The recent departures of Australian Rugby League Commission
CEO David Gallop and Boral CEO Mark Selway were attributed to the organisations
involved needing a different leadership style to take them forward.
After 10 successful years as the head of rugby league’s
national body, the NRL, Gallop was appointed CEO of the Australian Rugby League
Commission following its formation in February. Four months into his four-year
contract, the board says it came to mutual agreement with Gallop “that the game
needs a different style of leadership detached from the past for the next stage
of its development”.
In the Boral situation, by all accounts (including the
Board’s), during his two years in the job Selway successfully restructured and
re-energised the business and applied the Lean management philosophy to its
manufacturing processes. However, the company says it is now seeking a CEO “with
a leadership style suited to harmonising the changes that have occurred over the
last two years”.
To me, these situations reflect the delicate balance between
CEO style and substance.
After 14 years as an executive coach and mentor, I see
leaders as people who can:
– Articulate a vision and inspire others to participate;
– Work cooperatively with their team and take an interest in
their development;
– Take command when the going gets tough;
– Manage ambiguity to sustain morale and productivity during
times of change;
– Make decisions; and
– Achieve results.
Since leadership is all about influencing, enabling and
energising a business, people skills should be equally as important as financial
performance – if not more – when it comes to evaluating a CEO’s performance or
suitability for a role.
Boards should hire and evaluate CEOs based on a range of
criteria including leadership competencies, business acumen and
performance.
While it is true that some CEOs prefer or are more suited to
transformation, turnaround or high-growth situations, a CEO’s leadership style
should never be a surprise to a board that has done its due diligence and
recruited for both people skills and financial and operational management
skills.
CEOs and their boards often come unstuck when there is a
lack of alignment between a strategy presented by management and the views of
the board. The board is then faced with a decision to either ask for the
strategy to be revised – which can be a challenge – or replace the CEO if they
believe the CEO is unable or unwilling to deliver the strategy required.
If this lack of alignment comes as a shock to the board, it
brings into serious question the very nature of the relationship between the
board and CEO up to that point.
When it comes to deciding what leadership style is right for
an organisation, I would say that a leader’s primary job is to lead others to a
destination. The critical success factor, therefore, is whether others will
follow.
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