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CoronavirusLatest NewsEmotional intelligenceLearning & developmentLeadership

Leaders will show their softer side post-Covid, research claims

by Jo Faragher 18 Jan 2021
by Jo Faragher 18 Jan 2021

A softer, more humane approach to leadership will offer greater value in a post-Covid world, according to research from management education alliance CEMS.

CEMS surveyed 1,711 alumni of schools in its network and corporate partners on what they will consider important as organisations emerge from the pandemic crisis and how these priorities have shifted from before.

Leadership in 2021

Leadership development 

Why building resilience should be a priority in 2021

Resilience and empathy experienced a clear increase in how they were perceived, with 43% of respondents ranking these in their top three leadership qualities post-crisis, compared to 38% before.

Conversely, strategic vision ranked as a top-three priority for 75% of leaders prior to the pandemic, but sunk to 68% post-Covid. Just 5% of those surveyed thought “commanding presence and authority” would be a key leadership quality in the long term.

More than half of those surveyed thought the impact of the pandemic would be both positive and negative, citing changes such as more rapid decision-making and a greater capacity for resilience as plusses.

Job losses, an increase in mergers and acquisitions and a drop in revenue were cited as upcoming challenges posed by the aftermath of the pandemic.

However, the tough environment would be a good breeding ground for innovation, the report claimed, including in how leaders spend their time learning.

“We have been presented with a rare opportunity to redefine our business-as-usual approach,” said the report.

“The traditional approaches to learning in large lecture theatres and leadership based on staid and inflexible ideas are dead. What has emerged from this crisis is the transformative effect of open and empathetic leadership.”

CEMS proposed three actions for leaders to navigate through the upcoming turbulence:

  • to build psychological safety for people to be their best selves;
  • to drive greater autonomy by reframing how people learn and stay ahead of the innovation curve; and
  • to build an innovation mindset, have the resilience to unearth opportunities and expand their networks.

Heidi Robertson, group head of diversity, inclusion and employer brand at automation company ABB, said the research showed that it was important for organisations to build “trust-based leadership” rather than trying to exert control.

“People must feel motivated, empowered and inspired to be self-driven and, crucially, trust must run two-ways,” she said.

“Company values and culture become increasingly important – the glue that ties the employees together – when the working models are changing, and the environment is in constant flux and of unstable character.

“If managed well, this crisis can lead to an even stronger unity and feeling of belonging, as a sense of urgency drives and pulls the workforce in the same direction.”

Robertson added that this shift in culture would see changes to perceptions of hierarchy and mobility of talent.

“Physical presence is not the sole key factor of successful delivery and performance,” she added.

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“The pandemic has also underlined and strengthened the findings of historical research on the definition of successful leadership – linked to empowerment, empathy, accountability and trust. Micro-management, monitoring and control belong to the past.”

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Jo Faragher

Jo Faragher has been an employment and business journalist for 20 years. She regularly contributes to Personnel Today and writes features for a number of national business and membership magazines. Jo is also the author of 'Good Work, Great Technology', published in 2022 by Clink Street Publishing, charting the relationship between effective workplace technology and productive and happy employees. She won the Willis Towers Watson HR journalist of the year award in 2015 and has been highly commended twice.

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1 comment

Kadiyali Srivatsa 18 Jan 2021 - 5:35 pm

Innovations do not happen overnight and the tough environment is not the breeding ground. Without innovation, small countries that depend on tourism and crumbling health care will start facing a financial crisis. I have been an investor, developer and advice device and medical equipment manufacturers, in the early 1980s.
In the last two decades, I have not come across one innovation from the UK that I can say was great. Everyone is talking about AI taking over healthcare, but if this was true, then the world could have stopped the pandemic.
I have tested various hypotheses and know Post-Covid problem can only be solved if the greedy healthcare providers and power-hungry politicians listen to what I said and accept my solution “Superbug Pandemic and how to prevent them”, published in American Interest.
Sorry, my comment may not be easy for some people to read, but let us be honest, this is to do with life and death.

Comments are closed.

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