From people manager to thought leader
As
routine tasks are automated, humans will have to learn the art of inspiring
others around them
The world of
management as we knew it is dead, as are the typical management pyramids
As I fly around the world looking closely
at organizations and talking to their leaders, I get a sense that an increasing
number are becoming incremental in thought and uninspiring in vision. This
explains disengaged workforces, low innovation, and a culture of blame, all
adding up to lost market and mind share. More leaders are taking their
organizations into such dead zones because they don’t appreciate the full
implications of certain historical facts.
The industrial era brought the science of
management centre stage, delivering great results. The digital era, in
contrast, demands high doses of innovation, not just process improvements. You
need to build organizations that have a culture of rapid experimentation and
innovation. This needs inspired and freethinking leaders, not managers trapped
in a monitoring and supervisory mind set.
BREAKING
PYRAMIDS
The world of management as we knew it is
dead, as are the typical management pyramids. Millennials are far more open,
connected and collaborative in the workplace. They shouldn’t be expected to
follow a traditional command and control structure. Employees don’t want to be
managed and organized in rows and columns. They will not fall in line with an
obsolete hierarchy.
If you have any doubt about this, look at
the way children are leading change in gun laws in the US after the fatal
school shooting in Parkland, Florida. Their desire to get what they want for
their generation is not going to be contained by the prevailing norms of
change-making.
The progressive advances in technology have
added fuel to the trend of making the manager’s role redundant. The knowledge
they brought to the workspace is now readily available online.
Their analytical capabilities are slowly
being replaced with artificial intelligence and data analytics, and their
routine tasks can all be carried out with an app. While technology is making
managing obsolete, the task of leading and inspiring remains an open field. If
we do not have inspiring leaders, the future of work is quite bleak as we will
continue to have these managers operating in a redundant paradigm, creating
chaos and distress for employees around them. But is this entirely the
managers’ fault?
I believe that
the journey of creating an inspiring leader starts at school and unless we fix
the broken education system today, the future does not hold promise. Let me
explain.
As we left industrialization behind and
moved into a globalized world and economy, other forms of learning started
receiving better rewards in the markets. Divergent and innovative thinking led
to the proliferation of innovation-led disruptive models of growth. Our
education system, however, remained firmly stuck in the 18th and 19th
centuries.
Sadly, edtech interventions fail to see the
problems and continue to function as knowledge-givers. The child learns in half
the time but misses out on the process of learning and discovery. I have no
problem with knowledge gathering, but I wish we used the time saved to teach
other skills.
It is time for both classroom interactions
and edtech interventions to focus on building the skills that current pedagogy
doesn’t address.
Skills such as problem solving,
collaboration, design thinking, creativity and learning agility, which will
gain currency as artificial intelligence takes care of mechanical and
repetitive jobs. Robots will solve knowledge problems at a fraction of the time
it takes a human being, and so humans have to learn the art of not just
applying knowledge to solve real-world problems but also inspiring others
around them to do the same.
THREE
IMPROBABLE QUESTIONS
I have three improbable questions that
could help you transform the way you think about the future of work and
leadership. First, are robots going to sit on corporate boards? Artificial
intelligence has made rapid strides, driven by advances in data collection and
analytics. AI will not only free people from repetitive mental tasks but also
be ten times better. Expecting certain high-level intellectual decisions, such
as the ones boards make, to be taken by robots isn’t such a far-fetched
thought.
Second,
are university campuses going to become theme parks for knowledge? Augmented
and virtual reality will go mainstream in education, skill development,
innovation and design. Learning can be at your own speed and in your own way by
being in the situation rather that writing a thesis on it.
Third,
will human interactions become rare? As the cost of sensors continues to
decline and computing power increases, all kinds of devices will become
connected to the internet, talking to each other and knowing our next step
before we take it. Will we get used to this proactive and predictable service
that will alter human interaction as we know?
ROLE OF HUMANS IN A CONNECTED WORLD
One
question on everyone’s mind is whether this connected, automated age we are
moving towards will have roles for humans. In the future, I believe that jobs
that require creativity, abstract thinking, and adaptability in unpredictable
situations will grow exponentially.
Among
the top jobs of the future would be that of the data scientist—who can process
and spot opportunities or offer analysis from the data that is mined by the
algorithms and databases.
Then
comes the robot engineers and operators—people who will have the technical
know-how to help run the new technology world. And, of course, we will have
innovators or solution providers who work on solving the global and local
challenges in the interconnected world.
For me,
the future of work depends on how well we invest in creating inspiring leaders
with the ability to create next-gen jobs, and how they start putting their
heart into inspiring people to do amazing work that only humans can. That is
the human way.
Source | Mint | 22nd
February 2019
Regards!
Librarian
Rizvi Institute of Management
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