Decisions Decisions!! In Leadership and Executive Coaching
As making key decisions often fall to leaders (with potentially huge consequences), Leo McKeown ‘s article begins to explore how pattern recognition can form the basis for making successful choices. He believes there’s one thing that all leaders should be able to do well that certainly made me think twice. It's not managing or even having great ideas; it’s making great decisions.
One of the precepts of Predictable Success is that being successful in business (in anything, really) is simple: just make--and implement--good decisions. Even simpler: just make one good decision (your next one). Then follow it by another. Then another. Then another. Simple, elegant, logical.
One of the delights of my career has been meeting people who can do this like falling off a log. Business leaders who, while they're far from infallible, are able (more often than not) to make good decisions. And not just now and again, but repeatedly, in times of calm and in times of chaos.
The skill that such leaders share is not a subjective one--like good judgment--nor is it a hard-edged objective ability like numerical literacy. (Though these and many other skills are important and useful). What differentiates serially-good-deciders from the rest of us is pattern recognition. This is the ability to see the generic and lasting patterns that underpin localised and ephemeral data, and which form the unseen framework around which lasting success is built.
Why Patterns Matter
Business leaders with good pattern recognition skills see another dimension to data-- like an aviation engineer who can see the wind flow around a wing when we see only a two-dimensional blueprint; the map-maker who can picture the entire landscape while we see only the contours on the page; or the practiced CPA who can diagnose the health of an entire organisation while we see only columns of numbers, what they see is more than the sum of the parts.
Pattern recognition can be learned, and it's a skill that every business leader should develop, hone and practice consistently. A great place to start is Christopher Alexander's expensive, but wonderful book, A Pattern Language. Although the book is about architecture and town planning, the precepts of pattern recognition, how to apply it, the benefits from using it and good and bad examples have never been more eloquently expressed.
Pattern language is also at the core of the teaching of Ron Heifitz-- in my opinion the best leadership thought leader writing today. It's essentially what he means when he talks about "going to the balcony"-- one of his key leadership precepts. Any of Heiftz's books is worth reading, but Leadership on the Line explicitly addresses "going to the balcony."
Another great example is my friend David Allen's 2-million-copies-and-still-selling masterpiece Getting Things Done. Most people think of GTD as being about time management or productivity, but really what David has achieved is to recognise the eternal, essential patterns of high performance and mapped them into a comprehensive system--pattern recognition at it's highest.
For more information about Executive Coaching and Menoring with Xenonex, contact Suzanna Prout on 01423 876371 or email liz.hines@xenonex.co.uk
Suzanna Prout
Taken from an article by Les McKeown