A Modest Realism about One’s Gifts and Plans

From the University of Buffalo NewsCenter comes a story about humility in leadership. According to a recent study by Bradley Owens of the University of Buffalo School of Management, “humble leaders are more effective and better liked.”

“Leaders of all ranks view admitting mistakes, spotlighting follower strengths and modeling teachability as being at the core of humble leadership,” says Owens, adding that “these three behaviors as being powerful predictors of their own as well as the organization’s growth.”  It’s a theme that is probably particularly true of renewable energy and cleantech, where the exact path forward isn’t obvious.

The study sounds straightforward: “Owens and co-author David Hekman, assistant professor of management at the Lubar School of Business, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, asked 16 CEOs, 20 mid-level leaders and 19 front-line leaders to describe in detail how humble leaders operate in the workplace and how a humble leader behaves differently than a non-humble leader.”

The leaders were from various sectors, including manufacturing, health care, financial services, retailing and religious, and yet they had a common ground: “[T]hey all agreed that the essence of leader humility involves modeling to followers how to grow.”

“Growing and learning often involves failure and can be embarrassing,” says Owens. “But leaders who can overcome their fears and broadcast their feelings as they work through the messy internal growth process will be viewed more favorably by their followers. They also will legitimize their followers’ own growth journeys and will have higher-performing organizations.”

The researchers found that such leaders model how to be effectively human rather than superhuman and legitimize “becoming” rather than “pretending.”

…Owens and Hekman offer straightforward advice to leaders. You can’t fake humility. You either genuinely want to grow and develop, or you don’t, and followers pick up on this. Leaders who want to grow signal to followers that learning, growth, mistakes, uncertainty and false starts are normal and expected in the workplace, and this produces followers and entire organizations that constantly keep growing and improving…

These findings may seem counterintuitive, if you believe in the heroic, larger-than-life view of leaders.  But in cleantech as in other industries, leaders are humans, too.

woman rapelling
A 2002 photo of a woman rapelling down the side of a bridge in Veracruz, Mexico, shot by Gengiskanhg, Wikimedia Commons, under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license

What to do when a recruiter calls

Fortune magazinerecently published an article with tips for executive talent preparing for new career moves. We thought you might like to read it and are thus providing this link.

Job Search and the Efficacy of LinkedIn

Candidates for leadership positions in Renewable Energy often shy away from creating and maintaining a LinkedIn profile. This is a mistake, as this remarkable example illustrates.

Renewable Energy – where are the jobs?

 “Clean energy continues to fuel the plans of many cities, states, nations, investors, and companies as they look for the next wave of innovation and growth”, an article in Globe-Net told us last October.

Since then, the Obama administration has launched Startup America Partnership, an initiative for working closely with the White House in marshaling private sector resources for the acceleration of community-based entrepreneurship programs.

For the Renewable Energy sector the benefits are not yet clear, but any time job creation programs are launched, our industry will sooner or later feel a positive impact.