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This article was first published in Training and Learning (www.trainingandlearning.co.uk) in Vol 1, Issue 9, 2005 and is reproduced with the kind permission of the Institute of Training and Occupational Learning (www.traininginstitute.co.uk)

Don’t step in the leadership!

Neil Thompson

This is the title of one of Scott Adams’s Dilbert books, and it clearly shows what he thinks of the current emphasis on leadership! We’ve always had leaders and leadership has always been important, but the topic has been receiving more and more attention in recent years, as if it were something new. But then management thinking always has been prone to following fads and fashions and promoting people to guru status in the process. I’m not convinced that this is helpful, as it means that the ideas that get publicised are the ones that are seen as being ‘of the moment’, rather than the ones that are important, relevant or helpful. It also means that we lose out to a certain extent on the development and consolidation of ideas. Today’s ideas will be replaced by tomorrow’s fashion, and so much of what is of value in today’s thinking will be lost or at least dissipated. Similarly, important learning from the past gets labelled ‘dated’, and is discarded to a large extent, even if it has been of great value in helping us make sense of the complexities of organisational life.

In my view, though, leadership is a topic that justifies close attention. This is not only because it is an important issue (or set of issues), but also because it is surrounded by confusion, misunderstanding and oversimplification. In particular, the following common, but misleading, assumptions need to be challenged:

What we need, then, is a more sophisticated approach to leadership than many people currently adopt – one that avoids the misleading assumptions outlined here and others like them. Leadership development is not (or should not be) a bandwagon to be jumped on – it is too important for that. We need to build on the more in-depth understandings of leadership that are being developed in some quarters at the moment and make sure that training and development activities in this area do justice to the complexity of the issues. We also need to make sure that our learning in this important area continues to develop and be consolidated rather than fall by the wayside when the next fad or fashion comes along. We need to make sure that leadership is not allowed to be consigned at some point in the future to the status of ‘yesterday’s thing’. And that in itself is, of course, a leadership challenge.

Neil Thompson is the managing director of Avenue Consulting Ltd (www.avenueconsulting.co.uk) and the co-author of Supervision and Leadership Skills: A Training Resource Pack, published by Learning Curve Publishing.

© Neil Thompson 2005
www.neilthompson.info

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