, let me present the topic. We have been asked to discuss what was presented to us as the “four + four principles” which form the basis of the organization level of complex adaptive leadership. We were given a supplemental reading guide which outlined what these principles are. According to Obolensky (2010), they are:
·         Implicit purpose     < ------ >   Explicit objectives
·         Freedom to act        < ------ >   Boundaries to confine
·         People’s skill/will   < ------ >   Few simple rules
·         Ambiguity/chaos    < ------ >   Unambiguous feedback
Recently, I completed some fairly in-depth training on how to navigate our library at Embry-Riddle. We have instant access to thousands of databases, journals, books, videos, etc. If you know how to properly search and navigate the resources, research at the Hunt Library is a snap. However, one of the reasons that I am having a difficult time with this assignment is that it appears that this four + four model is a unique framework. I can research and support the individual elements of it but it has proven difficult to find research that supports the overall model as a whole. (With that being said, the model that Obolensky provides is brilliantly supported and I have no doubt as to its validity.) The second and more pressing issue is that I am finding that this is hitting a little bit closer to home than some of the other topics that we have discussed. I can see each of the shortfalls within the structure of my own team at work and I am having to swallow a serious pride pill and admit that my organization has not – or more like I have not – been properly applying these principles.
What I want to do here is first define what each of these principles mean and then I will tie them all together with how I can apply them within my own organization.
Let’s begin with the first two principles – implicit purpose and explicit objectives. “Purpose is what lends an underlying meaning to day-to-day activities” (Obolensky, 2010, p. 104). Identifying the purpose of an organization is a very “personal” question and one that can be very difficult but necessary to answer. The purpose cannot just be to produce revenue or contracts as there is no motivator for sustained engagement with that. “'What's your purpose?' is a tough question to answer, but one that, I believe, is essential if you want your [organization] to have any emotional relationship with its own people and, more importantly, its customers” (Earle, 2015, np). I somewhat alluded to it already but that ties directly to a clear and explicit objective. The objective must support the purpose of the organization. “The objectives have to make sense, and allow the individual to see how his targets fit into the greater whole” (Obolensky, 2010, p. 107). Objectives must be SMART (Specific, Measureable, Action-oriented, Realistic, and Time-oriented).
Next we have freedom to act and boundaries to confine. The easiest way to define freedom to act is empowerment which requires a leader’s willingness to let go. I know that I have already discussed empowerment in a previous blog. However, I think it is important that we continue to be reminded of the potential devastation that awaits an organization that will not empower its people. A leader/manager that does not trust his/her employees to act without constant supervision is a micromanager. However, “the micromanager is the true incompetent: the one bad apple that spoils the whole bunch” (Stack, 2013, p. 102). According to Obolensky (2010), there are three main barriers to managers letting go. First are good intentions taken to excess. A manager usually has the most experience and expertise. When they see something being done incorrectly, they often will step in and try to take control. Second, there is the fear of poor performance which leads to a lack of trust. Leaders are often the first to be blamed when something goes awry so it can be harder to let go and be responsible for the work of another. Third is the overall lack of awareness and understanding of empowerment. It may be a foreign concept to many leaders so they don’t know how to implement it. However, at the other end of the empowerment spectrum, there are boundaries to consider. Every organization with have different boundaries but some boundaries must clearly be set for a hierarchy to exist within the organization. Think of a young adult that still lives at home. The adult has freedoms that a child does not. However, they are still bound by the rules of guidance of their parents until they move out on their own. They may have freedom to come and go as they choose and live their life how they please but they still have limits on consumption of energy and entering into legally binding contracts within the home.
The next principles are workers’ skill/will and being grounded with a few simple rules. This seems to me to be something that falls heavily upon the shoulders of the HR department of an organization as they need to identify and hire those with the skill and will to work with an organization but that doesn’t mean that we, as managers will have no part in helping guide these areas. Skill falls into two broad areas: technical (referring to the ability to complete a given task) and operational (referring to how the task is completed) (Obolensky, 2010). Though we can help train on a skill, we can do extreme damage to the will of those within our organization. “The biggest barrier to people’s motivation in an emerging polyarchy is the tendency for leaders/managers to demotivate by using inappropriate oligarchic behaviours” (Obolensky, 2010, p. 118). So what are leaders doing that demotivate their teams? “The most significant demotivators identified are lack of praise and recognition, a demotivating management style and managers not dealing with underperformance in others” (McCarthy, 2015, np). (I will address this just a little more in my follow up momentarily.) Similar to empowerment, boundaries must be set. When your team has both the skill and the will, they must still be grounded with a few simple rules. These can be broken into two areas with which we are most likely all familiar within our own organizations- operational rules (standard operating procedures) and behavior rules (core values) (Obolensky, 2010).
The final two principles are tolerance of ambiguity and chaos and unambiguous feedback. This actually reminds me a little of “Jurassic Park” where Dr. Malcom is discussing chaos theory. The bottom line is that we strive for predictability but we accept that there are some gray areas in the operation of an organization. Not everything is going to go as planned and we must learn to accept and expect a little bit of chaos. At the same time, we need clear and concise feedback within the organization. When there is chaos, the reports on the chaos need to be specific. Though we can’t hope to eliminate future chaos, we can understand how to react when similar situations arise.
So now for the most relevant part – how this all ties into my organization right now. First, I believe that my team has forgotten our purpose and part of that is due to unobtainable objectives given to us that don’t match what our purpose actually is. This morning, I actually shared a video with my team, though, by a leadership coach by the name of Simon Sinek. In his video, Sinek talks about focusing on “why” instead of “what” within an organization (2009). (I actually have the link posted in my references below. I HIGHLY encourage you to watch the video. I used the same video as a reference in my weekly discussion forum as well. It will change the way that you view your role within your organization.) As an Army recruiter center leader, I need to remember why we do what we do. I don’t want to get into a philosophical debate over the morality of being a Soldier as I know that there are those that disagree with it and that is fine but the fact is that our nation does require a strong Army to maintain our way of life. As recruiters, if we do not find quality applicants to join us, those that are already in the Army are unable to have relief. That means more time away from home and their lives. That means more exposure to hazardous conditions. We recruit because there are people in the world that wish to do our nation harm and we stand ready to defend the people. It is so easy for us to lose focus of that when our upper leadership can only see numbers on a computer screen and place unrealistic goals on us for making a specific number of appointments for the week with no focus on quality. Our objective is six appointments each regardless of the conditions of the week. For whatever reason, the human side of everything is removed from that number. It doesn’t matter if you are tasked out for two days that week or if the weather forces the office to be close. We MUST make six appointments. When people start documenting in the system that Wal Mart or Duane Reade agreed to an appointment, that proves that we have lost our focus. The objective needs to shift to quality over quantity. We have voiced that complaint and it has fallen on deaf ears it seems.
The next two principles of freedom to act and the boundaries to confine are so closely related to the skill/will of the team and the simple rules that I am just going to lump them together here for how they should be applied within my center. Right now, I have 10 members on my team (including myself). Sadly, I do not trust all 10 of them. The fact is that they do not all possess the technical skill or the will but some of them do. Where I have failed as a leader is by not treating them all as individuals. What I mean by that is that I have perhaps empowered those that should be trained a bit more first. But do you remember that quote that I said that I would address a little more? This is it. The worst part is that I believe that I have allowed myself to demotivate my team at times by not dealing with underperformance properly. I allow myself to judge intentions instead of just actions. I used to be at the other extreme of this spectrum. As a military instructor, we were almost required to micromanage. I was required to scream and yell to motivate. I hated that aspect. I felt like a monster so I have perhaps now allowed myself to be too much of a nice guy and not properly address underperformance. Though I still enforce barriers and rules, I perhaps have set too wide of a limit. In other words, the line is pretty far out there. If you cross it, though, I will whip you back within the boundaries. However, I think that I set the boundaries so wide to where it would be difficult and intentional to cross them.
Lastly, the principles of chaos and unambiguous feedback – this may be the area where I have the least experience. Or maybe it is where I have the most experience. As paradoxical as that may seem, I believe that we always seem to operate right on the edge of controlled chaos. That has been the case through my entire career. I think it is just some common place that I simply don’t recognize it anymore. It still happens every day at work for me. We make projections for processing and I just expect half of them to not stick. I operate expecting every waiver to be denied and every test to be a failure. Perhaps it saves me from disappointment but it also protects me from giving my leadership inaccurate data. When a waiver is approved, I just know that I have to produce that much less for the following phase line.
Again, this was one of the hardest blogs for me to write. I believe that it is forcing me to recognize where I am failing as a manager and a leader. But it isn’t all doom and gloom. I also see where I can improve and inspire my team to improve. I also can see where I have been successful.



Earle, J. (2015). Frontline: What's your purpose?. London: Haymarket Media Group.
McCarthy, K. (2015). Leadership secrets. Dublin: Institute of Chartered Accountants in Ireland.
Obolensky (2010).  Getting Chaos and Complexity to Work. Chapter 7, p. 101-129
Sinek, S. (2009, September). Simon Sinek: How great leaders inspire action. [Video file]. Retrieved from                         http://www.ted.com/talks/simon_sinek_how_great_leaders_inspire_action#t-25805

Stack, L. (2013). Managing effectively without micromanaging. Alexandria: Association for          Talent Development.

Friday, July 15, 2016

A520.7.2RB_LeeDarrell - Importance of having a coach and mentor

Last week, I blogged about the common roles on teams – the task-facilitator role and the relationship-builder role. Defining those roles was just one aspect of what we studied. The overall subject was the effective use of teams. That correlates perfectly to what we are studying this week – coaching and mentoring. I am writing this blog with the assumption that teams are effective. Yes, it is true that there are those lone wolves out there that probably work best on their own but, in the professional world, that is most likely the exception and not the rule. The purpose of this entry is to focus on the smallest team – two: a protégé and a mentor.

There were some interesting points that I discovered in my research this week. Some of these points were included in my class discussion as well. There are two terms that we have most likely all heard and probably often view as being synonymous. Leadership coaching and leadership mentoring are related but are actually two separate things. Perhaps it is because I don’t have any professional experience in the “real world” yet but until this week I never even considered that those are two separate concepts. In my class discussion for the week, I highlighted what I learned from The 5 Hidden Roles of the Managerial Coach by Robert Banner (2011). Leadership/management coaching is a task. Just as a coach for a sports team will train, observe, critique, and correct a player’s action, so, too, will a management coach. In fact, “[professional] coaching derives from the world of sport. The duties of the sports coach involve both helping the active person set goals for his own efforts and assisting him in the process of reaching those goals”  (Nielson & Norreklit, 2009, p. 207). Though we are professionals, we often need objective assistance in setting goals. We may have unrealistic goals and ideas. They may either be too extreme or too limiting. A professional coach is responsible for reviewing activities and creating opportunities for us to reach our goals. Again, this is just like in sports. Also, just as in the sports world, a coach doesn’t have to have a strong personal bond with the one being coached. As previously mentioned, coaching and mentorship are often thought to be synonymous so this is where I was really intrigued. A complete stranger can act as a professional coach. Entire corporations are actually built on that idea, actually. Consider corporate entities such as Deloitte, KPMG, and Accenture. They make hundreds of millions of dollars be selling their consulting services. Consulting is essentially coaching. There’s a little more to it than that, of course, but the idea is solid.

On the other hand, a mentor enters a long term relationship with the protégé. A mentor is “an experienced adult who befriends and guides you and shows you the ropes. It's kind of like having a guide, coach, counselor, teacher, or friend who believes in your abilities and wants to help you succeed” (Cantore, 1996, p. 13). Unlike a coach, a mentor is not just present to critique your actions and provide opportunities for growth. A mentor is there, rather, to shape your career through encouragement and by setting the example to be followed. Another stark difference between a coach and a mentor is that a coach serves to guide your actions toward a specific goal. A mentor, on the other hand, has a more broad purpose. Consider this. If you are between jobs, you do not require a coach any more than a hockey player taking an off season requires a coach. There are no goals. A mentor, however, will support you through your entire career even as you transition between organizations.

I don’t want this blog to just mirror my discussion post for the week but one more idea that I really want to point out is our responsibility in obtaining a mentor. Susan Colantuono (2013) addresses our role in her TED Talk. Is it possible to just fall into a protégé role with a good mentor? Of course it is possible. However, if we wish to advance our careers (and personal lives), it is incumbent on us to seek out wise counsel. So what should we look for in a mentor? One of the first things that we should consider is the mentor’s willingness to be a mentor (Ghislieri, Gatti, & Quaglino, 2009). We cannot force a professional to mentor us. Another consideration is the level of experience that the mentor has as a mentor. Granted, everybody has to have a first time at doing everything. I would personally want to choose a mentor that has experience with encouraging and motivating. I would prefer someone with a firm patience.

Being a Senior Noncommissioned Officer in the Army, I have a wealth of experiencing both with being coached and coaching. It is built into just about everything that we do. We are constantly trained and evaluated. We are given direction and our goals are set for us. Just as my Commander, First Sergeant, and Sergeant Major coach me, I, in turn, coach my subordinates. I assist in training and development. Outside of the chain of command, I have my own mentors in life. I am left wondering, however, if I am a mentor to anybody. I believe it is possible that I may have my own protégé now that has been seeking my counsel for a few years. If so, I hope to be the best mentor possible to him.   



Barner, R. (2011). The 5 hidden roles of the managerial coach. Alexandria: American Society                   for Training & Development, Inc.

Cantore, J. A. (1996). How a mentor can direct your career. Career World, 24(5), 13.

Colantuono, S. (2013, November). Susan Colantuono: The career advice you probably didn’t get [Video file]. Retrieved from                         http://www.ted.com/talks/susan_colantuono_the_career_advice_you_probably_didn_t_get

Ghislieri, C., Gatti, P., & Quaglino, G. P. (2009). Factors affecting willingness to mentor. International Journal for Educational and Vocational Guidance, 9(3), 205-219.    doi:10.1007/s10775-009-9164-1


Nielsen, A. E., & Norreklit, H. (2009). A discourse analysis of the disciplinary power of    management coaching. Society and Business Review, 4(3), 202.   doi:10.1108/17465680910994209

Saturday, July 9, 2016

A520.6.4RB_LeeDarrell - Team Roles

We are all familiar with the concept of teams. My personal definition of a team is a group collaborating and working together toward a common goal. Of course, that is a very loose definition and there may be exceptions. A group of friends collaborating and working together for the common goal of planning a party, for example, probably would not be considered a team. Whetten and Cameron define a team as “groups of people who are interdependent in the tasks they perform, who affect one another’s behavior through interaction, and who see themselves as a unique entity” (2016, p. 404). Some of the most obvious examples are sports teams. The players rely on one another and interact with each other to achieve the goal of outperforming the opposing team. I spent the majority of my time in the Army with 5th Special Forces Group (Airborne). For security reasons, I won’t say how many Groups there are or how many battalions or anything like that but what I will say is that every member of the unit ultimately is there to serve the Operational Detachment Alpha (ODA), better known as an A-Team. Now that I am a recruiter as I wind down my career, my entire center is a team with the goal of finding qualified applicants and processing them into the Army.
The performance of any team can be enhanced by having team members play certain roles (Whetten & Cameron, 2016). There are two main types of roles that exist: task-facilitating roles and relationship-building roles. These roles each have certain characteristics. I will briefly describe both here.

Let’s begin with the task-facilitating roles. They are direction giving, information seeking, information giving, elaborating, urging, monitoring, process analyzing, reality testing, enforcing, and summarizing. “Task-facilitating roles are those that help the team accomplish its outcomes of objectives” (Whetten & Cameron, 2016, p. 422-423). All of these characteristics actually remind me of my mother. She is very organized (messy, but organized) and always seems to be the one to apply logic in the midst of chaos. Any time there is a major emotional event – the loss of jobs, divorce, death in the family, etc. – my mother has always been the one to keep everybody in line and guide them on the tasks to be completed. In a team situation, she would be the one in the task-facilitating role. Of course as task-facilitator on an organized team is not quite the same but I see the similarities. Task-facilitators are team members that can anticipate the complete process and have the ability to always remain neutral. They assist the team in maintaining order and focus and are trusted by all group members to maintain an unbiased loyalty to the group (Schuman, 1996).

The characteristics of the relationship-building role are supporting, harmonizing, tension relieving, confronting, energizing, developing, consensus building, and empathizing (Whetten & Cameron, 2016). Think of Spock on “Star Trek”. He was certainly a task-facilitator. He was always logical and, for the most part, lacked emotion. We could probably see Captain Kirk as being the relationship-builder, though. He was a little more emotional, of course, but focused a lot on the “human” side of everything. If you are a Trekkie, you may already know the best example of a relationship-builder. Though she was never directly involved in very much, do you remember Guinan on “The Next Generation”? She espoused all of these characteristics. She wasn’t necessarily emotional but she was encouraging, supporting, harmonizing, and held the crew accountable. It is important to notice, however, that the relationship-builder is not the opposite of the task-facilitator. They can share some of the same characteristics. They both work together toward the same goal. Whetten and Cameron note that “it is difficult for team members to emphasize both types of roles equally, and most people tend to contribute in one area more than the other” (2016, p. 422).

It isn’t impossible to fill both roles. Most of us probably have a blended approach to these roles. And some of us may be forced to fill both roles but we still probably gravitate toward one role over the other. At work, I am the acting center leader which means that I am forced to be in a task-facilitating role. As the one that manages and oversees the day to day operations, I have to keep my team focused both on prospecting and processing. Honestly, though, that is a little out of my comfort zone. Though I inherited my logical traits from my mother, there is a difference between application and desire. I see myself as more of an interpersonal relationship builder. I am a motivator and encourager. I like to bring levity and hope to the team. I feel much more comfortable as a relationship-builder. So the question that I am left facing is how do I do both? How do I, as a manager, also act as a leader? Gary Yukl, a business professor at the University of Albany, points out that a growing train of thought in many highly successful business and organizations today is that managers and leaders should be separate people because the roles often contradict one another (2013). In fact, that is the reason that I selected to study for my Masters in Leadership instead of just an MBA program. I am an efficient and effective manager but I garner so much more joy out of encouraging others to be the best that they can be. I am surely a relationship-builder on my teams.          


Schuman, S. P. (1996). What to look for in a group facilitator. Milwaukee: American Society for Quality Control, Inc.

Whetten, D. A., & Cameron, K. S. (2016). Developing management skills (9th ed.). Boston, MA. 


Yukl, G. (2013). Leadership in Organizations (8th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.

Monday, July 4, 2016

A520.5.3RB_LeeDarrell - Forrester's Empowerment

Last week, we discussed motivation of employees within an organization. One motivator that was discussed was empowerment. However, empowerment, though motivational, is different from influencing others. “Empowerment means providing freedom for people to successfully do what they want to do, rather than getting them to do what you want them to do” (Whetten & Cameron, 2016, p. 366). Through empowerment, managers are able to delegate tasks and subordinates are free to operate in the way that they feel is best to complete the given tasks.

There are five core dimensions of empowerment (Whetten and Cameron, 2016). They are self-efficacy, self-determination, personal consequence, meaning, and trust. Though it may have been worded slightly different, these same dimensions were revealed in almost every article that I researched this week over the concept of successful empowerment. For example, Matsudaira (2016) focuses on the concept of empowerment through self-efficacy (a sense of competence) through extensive task training. Others focused on other dimensions such as Webb’s discussion on both empowerment through personal consequences (“ownership” of the task) and meaning (2002).

For this particular blog, we were given an article to review and asked to compare and contrast it to the concepts discussed in our weekly reading. The author is Russ Forrester who is an organizational psychologist who studies teams and nontraditional organizational patters. The article is titled “Empowerment: Rejuvenating a potent idea” (see reference below). Though the concepts that he discusses are similar to what is found in our weekly reading, he actually takes a unique approach and begins by first outlining what doesn’t work with empowerment.

Russ Forrester begins with a unique idea of why empowerment often fails. When subordinate employees are delegated power, they are usually not compensated for the new responsibilities. Their pay doesn’t increase nor does their position within the organization. They often don’t receive any added benefit for the increased responsibility. He states:
            Suddenly, their work lives have been enriched by time-consuming duties of           administration, decision making, and coordination. They are not given any more time to     carry out what had been considered more demanding functions that made up someone          else’s better-paid, full time job (Forrester, 2002, p. 68).
This type of “empowerment” often leaves employees feeling overwhelmed and under-valued.

The next “short circuit” to empowerment that Forrester discusses has to do with the psychological aspect of empowerment. The psychological concept assumes that empowered employees will be motivated and have feelings of self-efficacy. “Proponents of the psychological approach expect that empowered employees will find the work intrinsically rewarding and will attack with a verve that would not otherwise be attained” (2002, p. 69). However, as you can imagine, we are not all motivated by the same things. Some people crave competition whereas others are passive. Some act on logic whereas others act on emotion. Not every employee will react the same to the power that they are given. That is a perfect segue to his next point, as well. There is no “one-size fits all” for empowering employees. Many organizations fear that they will create dissention amongst employees by empowering some and not others. It is almost as if they fear hurting the feelings of those not empowered. They don’t want to create an “us vs. them” environment. Though it is good to try to maintain the peace within the organization, “empowerment programs more often fail because they fail to differentiate among employees” (Forrester, 2002, p. 70). Some employees are just better equipped to handle power than others. Being indiscriminate with empowerment is counterproductive. When power is given, the recipient’s motivation and ability must be taken into account.

Forrester continues his discussion of why empowerment fails with what he considers to be the most common mistake made by organizations looking to empower employees – not considering what they are asking the middle managers to do. As a mid-level manager myself, I can surely relate to this. “Many top executives seem to believe that managers and supervisors who have been exercising the most power will, at the declaration of an empowerment program, readily pass that power on” (Forrester, 2002, p. 70). As a mid-level manager, when this happens, I often wonder what my role is then. If those above me are empowering those subordinate to me, where do I fit into the picture? I was my subordinates to be empowered but, as their manager, should I not be the one to delegate as I see fit? When those above us empower those below us, they are actually doing the opposite of empowerment to us. They just took the power away from us.

The next mistake often made with empowerment is a piecemeal approach. Forrester presents several examples of failed empowerment programs where positive empowerment actions were implemented but the larger system wasn’t adjusted to account for the new empowerment program. I was just watching an episode of “The Office” (the NBC mockumentary) and saw a perfect example of this. In the episode, the staff are all told that their role is to support the salesmen and the salesmen are empowered to run their operations as they see fit. When this happens, everything begins to fall apart in a hilarious way. Though just a fictional situation, it is actually a very real scenario that could happen in any organization. The sales staff was empowered but the larger system wasn’t addressed. Nothing else changed in the office to adjust to their autonomy. (Though the show is hilarious, it is interesting to watch it through the lens of a leadership and management grad student. It’s amazing how much you can actually learn from it!)

The final shortcoming of empowerment discussed by Forrester is the distortion of accountability. This, to me, was the most interesting point and I have never considered it before now. Those at the very top of the organization have the most accountability. The more power you have, the more accountability comes with the role. If the decisions and actions made by top executives fail, the entire organization can cease to exist. In the case of business, this can cost thousands of jobs and millions of dollars to shareholders. However, what happens at the very bottom to the person with the least power if they fail? Consider someone that works in sales. What happens if they fail? The consequences of their failure are far less. Where this becomes an issue is when empowerment occurs but accountability doesn’t increase. I started considering how this relates to my work as a center leader for an Army recruiting center. If I fail at my job, my center may fail to complete our mission requirements. However, if I empower our most junior recruiter and he fails, his accountability hasn’t necessarily been increased. He is in a much more forgiving place. With empowerment, we, as managers and leaders, need to consider the power-accountability balance.

I greatly appreciate the insight and perspective of Dr. Forrester since he outlined not just how to empower those under us but also how to recognize how empowerment fails.  



Forrester, R. (2002). Empowerment: Rejuvenating a potent idea. Measuring Business Excellence, 6(2), 68. doi:10.1108/mbe.2002.26706baf.006

Matsudaira, K. (2016). Delegation as art. New York: ACM. doi:10.1145/2890772

Webb, R. (2002). Delegation: Burden or empowerment? Education 3-13, 30(3), 35-41.                         doi:10.1080/03004270285200331


Whetten, D. A., & Cameron, K. S. (2016). Developing management skills (9th ed.). Boston, MA:             Pearson.