Why Unrealistic Demands On Our Leaders Are Killing Good Leadership. Hello everyone, I hope you are well. In today’s post, I will be sharing a guest post from Karen Meager, co-founder of Monkey Puzzle Training & Consultancy. Karen will be sharing what you can do to be a better leader now and in the future (and how to handle unrealistic expectations). Our expectations of our leaders have changed dramatically over the last few years. Not only are they expected to provide strategic thinking and make business decisions, but modern leaders are also held responsible for employees’ mental health and well-being, psychological safety, diversity and inclusion.
Why Unrealistic Demands On Our Leaders Are Killing Good Leadership
While it may seem surprising, the day-to-day challenges leaders face have barely changed over the past decade, according to a Monkey Puzzle leadership survey. Today, just as ten years ago, the significant challenges are managing time and dealing with problematic behaviour.
However, what has changed is the demands on business leaders. Not only are they expected to provide strategic thinking and make business decisions, but modern leaders are also held responsible for employees’ mental health and well-being, psychological safety, diversity and inclusion.
Business leaders are also now expected to embody a wide range of (often contradictory) personality traits. They are expected to be decisive yet flexible, empathetic yet analytical, and precise yet nuanced. It is an ever-growing list of expectations that is exhausting and unrealistic for any single person.
Moving from leaders being the authority to taking on broader responsibilities for the employee experience is generally welcome. But as the needle shifted too far? How can leaders understand and respond to paradoxical needs and demands?
Why Are Unrealistic Expectations Killing Good Leadership?
Most of the leaders surveyed cared very much about their teams and employees. They wanted to do their best but felt, at times, trapped by potential conflicts. The more leaders care, the more they are hurt by the constant critique and judgement. Many felt that they could not do right no matter what, resulting in them evaluating whether they were suitable for the role.
Unfortunately, if these caring leaders leave the profession, those that remain will be the hard-nosed, thick-skinned, disconnected leaders that don’t care about the critics.
The wave of employee activism may leave them with the one thing they can all agree they don’t want: cold, uncaring leaders.
What Needs To Change To Encourage Good Leadership?
With all these stressful and impossible expectations, it’s no wonder that many leaders are exploring different (less stressful) career options. But we need good leaders now more than ever. So, what needs to change to encourage good leadership? And what can leaders do to make it easier?
Don’t Give Up. Armour Up!
Firstly, please don’t leave the world with cold, complex robots. The (actual) robots are already coming for many of our jobs; we don’t need human robots running the place either!
As a caring, empathetic leader, it can be hard not to take criticism to heart. It’s essential, therefore, to find ways to disconnect and develop resilience to criticism. Disconnecting doesn’t mean you don’t care, just as resilience to criticism doesn’t mean you stop taking feedback. It does, however, mean creating a layer of armour around yourself so that you don’t take it all so personally.
Armour can be beneficial for feedback. Create a sort of ‘spongey wall’ that absorbs critical feedback without penetrating your core. Using a mentor or other third party can help – they can filter the feedback, picking out key themes you might want to act on while limiting the unhelpful noise. You can also mentally prepare yourself with armour for conversations that are likely to be complex and critical.
Armour also means boundaries. While it can be challenging to express clear boundaries sometimes, setting them for yourself can be a helpful reminder to switch off and recover. Set end times when you will switch off your phone and laptop, so you aren’t always available. Try to limit the number of evenings you work late as well. This will help maintain some energy and work-life balance.
Develop Strong Emotional Regulation
Becoming triggered by all the emotional chaos around you is exhausting. An unexpected result of the coronavirus lockdown is that everyone became a little less emotionally regulated – partly due to the stress of being confined indoors, partly because it is easier to regulate in your home’s safety and relative solitude emotionally.
Unfortunately, when others are emotional, your emotional dysregulations will suck you in, causing a cycle of upset. The employee is upset, you become upset, they are upset at your reaction and get more upset, and so on.
It can be helpful to consider what psychologists call the Drama Triangle. In the triangle, there are victims, rescuers and persecutors. Victims need a persecutor to blame and a rescuer to save them. Being cast as the persecutor can feel unfair and unwarranted, leading them to become the victims in their triangle. Being cast as the rescuer can feel rewarding at first, but it is an unending task since the victim stays steadfast in their role as victim.
Remain Grounded
Instead of getting sucked into any of these roles, leaders need to remain grounded. That way, you can listen and empathise without needing to agree or disagree, rescue or persecute.
One way of remaining grounded and emotionally regulated is to surround yourself with other well-regulated people, perhaps as part of a peer support group where issues can be discussed without emotion.
It also helps to be well-organised. Remember that most people like clarity and hate surprises – doubly so for neurodivergent people. Publishing an agenda for every meeting, however small, can help people to prepare mentally and emotionally. Similarly, having an appointed facilitator can help provide clarity and direction to meetings.
If you need to cancel, leave or rearrange a meeting, be sure to take an extra moment to explain why. People will appreciate the clarity, which will stop them from taking it personally and becoming dysregulated.
Be Clear About What Kind Of Leader You Are
We all have ‘superpowers’ – the things only we can do. By identifying these strengths, we can lean into them, spending time cultivating those skills that we are uniquely good at. If your strengths don’t fit the organisation, perhaps it isn’t your proper role. If they do fit, you can make yourself part of the fabric of the business.
As well as identifying your strengths, finding your ‘why’ can be beneficial. Why do you do this work? Why is it meaningful to you? Once you know the reason and meaning behind your motivations, it becomes easier to focus on them and develop the right skills for meaningful work.
By setting the right development goals—meaningful and relevant—you will become the leader you want to be. For everything else that you are less good at, find someone else who can help plug the gaps. You can’t be an expert at everything, so why are waste time and energy trying?
Develop Your Peer Support
Leadership can be lonely, but it doesn’t have to be. Cultivating a group of supportive peers and mentors to go to for help processing complex events can provide essential moral support.
Peer support groups can be significant and influential in larger organisations, where structures tend to be more hierarchical. By creating a cohort of leaders on a similar level, you can share and discuss challenges openly without fear of conflicting agendas or power dynamics.
In smaller organisations or for very senior leaders, developing a mentor relationship can be a helpful approach. It is important that you can trust your mentor so that you can speak openly and share your concerns freely. It can also help if the mentor has some pre-existing knowledge of your industry so that the conversation and advice are relevant.
Learn How To Facilitate Difficult And Sensitive Conversations
Dealing with difficult people and behaviour is a vital part of being a leader, yet it is one aspect that many leaders find hard, especially those who are more sensitive.
Many people think they can avoid conflict by avoiding difficult conversations, but this only causes issues to remain hidden and fester. It’s like trying to avoid a serious infection by refusing to see a doctor. Difficult conversations are essential in understanding the expectations and challenges of employees.
If you can create armour for yourself, establish clear boundaries, develop your emotional regulation, and have peer support, these conversations will become much more manageable.
However, this does not come naturally for most people and requires practice. Start small and build up as your skills improve. You can practise your listening skills with peers, mentors and third-party trainers before going into a ‘live’ situation. And there will always be an opportunity to practise in live situations through your work.
Many books and resources can help, from our practical guide, Real Leaders, to Adam Grant’s brilliant book Think Again, which challenges our fundamental notions on how to shift perceptions and have productive, challenging conversations.
Remember:
You don’t need to do everything that is asked of you, but you do need to engage. That means listening, understanding and asking questions. Showing genuine interest and concern goes a long way to resolving conflict.
HowHoweveru decides to approach leadership, remember that it is possible to be a kind, caring leader without burning out.
More than ever, the world needs compassionate and empathetic leaders to help deliver an economy that looks after people and the planet. If all the kind leaders leave, we’ll be ruled by hard-nosed leaders who don’t care about or listen to criticism. And that’s not a future any of us want to live in.
I hope you enjoyed that.
Talk soon
About The Author
Karen Meager is co-founder of Monkey Puzzle Training & Consultancy, a leadership development and organisational design consultancy and co-author of Real Leaders: a practical guide to the essential qualities of effective leadership. Monkey Puzzle works with business leaders to help align teams, support innovation, build sustainable organisations and develop exceptional people who can achieve results – giving leaders more time to do their best.
Web:
https://www.monkeypuzzletraining.co.uk
LinkedIn:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/karen-meager
https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-mclachlan/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/monkey-puzzle-training-and-consultancy-limited/
9 Comments
Fransic verso
Great points and it’s important to have team to help with leadership. Thank you for sharing!
Yolanda
So true! Assuming a leadership role is challenging, and not everyone possesses the necessary skills. You’re absolutely correct that unreasonable demands can complicate leadership tasks. However, an exceptional leader has the ability to establish clear expectations from the outset and can navigate through any situation.
Ntensibe Edgar
Yyyeeessss! You have said it beautifully. Many times, I prefer to select out who will lead basing on how they choose to facilitate or have difficult conversations.
Alex
Unrealistic Demands are often interfere with life, sometimes you have to try to think rationally and be more realistic
Debbie
Interesting read. It can be lonely in a place of leadership. I’ve heard the saying it’s lonely at the top. Especially in the work place.
Olga
Yes i agree leadership is hard. I like your idea what good leader makes us to do good things. Honestly, I don’t see many good leaders around unfortunately.
Amber
Unrealistic demands create pressure and that pressure become stress and that stress leads to reaction rather than thought out response. Great post.
Nyxie
This is the same for everyone, not just leaders. I see it everyday in my day job – the higher ups placing more and more uinrealistic experctations on their managers and the staff beneath, leaving us with nothing but criticism! It’s harming the working environment. Their need for constant profits is just ruining the store slowly and killing morale.
Beth
Indeed, leadership can be lonely and it’s important to have your own support team. Thank your for the expert tips here.