The 15 Diseases of Leadership, According to Pope Francis
The 15
Diseases of Leadership, According to Pope Francis
By: Gary
Hamel
Taken
from: Harvard Business Review
Pope
Francis has made no secret of his intention to radically reform the
administrative structures of the Catholic church, which he regards as insular,
imperious, and bureaucratic. He understands that in a hyper-kinetic world,
inward-looking and self-obsessed leaders are a liability.
Last year,
just before Christmas, the Pope addressed the leaders of the Roman Curia — the
Cardinals and other officials who are charged with running the church’s
byzantine network of administrative bodies. The Pope’s message to his
colleagues was blunt. Leaders are susceptible to an array of debilitating
maladies, including arrogance, intolerance, myopia, and pettiness. When those
diseases go untreated, the organization itself is enfeebled. To have a healthy
church, we need healthy leaders.
Through the
years, I’ve heard dozens of management experts enumerate the qualities of great
leaders. Seldom, though, do they speak plainly about the “diseases” of
leadership. The Pope is more forthright. He understands that as human beings we
have certain proclivities — not all of them noble. Nevertheless, leaders should
be held to a high standard, since their scope of influence makes their ailments
particularly infectious.
The
Catholic Church is a bureaucracy: a hierarchy populated by good-hearted, but
less-than-perfect souls. In that sense, it’s not much different than your
organization. That’s why the Pope’s counsel is relevant to leaders everywhere.
With that
in mind, I spent a couple of hours translating the Pope’s address into
something a little closer to corporate-speak. (I don’t know if there’s a
prohibition on paraphrasing Papal pronouncements, but since I’m not Catholic,
I’m willing to take the risk.)
Herewith,
then, the Pope (more or less):
____________________
The
leadership team is called constantly to improve and to grow in rapport and
wisdom, in order to carry out fully its mission. And yet, like any body, like
any human body, it is also exposed to diseases, malfunctioning, infirmity. Here
I would like to mention some of these “[leadership] diseases.” They are
diseases and temptations which can dangerously weaken the effectiveness of any
organization.
The disease
of thinking we are immortal, immune, or downright indispensable, [and
therefore] neglecting the need for regular check-ups. A leadership team which
is not self-critical, which does not keep up with things, which does not seek
to be more fit, is a sick body. A simple visit to the cemetery might help us
see the names of many people who thought they were immortal, immune, and
indispensable! It is the disease of those who turn into lords and masters, who
think of themselves as above others and not at their service. It is the
pathology of power and comes from a superiority complex, from a narcissism
which passionately gazes at its own image and does not see the face of others,
especially the weakest and those most in need. The antidote to this plague is
humility; to say heartily, “I am merely a servant. I have only done what was my
duty.”
Another
disease is excessive busyness. It is found in those who immerse themselves in
work and inevitably neglect to “rest a while.” Neglecting needed rest leads to
stress and agitation. A time of rest, for those who have completed their work,
is necessary, obligatory and should be taken seriously: by spending time with
one’s family and respecting holidays as moments for recharging.
Then there
is the disease of mental and [emotional] “petrification.” It is found in
leaders who have a heart of stone, the “stiff-necked;” in those who in the
course of time lose their interior serenity, alertness and daring, and hide
under a pile of papers, turning into paper pushers and not men and women of
compassion. It is dangerous to lose the human sensitivity that enables us to
weep with those who weep and to rejoice with those who rejoice! Because as time
goes on, our hearts grow hard and become incapable of loving all those around
us. Being a humane leader means having the sentiments of humility and
unselfishness, of detachment and generosity.
The disease
of excessive planning and of functionalism. When a leader plans everything down
to the last detail and believes that with perfect planning things will fall
into place, he or she becomes an accountant or an office manager. Things need
to be prepared well, but without ever falling into the temptation of trying to
eliminate spontaneity and serendipity, which is always more flexible than any
human planning. We contract this disease because it is easy and comfortable to
settle in our own sedentary and unchanging ways.
The disease
of poor coordination. Once leaders lose a sense of community among themselves,
the body loses its harmonious functioning and its equilibrium; it then becomes
an orchestra that produces noise: its members do not work together and lose the
spirit of camaraderie and teamwork. When the foot says to the arm: ‘I don’t
need you,’ or the hand says to the head, ‘I’m in charge,’ they create
discomfort and parochialism.
There is
also a sort of “leadership Alzheimer’s disease.” It consists in losing the
memory of those who nurtured, mentored and supported us in our own journeys. We
see this in those who have lost the memory of their encounters with the great
leaders who inspired them; in those who are completely caught up in the present
moment, in their passions, whims and obsessions; in those who build walls and
routines around themselves, and thus become more and more the slaves of idols
carved by their own hands.
The disease
of rivalry and vainglory. When appearances, our perks, and our titles become
the primary object in life, we forget our fundamental duty as leaders—to “do
nothing from selfishness or conceit but in humility count others better than
ourselves.” [As leaders, we must] look not only to [our] own interests, but
also to the interests of others.
The disease
of existential schizophrenia. This is the disease of those who live a double
life, the fruit of that hypocrisy typical of the mediocre and of a progressive
emotional emptiness which no [accomplishment or] title can fill. It is a
disease which often strikes those who are no longer directly in touch with
customers and “ordinary” employees, and restrict themselves to bureaucratic
matters, thus losing contact with reality, with concrete people.
The disease
of gossiping, grumbling, and back-biting. This is a grave illness which begins
simply, perhaps even in small talk, and takes over a person, making him become
a “sower of weeds” and in many cases, a cold-blooded killer of the good name of
colleagues. It is the disease of cowardly persons who lack the courage to speak
out directly, but instead speak behind other people’s backs. Let us be on our
guard against the terrorism of gossip!
The disease
of idolizing superiors. This is the disease of those who court their superiors
in the hope of gaining their favor. They are victims of careerism and
opportunism; they honor persons [rather than the larger mission of the
organization]. They think only of what they can get and not of what they should
give; small-minded persons, unhappy and inspired only by their own lethal
selfishness. Superiors themselves can be affected by this disease, when they
try to obtain the submission, loyalty and psychological dependency of their
subordinates, but the end result is unhealthy complicity.
The disease
of indifference to others. This is where each leader thinks only of himself or
herself, and loses the sincerity and warmth of [genuine] human relationships.
This can happen in many ways: When the most knowledgeable person does not put
that knowledge at the service of less knowledgeable colleagues, when you learn
something and then keep it to yourself rather than sharing it in a helpful way
with others; when out of jealousy or deceit you take joy in seeing others fall
instead of helping them up and encouraging them.
The disease
of a downcast face. You see this disease in those glum and dour persons who
think that to be serious you have to put on a face of melancholy and severity,
and treat others—especially those we consider our inferiors—with rigor,
brusqueness and arrogance. In fact, a show of severity and sterile pessimism
are frequently symptoms of fear and insecurity. A leader must make an effort to
be courteous, serene, enthusiastic and joyful, a person who transmits joy
everywhere he goes. A happy heart radiates an infectious joy: it is immediately
evident! So a leader should never lose that joyful, humorous and even
self-deprecating spirit which makes people amiable even in difficult
situations. How beneficial is a good dose of humor! …
The disease
of hoarding. This occurs when a leader tries to fill an existential void in his
or her heart by accumulating material goods, not out of need but only in order
to feel secure. The fact is that we are not able to bring material goods with
us when we leave this life, since “the winding sheet does not have pockets” and
all our treasures will never be able to fill that void; instead, they will only
make it deeper and more demanding. Accumulating goods only burdens and
inexorably slows down the journey!
The disease
of closed circles, where belonging to a clique becomes more powerful than our
shared identity. This disease too always begins with good intentions, but with
the passing of time it enslaves its members and becomes a cancer which
threatens the harmony of the organization and causes immense evil, especially
to those we treat as outsiders. “Friendly fire” from our fellow soldiers, is
the most insidious danger. It is the evil which strikes from within. As it says
in the bible, “Every kingdom divided against itself is laid waste.”
Lastly: the
disease of extravagance and self-exhibition. This happens when a leader turns
his or her service into power, and uses that power for material gain, or to
acquire even greater power. This is the disease of persons who insatiably try
to accumulate power and to this end are ready to slander, defame and discredit
others; who put themselves on display to show that they are more capable than
others. This disease does great harm because it leads people to justify the use
of any means whatsoever to attain their goal, often in the name of justice and
transparency! Here I remember a leader who used to call journalists to tell and
invent private and confidential matters involving his colleagues. The only
thing he was concerned about was being able to see himself on the front page,
since this made him feel powerful and glamorous, while causing great harm to
others and to the organization.
Friends,
these diseases are a danger for every leader and every organization, and they
can strike at the individual and the community levels.
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