Blog Post

Increasing Executive Presence might be the key to leadership success (article 3)

  • by Tim Anderson
  • 04 Feb, 2019

In his book The Next Level: What Insiders Know About Executive Success, Scott Eblin considers Personal Presence, Team Presence and Organisational Presence as three core traits that great modern leaders portray.

He argues that developing these core traits often requires an executive to drop certain habits and clear the path to concentrate on developing good behaviours

In this last of three articles around increasing executive presence I will consider the impact that Organisational Presence can have on your ability to become a great leader.

Eblin highlights the following areas he feels should be developed by a manger and the areas a great leader should drop in order to thrive on organisational presences:

Organisational Presence 

Organisational presence is the ability to broaden your field of vision. It is about being able to identify and interact with stakeholders that can have an influence internally and externally on your organisation.

There are a several benefits to developing this ability, firstly, if you are a middle tier manager and looking for your opportunity to progress to the senior leadership team, it can do your career no harm at all to be considered as a dynamic player who regularly contributes to organisational challenges and by doing so are considered future potential. Secondly, by being able to have access to influential stakeholders and having a clear understanding of their respective abilities in any given circumstance, the executive can plan strategically how projects and initiatives can become successful.

I will give a description of how organisational presence works in real situations with an example that included the three core attributes that Eblin suggests an executive should develop by sharing a coaching intervention I was involved with last year.

My client was a successful sales manager sitting in the mid-tier, with a global software company. He is way past the stage of justifying his role as a manager in terms of being the go-to person, indeed he took great delight in developing his team to take responsibility for their actions.  He was comfortable with his role being that of creating conditions for his team to prosper.

He had shared his desire to move into a senior leadership role over the coming year to eighteen months and we were actively looking for methods he could employ to ensure he was perceived to be a realistic candidate for senior roles going forward.

In one session he shared with me a challenge that he was facing that was beginning to concern him in terms of his ability to help his team deliver on sales quota which in turn may adversely affect his standing and reputation within the organisation and thus inhibit his ambitions for a senior leadership role.

He described the constant threat of a competitor’s product that was gaining momentum in the market place. His team were beginning to regularly report losing opportunities to this competitor and he faced both missing that quarters sales targets and a dwindling motivation from the sales team who were not sure how to react.

Having listened to my client it was apparent that the competitor’s product was certainly a threat to his companies offering and he described the advantages of the competitor product over their own. What was also apparent was both my client and his sales teams were beginning to accept that the competitors offer would lead to failure and I saw little energy that convinced me that they would fail.


The mindset was of pending doom and gloom and I was reminded of Henry Ford’s statement:


 I was also reminded of the concept of being a victim. In his book Conscious Business, Fred Kofman talks about the “victim” and the “player” where a mindset of being a victim will inevitably lead to accepting defeat, where blame and accountability is shifted from you onto others thus making you feel less guilty about failure.

The converse he suggests is to become a player where you assume response- ability and therefore can have an impact. He describes the difference as such follows:

Whilst we can never guarantee success, adopting the role of the player can help us to positively try and do something about our situation. It can certainly stimulate energy and enthusiasm, something that was lacking with my client and his team and this was how we approached my client’s plight.

We spent our next session talking about the player / victim scenario and we were able to identify a gap from where my client currently sat and where he would prefer to be. Once my client had acknowledged he should be a player rather than a victim we were able to consider actions he might be able to take to start to “fight back”.

The outcome from the intervention was to position my client with some skills and ideas around organisational presence.


To enable him to gain an outside in view of his organisation he needed to get proper feedback from customers and others in the market place about perception of their offering and the perceived ability to deliver, he was also able to get great feedback of current and future user requirements.

He then looked left, right and diagonally within his own organisation and was able to produce a stakeholder map and gauge the level of influence each stakeholder might have when receiving feedback and ideas that could shift the momentum back in their favour.

What these actions delivered has helped put in place projects for improvement by the organisation that are way beyond the direct responsibility of my client’s current role however, by going the extra mile he has been able to get noticed by taking the initiative, and incorporating other skills mentioned in personal and team presence we covered in articles one and two.

By taking a big footprint view of his role, he has been able to influence a much-needed shake-up within the wider areas of the business that support the organisations ambitions and aims for growth.

Has he stemmed the flow? It is too early to tell.

Has he gained credibility from his peers and senior managers? Absolutely.

Does he feel empowered? Yes and his team feel motivated and re-energised, knowing that their manager is fighting their corner.

 


The NEXT LEVEL MODEL OF LEADERSHIP PRESENCE can certainly support our middle managers to become potential new leaders. It can also support improvement of existing leaders too.

Taking on a new role, increased scope in an existing role, operating in a constantly changing competitive environment – all of these are next level situations for senior managers and are challenges that most organisations management personnel face.

I wonder how well your organisations have defined the task and responsibilities of your executive leaders and whether you have armed them with enough resources to lead your organisations various teams?

Managers can have the single largest impact on your organization. A good (or bad) manager affects employee performance and satisfaction, productivity, efficiency, turnover, and the overall health of any organization. If your company is in business to make a profit, it goes without saying that investing in training is a smart move.

A good manager needs to be able to lead their team, manage their direct reports, be able to interact with wider stakeholders both inside and outside of the organisation which in turn demands fantastic communication skills and the ability to build effective and professional relationships.

The modern manager should be able to take responsibility, step up to the challenge, be agile and be able to manage the stress that will inevitably come with the role. They need to be a professional ambassador for your organisation.

Good management doesn’t just happen. They need to be trained and then supported to perform at their best.



For more information on how coaching can support the development of your team contact me on 07970190802

by Tim Anderson 11 Apr, 2020

In these challenging times I would like to share some thoughts with you why being people focused will have longer term benefits once we move out of lock down and toward more favourable times.

The term of the month seems to be furlough and I understand the need for businesses of all shapes and sizes to take whatever steps they need to take in order to survive however we would urge all organisations that have needed to take these measures not to fall into the trap of “out of sight out of mind”.

Never before have we had an opportunity as business owners and organisational leaders and managers to show that our people focused cultures are indeed what we do and how we act. I wonder how we might meet this challenge.

Taken from an excellent guide from the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development ( CIPD) to an explanation on the rules and regulations around furloughed workers here we can provide a brief explanation furloughed working regulations.

by Tim Anderson 27 Mar, 2020
This article considers two things you might do as a leader to provide practical support to your remote working teams, they are taken from experiences I have shared this week with some of my coaching clients
by Tim Anderson 18 Feb, 2020

I wanted to share a coaching session I provided to a client recently who brought to their coaching session a topic on how to support them in an up and coming bi-annual performance review. It was an interesting use of a coaching session and it got me thinking, why do we still carry out performance and staff reviews in methods created in the last century?

Employees the world over have been subject to the annual appraisal for as long as I can remember, I think I attended my first one back in the late 1970’s, I am not sure they have moved on much since then!

Back to my coaching session though. The coachee had suggested we look at areas such as how she could communicate a rich and powerful story that could describe many of the great things she had achieved since her last review and which were not captured by the standard KPI’s that everyone was measured against in the organisation. She wanted to include feedback on the things she had done since she had been promoted late last year, so her manager was aware of her growth. And she wanted to widen the theme, so the conversation did not major on merely what she had done this past month or so.

 My client wanted to explore with me how to make less visible things visible; she wanted to include items such as being a team player, being seen as trustworthy by her staff, showing up to work with the best version of herself on offer and how this delivered on her being considerate and respectful of the team members. What she was eluding to was how to get the strengths in soft skills onto the agenda?

All too often the agenda that is set for the review is to meet the needs of the manager and that of the organisation, ticking off an event in the calendar and ensuring that key business drivers are being met. This is fair but also one sided and whilst it might support short term deliverables the business needs, it does not address the team members own career aspirations very well, neither does it address some of the harder challenges facing many organisations today in terms of recruiting, retaining and developing their workforce for the 21st Century challenges they face.

Two or three other areas we considered exploring were around the review process itself and how we might be able to keep key things top of mind continuously and not just at review time. How best to do this?

We considered the difference between performance reviews and development reviews? How can the attendee ensure both performance (an historic measure) and developmental conversations (taking a future perspective) take place within the meeting? We considered how to raise awareness of how the softer challenges were important in terms of reaching the organisational goals.

I was impressed with the approach my coachee had taken to preparing for the forthcoming meeting and that she had considered bringing this topic to coaching, she also mentioned how she had talked with her peers which in turn had added to the depth of information she was using to be able to best plan and approach the meeting. Clearly there was some deep thought from my client around how best to take advantage of the forth coming review. She acknowledged and accepted that the three key areas her company measured would need to be addressed but she wanted this to be a two-way process.

On reflection of the session I considered several things, firstly I wonder how well her manager was preparing for this meeting? I have had several coaching sessions with senior managers who have shared with me that whilst they always intend to approach the annual reviews with a greater level of planning, by the time review season hits, other dynamics have taken preference to the allocated planning time and so they end up with more of the same as last year.

I also considered the power of regular reviews; these are opportunities to learn and plan for both the manager and their employees. I am reminded of Bernard Marr description of why we measure from his fantastic book Managing and Delivering Performance ( p141) where he suggests we measure for three reasons, firstly because we do not trust our team will perform ( pretty negative), secondly because we have to (compliance) or thirdly, because we want to provide rich information that can help us improve. Of course, we all aspire to the third of Marr’s reasons, but I wonder how well we manage the review process as managers and how rich and varied is the quality of the data we use when carrying out such reviews?

It occurred to me too that most organisations offer reviews as a type of snapshot. There is nothing wrong with this in theory, and an annual review is better than no review at all. I noticed my client’s company were carrying out reviews twice a year and I know other organisations where I coach that do so each quarter. Each organisation uses a variety of tools to collect data that can be used during the review such as 360% surveys, performance impact data on internal and external customer satisfaction, team retention. But generally, this data is also provided as a snapshot. And yet, with the advances in technology and data integration it must be feasible to provide accurate and up to date information that each employee can use on a weekly or daily basis to help identify improvement areas. By providing up to date and regular data to our teams we can ensure the performance reviews are not the dominant process, or worse, continue to be the only way we support our employees. By providing data that our teams have regular access to, the employee can take ownership of their own development as part of their regular routine.

With the  frightening statistic that 87% of employees worldwide are not engaged at work (Gallup 16) and considering that 50% of all millennials in the workplace are asking for more feedback and further, where many of the workforce in 2020 are working remotely and  often with more flexibility with working hours, I wonder what your organisation is doing to support your workforce and helping them to feel included, invested in, ensuring they feel part of the future plans of the organisation and, most importantly, supported in being the best they possibly can within their respective roles?

I am interested to hear from you on processes your organisation is adopting to meet these people challenges, and what technology are you using, or considering using, to help support these challenges going forward.

It would be great to learn more.

And on a final note, one of the frustrating elements to a review is when the team member does not come prepared, here is one amusing example that springs to mind.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IkYUDQCYGHA&t=80s
by Tim Anderson 28 Nov, 2019

Working as a coach and as a consultant I have been quite amused by the number of organisations that have used “Vision 2020” as a title when launching new strategic initiatives. As we fast approach the end of the decade and reach 2020 I wonder what organisations have achieved in terms of supporting their teams and leaders to deliver on their “2020 visions”?

The time for 2020 vision is fast approaching and is accompanied by challenges such as:

·        87% Of employees worldwide are not engaged with their work (Gallup 2016)

·        Leaders are increasingly required to support staff in complex and multicultural environments.

·        Senior executives are managing teams that are often working remotely and across time zones.

·        Many are managing teams where they do not have direct authority.

·        Dispersed workforce's are having to be managed within the lens of cost reduction and reducing the organisations carbon footprint.

·        Compliance continues to be a challenge where legislation is produced locally, causing duplication of cost across nations and borders.

·        Where the influence of technology is enabling personal values of different culture and generations across the globe to consider life with a different and fresher mindset.

·        Where ease of communication and connectivity has invigorated topics such as personal health, well-being and the sustainability of our planet.

·        And where wealth creation and imbalance regarding the distribution of such wealth is now far wider than 20 years ago and yet technology continues to make the world smaller and as such leads to tension and dissatisfaction.

So, what is the role of the 21st Century leader? Certainly, the modern leader is no longer required to be the knight on the white charger, fixing all in front of them, but perhaps now is required to be the facilitator of change.

When considering the past, present and the future we need to ask:

How well did we prepare managers and leaders to work in such a VUCA world where change is the norm?

What support mechanisms are delivering the outcomes we NEED to see today?

What initiatives and development methods will support our leaders in contributing to the success of our respective organisations in the future to help meet such challenges?

As we approach a new decade, it might be a great time to stop, reflect and consider what organisations need from their leaders and senior executives.



by Tim Anderson 12 Aug, 2019


Hitting the glass ceiling, being over-looked for promotion or perhaps you are just head down and working hard and looking forward to promotion……. but getting nowhere?

Getting to that next level may not be all about performance, hard effort and working long hours.

According to Harvey J Coleman from his book Empowering Yourself, how well you do your job may have very little to do with how successful you are in your professional career. Coleman suggests that how well you do your prescribed work will account for only about 10% of your overall success.

 Coleman suggests that career success is based on the 3 key elements of Performance, Image and Exposure (PIE):



by Tim Anderson 27 Mar, 2019

For many years now I have read about the desire to be able to demonstrate value for money in corporate training and development. Type ROI for training into any search engine and you can find hundreds, if not thousands of educated opinions on the subject.

by Tim Anderson 11 Mar, 2019
An article on how supervision can help develop our managers to perform at their peak consistently
by Tim Anderson 18 Feb, 2019

With so much noise surrounding coaching these days it is hard to distinguish between good practice within coaching and mentoring and interventions that are merely responding to a fashionable trend.

Coaching has grown of age over the past 30 years, with many organisations using both internal coaches and mentors, as well as using external experts to deliver outstanding individual results. Yet despite this maturity within the coaching and mentoring area, I still come across pockets of excellence of business coaching that have failed to move from isolated examples into long term and sustainable methods of doing business. The main reason for this I believe is the lack of published and substantiated success of how coaching and mentoring can impact effectively on corporate objectives.

Most coaching and mentoring interventions appear to remain at the 1:1 level. This is not surprising as coaching and mentoring is often provided to support the individual, however the importance of the individual’s development should have a wider impact than on just their own performance and ability.

For coaching to be able to demonstrate how it benefits the greater success of the organisation, we need to consider the knock on affect they have within their role, their department and ultimately on how they contribute to the success of the business.

Professor Peter Hawkins talks about the systemic approach to coaching where a coach considers the wider implication of a clients challenge when supporting in a 1:1 session. This can be illustrated below.

by Tim Anderson 15 Feb, 2019

For those of you old enough you may recall the BT adverts of the early 1990’s which featured the late Bob Hoskins where he told the viewer  “It’s good to talk”!

But how well do we really communicate, sure we have the corridor conversations with colleagues whilst we are at work. And we have countless meetings with internal and external contacts.


by Tim Anderson 30 Jan, 2019

In the second of three articles around increasing executive presence I will consider Team Presence as an essential core competence.

Eblin considers team presence in terms of team reliance over self-reliance, defining what to do rather than telling how to do it and finally to shift from responsibility for many results toward being accountable for many results and allowing your team to share and prosper in the departments success.

So how can coaching, training and development of you as a leader enable you to develop the correct environment to deliver modern-day leadership services to your team and wider stakeholders.

Within this article I will share my thoughts and experiences around team presence and some of the methods I have been able to use to help executives enhance their ability in this area.

Show More
Share by: