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Leadership
New Style
May 12, 2004 @ 6:33 am and 8:20 am on 90.3
Northeast
Ohio is in a state of change, but who will lead after those changes
take hold? Some are concerned that there isn’t much high quality
talent lining up to guide Northeast Ohio in the decades to come.
But ideastream’s Shula Neuman reports there may be plenty
waiting to take the reigns – they just don’t resemble
the kind of leaders the region is accustomed to, and many of them
are off the radar. As part of Making Change:
Reinventing our Economy, Shula reports on an emerging
style of leadership.


When setting
up a meeting with a so-called young leader, don’t expect to
get together in a corporate office or conference room. Most of them
don’t work for major corporations - or small corporations
- or any corporation for that matter. Most of them are like Mark
Brandt. He rents a small office downtown, but conducts business
in any number of offbeat locations. I caught up with him at a resort
in Aurora. All that running around seems to energize Brandt, but
the Lakewood denizen says he doesn’t see himself as a leader.
Mark
Brandt: And it just seems like there’s need
to do certain things so I’m the one doing ‘em. But I
don’t get off on being a leader. As far as I’m concerned,
other people are leaders. I’m just an organizer who pulls
things together.
Brandt has pulled together several initiatives that could go a long
way toward improving the region’s economy, if not its profile.
He started Say Yes to Cleveland, a kind of road-show for
Northeast Ohio businesses designed to induce former Clevelanders to
invest in or return to the region. Brandt also runs the Maple Fund,
an investment fund specializing in early stage nanotechnology developments.
While wearing that hat, he created the Nano-Network, which helps area
nano start ups and researchers get to know each other. But despite
all that, Brandt still says:
Mark
Brandt: I don’t see myself
as the typical leader, I’m more of an organizer.
But
he is - in fact - a leader, says Laura Steinbrink, executive director
and co-founder of the leadership training program Cleveland Bridge
Builders. He just doesn’t fit the traditional mold. And that,
she says, is pretty typical of today’s new leadership.
Laura
Steinbrink: The people that are on the scene today
engaging in the community look, smell and feel and think differently
than what we’ve been traditionally used to from our civic
leaders.
They don’t buy into the traditional hierarchy, Steinbrink says.
They aren’t afraid of risk. They don’t necessarily trust
big organizations and they don’t want to wait around and be
told how to help. They’re Gen-Xers, she says, and in order to
get things done, they choose to play in smaller sandboxes, and empower
others to do the same. That’s in sharp contrast to traditional
leadership.
Laura
Steinbrink: Our leaders have opted
to play in big overarching, well-reaching sandboxes with the opinion
that we can serve all and we will and we don’t need extra
help.
Richard
Boyatzis: Most of the people we see in leadership aren’t
good at it. We have distorted views of what leadership is.
Richard Boyatzis
is professor of organizational behavior at the Case Weatherhead
School of Management. He believes under the old model of leadership,
the likelihood that someone who bears the label “leader”
is actually effectual is relatively slim. He says not only does
good leadership take a certain set of innate skills, but the stars
have to be aligned for people to be receptive to a leader’s
influence. The conditions aren’t always perfect for someone
with a new idea to influence others - but working on a smaller scale,
he says, makes it more likely for new leaders to emerge and succeed.
Richard
Boyatzis: So if you allow this ebb and
flow then what you end up saying is, what can I do for my unit?
What can I do for my neighborhood? What can I do for my department?
What can I do in my community? What can I do in the work that I
do and what can I do in the way I help and reach out to others.
That
pretty much describes David Akers, who’s both a civic and
business entrepreneur, and whose office is frequently the coffee
shop closest to his next meeting. Akers continuously pursues ideas
that he thinks will help the region, he says, but he dreads making
what he calls The Pilgrimage to the traditional power brokers
to get his ideas heard.
David
Akers: When you want to get something done on the
civic side you go talk to whomever. Almost always the reaction is
going to be, “Well, I need you talk to these five other people.”
And some of those people say, “Yeah, I think it’s a
great idea sign me up,” and others will say, “Well I
want you to speak to these three or four or five people.”
Akers says that’s
part of the culture of Northeast Ohio, in both the public and private
sectors: no one makes a decision without a certain set of people
signing on. It’s frustrating, he says, but it seems to be
the only way for initiatives to gain acceptance and support from
the community.
David
Akers: So what I see happen is there’s a
lot of folks - maybe who aren’t on the radar screen - who
have decided they’re not going to through that process.
That they’re going to find the space, where there’s
an opportunity, something that ought to get done, and they’re
just going to do it their way; and their going to do it their
way, as opposed to doing it the way.
Some of these
new, small organizations eventually do gain credibility in the eyes
of the establishment, Akers says, and some remain undetected. But
if the region is serious about building a strong future for Northeast
Ohio, he says, then everyone needs to learn to adapt to a new style
of leadership. In Cleveland, Shula Neuman, 90.3.
Resources:
- Craig
James Interview
The region needn't despair when considering who will come along
to head up vital community organizations and to make sure Northeast
Ohio grows. As I explained in the story on the new style of leadership
(aired May 12, 2004), there are dozens of so-called "young
leaders" in the region who are already actively engaged in
changing the regions economic development. We'll meet one of them,
Craig James, in this exclusive web interview.
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