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Leaders rarely make a lasting
impact on their organizations—even the really, really good ones. Then out of
the blue comes a Churchill. Gautam Mukunda discusses his new book,
Indispensable: When Leaders Really Matter.
by Kim Girard
Harvard Business School
Assistant Professor Gautam Mukunda leads off his new book, Indispensable: When
Leaders Really Matter, with the results of social science research that
executives may wish not to consider: individual leaders rarely make a
difference.
Although many heads of
organizations would like to think of themselves as truly indispensable—impact
makers, history movers, culture changers—few reach the bar set by Steve Jobs,
Napoleon, or Martin Luther King Jr., Mukunda says. (Even some people you might
think would be shoo-ins for the indispensable category don't make Mukunda's
cut, including Thomas Jefferson and Jack Welch. More on them later.)
Under most circumstances, a
leader is elected or appointed. And it makes no difference who ends up in power
so long as the person is experienced and is hired through the structured
processes that most organizations use to vet everyone from CEOs to military
officers to presidential candidates, Mukunda says.
Read an excerpt from the book
"Are individual leaders
truly responsible for the end result, or do they just happen to be there, for
better or worse?" Mukunda asks. "We revere Lincoln. He must matter.
But it's not so clear that that this is the case, and it is certainly not clear
that every leader matters."
Out of the blue
Every once in a while,
though, someone comes to power who is inexperienced or appointed in an unusual
way. The incumbent dies suddenly, for example. Or a country experiences extreme
historical circumstances. It's this person who has the potential to become an
unconventional, powerful leader—a Hitler, perhaps, but maybe a Winston
Churchill.
These people—total extremes
on both ends—are usually "unfiltered" leaders, those who are unproven
in their area of leadership, Mukunda explains. They are also, in most cases,
the ones who matter when history is written.
“Unfiltered leaders are much more likely to
have a high impact”
"Unfiltered leaders are
much more likely to have a high impact," Mukunda says. "Unfiltered
leaders will do extremely well or extremely poorly. Everything else boils out
of that."
In his research, Mukunda
wanted to identify "those particular individuals who were the right
people, in the right place, at the right time, to change history." By
doing so, he hopes to improve our understanding of contemporary leaders and
"perhaps help us choose better ones."
Mukunda knew he needed solid
data to answer the question of who mattered. So he made lists of US presidents
and British prime ministers that dated back to George Washington in 1789 and
Britain's Charles Grey in 1830. He noted how historians ranked them on
performance, how much political experience they had before entering office, and
how they got the top job.
The result was his Leader
Filtration Theory, or LFT, which states that a leader's impact can be predicted
by his or her career. The more unfiltered the leader, the larger the prospect
of big impact. The more a leader has relevant experience, the less chance of
high impact.
Filtering a leader
There are three factors that
social scientists agree minimize the impact of leaders:
An external environment in which responses
of competitors limits the leader's discretion to act.
Internal organizational dynamics,
bureaucratic politics, or constituents' interests that leaders must respond to.
The selection systems used to pick leaders,
which he says homogenize the pool of potential CEOs and presidents. These are
especially important, Mukunda argues, because they preserve the status quo and
prevent incompetent or disturbed leaders from gaining power.
Take General Electric. What
if GE's board had picked someone other than Jack Welch as CEO? Would the
company have performed the same?
Most likely, GE would have
chosen someone quite similar to Welch had he not accepted the job, Mukunda
says. Because of this, Mukunda calls Welch a leader of "low individual
impact." It's likely that another candidate chosen by GE management would
have performed nearly or as well as he did.
Winston Churchill was an
unfiltered, high-impact leaderOn the other end from low impact leaders are
those whom Mukunda terms "extremes." These people, who slip through
the cracks of conventional leadership filtering processes, are more likely to
be high-impact and make their mark on history "for better or worse."
The book studies both kinds of leadership through historical cases that Mukunda
teaches in his courses.
In the book, Mukunda
classifies every US president from George Washington to G.W. Bush as
"filtered" or "unfiltered" based on their experience in
offices that would prepare them for the presidency, and how they became
president. A filtered president is one with a high amount of relevant
experience, an unfiltered one with little or no such domain experience.
George Washington, as the
first president, was an unfiltered revolutionary leader. Teddy Roosevelt was
unfiltered, because he was a vice president who got the top job following the
assassination of William McKinley. John F. Kennedy was a filtered leader with
13 years in the House and Senate. George W. Bush was unfiltered, Mukunda says,
because he spent less than six years as governor and was boosted by family
connections.
Mukunda's findings support
the LFT theory that unfiltered presidents often turn up at the high and low
ends—four of the five highest ranked presidents and four of the five lowest
ranked ones were unfiltered.
In case studies he analyzes
three presidents and two prime ministers: Jefferson, whom he called "the
hardest possible case," Lincoln, Woodrow Wilson, and Prime Ministers
Winston Churchill and Neville Chamberlain, comparing their approaches to
decision-making with people who plausibly could have been in their shoes.
Chamberlain is a perfect
example of "how a British prime minister reaches the top of the greasy
pole" by climbing the political system and serving as postmaster general,
minister for health, and chancellor for the exchequer before becoming PM. He
was a filtered, low-impact prime minister who never willingly stood up to
Hitler. Churchill, on the other hand, was widely considered a "failed,
right-wing politician," named prime minister because Halifax,
Chamberlain's Foreign Minister, didn't want the job, not because the king and
the cabinet decided that Churchill was the best choice.
"They didn't have any
alternatives," Mukunda says.
“We revere Lincoln. He must matter. But
it’s not so clear that that this is the case”
An unfiltered, extreme
leader, Churchill made history. "His energy, his talents, his indomitable
courage, his rhetorical abilities, and his rigidity and inflexibility were
enormously unlike the vast majority of politicians," Mukunda says.
On the other hand, there is
Thomas Jefferson, whom Mukunda argues had low impact, despite his success as a
filtered president. There were others who could have easily taken Jefferson's
place, including James Madison and John Adams. While Jefferson secured his
place in history with the critical Louisiana Purchase, Mukunda argues that
"no diplomatic virtuosity or intellectual brilliance was required…there is
nothing in the events surrounding it that suggests any normal president could
not or would not have done the same."
Results may vary
These two cases—Jefferson and
Churchill —illustrate Mukunda's theory that a filtered leader can deliver
excellent results without being extreme, and an extreme leader can be a force
for great change.
Mukunda hopes future research
will expand the Leader Filtration Theory, which he believes can be applied by
companies trying to make better CEO choices—and even in evaluating presidential
candidates.
The trick for a company or
country picking an extreme leader is to realize that it is a high-stakes
gamble, and that the candidates are difficult to evaluate—it happens over time
as they are observed leading and making decisions. In the book Mukunda offers
specific ways to avoid making a poor candidate choice:
Avoid deceptive signals. Someone who has
ridden family wealth to high office, for example, may have accomplished less
than meets the eye.
Match the leader's characteristics to your
situation and remove them from power when situations change.
Take seriously the statements made by unfiltered
leaders before they take power.
Choose unfiltered leaders who have been
successful filtered leaders in other contexts.
Shape the position to fit the leader you
choose.
Want to see an unfiltered
leader in action? Check out the mercurial ups and downs of the nearest startup.
"They're always unfiltered," Mukunda says. "In pretty much every
case the personal quirks of the entrepreneur will have a huge impact."
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