Category Archives: Blog

The current approach to leadership development is proving to be ineffective, indicating the need for a new strategy.

An insightful and intellectually stimulating essay in the Winter 2024 MIT Sloan Review (accessible through a paywall with different pricing tiers) resonates with the ideas I have presented on this blog regarding the shortcomings of organizations in their selection of leadership development programs. The article titled “Leadership Development is Failing Us – Here’s How to Fix It” by Hannes Leroy, Moran Anisman-Razin, and Jim Detert presents evidence-based results and insightful recommendations.

The essay highlights that leadership development programs often fail to effectively enhance organizational capacities for many firms.

The selection and assessment of leadership development programs primarily rely on subjective preferences rather than objective measures of enhancing participants’ talents, fostering significant performance improvement, and facilitating robust career advancement.

One of my preferred lines is: “According to an executive’s observation, decisions regarding leadership development appear to resemble the online dating industry, where the act of swiping left, or right is primarily influenced by appearance rather than substance.”

The authors propose that in order to address the prevalent and ineffective approach to selecting leadership development programs, attention should be directed towards three key factors: vision, method, and impact.

  • Vision: Will participants enhance their leadership skills and be inspired to apply their acquired knowledge?
  • Method: Does the program present a level of difficulty that is intellectually demanding, and will the participants acquire knowledge and skills even if they experience discomfort due to the intricacy?
  • Impact: Can we expect alterations in behaviors?

You should feel discontented and exhausted by the unsatisfactory outcomes of your endeavours in developing leadership skills.

I appreciate the article’s recommendations for enhancing the process of selecting leadership development programs. This article should be periodically studied and cited as a valuable resource for discussing the topic of learning disabilities (L.D.). Executives, it is important for you to take responsibility for this mindset and ensure that your supporting functions (such as H.R., Learning and Development, and sponsoring managers) are also held accountable.

Additional pragmatic suggestions to enhance the leadership development ideas in the article include implementing sustained efforts in conjunction with coaching.

First: Leadership development initiatives must be consistently maintained. Cease the practice of providing single, isolated training sessions for leadership development without any follow-up or continuation. Do not presume that individuals will acquire leadership skills solely via an online course. Guidance, feedback, and time are crucial. If the experience does not provide this combination, it is a one-time occurrence.

Second: The sponsoring manager must possess a role that extends beyond simply granting approval for the bill.

The sponsoring manager must actively fulfil the role of a sponsor, rather than merely being responsible for approving the bill for payment. The sponsoring manager must possess a comprehensive understanding of the Vision, Method, and anticipated Impact as outlined by the authors above. Subsequently, it is vital for them to actively engage by providing guidance, offering prompt criticism on behavior, and fostering a cooperative environment to discover fresh prospects alongside the individual.

Third: Seek a comprehensive development opportunity. Evaluate whether the program provides specialized, evidence-based guidance, sufficient practical application time, constructive feedback and mentoring, and a collaborative learning environment for exchanging ideas and cultivating strategies to overcome challenges. If not, press the stop button and make a more diligent effort to choose the appropriate option. Alternatively, you can create the appropriate service on your own.

Fourth: Assess the long-term effects, for goodness’ sake. Enhance and refine initiatives to quantify the extent of influence. Direct your attention to the performance, cultural, and growth-oriented measures that are significant. Below are a few options to begin with: Key performance indicator (KPI) performance, successful achievement of goals, level of engagement, ability to retain employees, capacity to handle additional tasks, increase in critical thinking skills, impact on leadership, demonstration of effective leadership on a large scale, and other relevant factors. Ensure that measures are also established for the sponsoring managers. They play a crucial role in the success of these projects. Observe these measures. Adjust them as necessary. Incorporate them within the organization’s operational framework.

Summary for the Present Moment

This subject heightens my level of energy. There is nothing more revered in our profession than discovering methods to develop the abilities that drive our organizations towards achieving our vision and purpose. For many years, managers and executives have been delegating tasks to other departments and relying on training businesses that provide one-time services. Adhere to the instructions provided in the aforementioned article and use my ideas to introduce a practical and realistic perspective. Although it is sometimes claimed that we are all technological organizations in the present century, the truth is that our success and survival as organizations depend on having the most exceptional individuals. Begin exhibiting the qualities of a leader when it comes to the development of leadership skills.

My New Post

The Meaningful Patterns of Dreams: A New Study

A brief update on a study of the dreams of a former religious cult member.

A new article shows that many important aspects of a person’s waking life concerns can be clearly identified in the word usage patterns of her dreams.  The article is titled “The meaningful continuities between dreaming and waking: Results of a blind analysis of a woman’s thirty-year dream journal,” and I have just finished and sent a revised draft to the journal Dreaming, which will publish it sometime in 2018.

The participant in this study, “Beverly,” is a fascinating person in many ways.  As the article describes, she was a member of a religious cult for many years, then left the group after a series of violent conflicts.  Her dreams chronicle her life during the period when she was a member of the group and immediately afterwards; this is incredibly interesting material from a research perspective, and my article is just the first effort to begin exploring Beverly’s collection of dreams.

Her journals include more than 6,000 reports, of which only a subset of about 1,000 was analyzed for my project (all of which are currently available for further study in the Sleep and Dream Database).  Right now she is working on transcribing her handwritten dream journals into a format that can be studied using digital tools of analysis.  Beverly is at least as excited as I am about this project, and we will both be making presentations at a research panel at the upcoming annual conference in June 2018 in Scottsdale, Arizona. More on that later.

Here is the abstract for the article:

This paper reports the findings of a new exercise in the “blind analysis” of a long dream series.  The study focused on 940 dreams from a woman (“Beverly”) who kept a regular dream journal for thirty years. Four subsets of her dreams (from 1986, 1996, 2006, and 2016) were analyzed using a digital word search template, then predictions were made about Beverly’s waking life based on the word usage frequencies of her dreams. Twenty-six predictions were made, of which Beverly confirmed twenty-three as accurate.

The correct inferences included aspects of Beverly’s emotional temperament, preoccupations, relationships, financial concerns, physical health, and cultural interests, especially revolving around religion and spirituality.  The waking-dreaming continuities identified by the blind analysis method in this study strongly support the claims by Hall, Domhoff, Schredl, and others that patterns in dream content have meaningful connections with people’s concerns, interests, and activities in waking life.

source – kellybulkeley.org/