Rapid Culture Change is Possible
by Brace Barber
Published on this site: August 4th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month
Purpose: Show how immersion leadership training makes
strategic initiative success possible.
Adults learn through experience. We learn behaviors through
experience. This is the flagpole fact of the educational world.
This flag is visible for everyone to see, and it's where educators
know they need to be whether they are training hard or soft
skills. Deborah Solomon Reid of Tuck School of Business strikes
a bell to be heard by anyone considering this most fundamental
element of adult learning. "While conceptual learning
is important, the major leaps forward-these so-called 'aha!'
moments when mental maps are rearranged-are most likely to
happen when students encounter these theories experientially."
The widespread use of experiential training in the development
of the soft skills of leadership and teamwork can transform
individuals and your organization.
The question is, "What transformation do you want?"
What end state do you envision for your organization, and
what behavioral alignment must take place in your employees
before that vision can be realized? The answer to that question
often traverses the corporate culture. For instance, the characteristics
necessary for an agile and responsive company, one of the
strategic focuses highlighted by IBM in their 2004 CEO survey,
require employees, who value agility and responsiveness. Properly
guided experiential training can create fertile conditions
for a rapid adjustment in corporate culture, no matter the
direction you wish to go. Whether it is agility and responsiveness,
sustainability, or lean systems you wish to ingrain, it can
be done. However, to reap the greatest rewards you must make
two commitments.
First, you must embrace the experiential training model for
its ability to quickly influence behavior. Second, because
everyone has a role in corporate culture you must commit to
training nearly everyone. I acknowledge that this is a tremendous
distance to go for most companies. You will see that there
are many powerful uses for experiential training that will
enhance your company's performance without a wholesale assault
on your corporate culture. Any significant impact on your
leadership core should be embraced. However, if you are looking
for that sweeping modification, you need to plan and resource
for results. Bring a ladder tall enough to at least reach
the lowest branches.
Changing values for maintainable strategic initiatives:
Frances Hesselbein said, "Soft skills are now hard,"
and she is right. In so many strategic initiatives, particularly
in sustainability and lean systems, we must get into the person's
brain and adjust their value system. That's not easy. Experiential
training and immersion training as I'll define here require
a thoughtful approach by leaders determined to make improvements
and dedicate the necessary resources to do so.
When I refer to experiential training, I mean a guided experience
intended to teach specific lessons. Immersion training is
an extended use of experiential training where no other focus
is allowed. Immersion training (table 1) uses all available
time allotted for the achievement of the intended results.
The understanding is that the entire day is a training environment.
There are no distractive devices that connect the students
to work or home, and there is no happy hour or tee time. No
matter the number of days, and more than one is preferable,
the objectives of the course have the un-interrupted attention
of the students.
Table 1. Immersion training is characterized by:
Experience Based (table 2, 2a) - Students are involved;
physically and emotionally. Not in role playing but with actual
responsibility within the scenario. Their decisions have consequences.
Distraction free - For the duration of the training,
there are no connections, such as cell phone, pager, laptop,
to non-scenario, outside responsibilities.
Multiple day - More time for repetition of scenarios,
which aides in internalization of intended lessons. Facilitates
application of lessons in real life.
Extended work hours - More time for repetition of
scenarios, which aides in internalization of intended lessons.
Facilitates application of lessons in real life.
Narrow focus - Allows for frequent reoccurrence, reinforcement
and internalization of intended lessons. Facilitates application
of lessons in real life.
Reflection - Distraction free environment allows for
down-time assimilation of lessons. Facilitates application
of lessons in real life.
Regardless of the variables chosen for the realignment of
your corporate culture, teamwork, leadership and communication
must be the constants. When those components are taken out,
all other initiatives suffer. In the IBM 2004 CEO survey,
they "recognize that it is the skills of their people
and their capacity for change and leadership that will ultimately
determine the outcome."
Bob Doppelt, a leading researcher on sustainability, writes,
"Leading organizations are blessed with - or take explicit
steps to develop - exemplary leadership at the top and throughout
the enterprise. It is not possible to initiate or sustain
the tremendous transformation required to become more sustainable
without exceptional leadership."
Warren Bennis put it this way, "Without leaders who
can attract and retain talent, manage knowledge, and unblock
people's capacity to adapt and innovate, an organization's
future is in jeopardy."
If you don't have leadership, you will lose the capability
to fully exploit the preparedness for the new culture that
this training makes possible. You can spend all of your training
time and effort on sustainability or agility, and your company
will become very smart on these subjects. You can use experiential
training to make the lessons real, but if you don't have an
expansive, dedicated and perseverant leadership foundation,
you will fail.
One of the key advantages you have by making the commitment
to a broad immersion campaign is that through the process,
you will not only steer your corporate culture, but you will
also enhance every aspect of your ability for success by creating
a prevailing culture of leadership. Fortunately, leadership
principles are nearly universal. The same principles that
are used to successfully lead a project team are used to lead
a sales organization or a tech staff. The better those principles
are incorporated into the operating habits of your people,
the more advantage you will have.
In addition to the critical leadership aspect of the training,
you will customize your training to include those areas you
want most understood and valued. A narrow focus is more effective,
and I recommend only one or two. Fortunately, when it comes
to cultural issues a short list should be more than sufficient.
You are in the process of turning an ocean liner with momentum,
so the unsettling notion of a realigning of company values
must be prepared for by an extraordinary event.
Doppelt's first intervention for creating a sustainable organization
deals with change. "Disrupting an organization's controlling
mental model is the first - and most important - step toward
the development of new ways of operating. Little
change will occur if this step is unsuccessful."
The nature of immersion training is that it gets under your
skin. It's disruptive because in order to align the training
with how adults learn best, people have to be allowed to fall
down, be uncomfortable, challenged, stressed and sometimes
broken. This seems to go against our desire to protect people's
self-esteem. Understand that true self-esteem and confidence
comes from achievement not coddling. One of the greatest things
we as leaders can do to build up the capacity of our people
is to allow them the chance for achievement.
Immersion training allows for the complete involvement of
each of the participants at every step, whether a leader or
follower. It allows for the immediate illumination of the
relationship between actions and consequences. It provides
the ability to learn how to do things better through educated
analysis and experimentation. It allows the consequences of
mistakes to be experienced in a training environment and not
in the office environment, where they would be much more costly.
It compresses the on-the-job learning cycle from months and years
down to a number of days. It is an experience that aids in
the internalization of positive practices of teamwork, leadership,
communication and the variables you choose.
Begin and end properly:
At the beginning and end of this visceral, emotional experience
are the critical pieces of instruction and analysis. The format
of the experience is of ultimate importance, but in order
to keep it from wastefully spilling out of the ends, the classroom
time is the cinch.
The introduction is where the primary focuses are defined.
It is where their meaning and importance are explained. Next,
the students get to actually lead and follow in their experiential
environment. They get to make decisions that have consequences.
They get to feel the stress of having eyes and expectations
on them, and they get to learn what it means to make a decision
and stand by it. Everyone gets to operate as a team and learn
to depend on each other towards the accomplishment of an objective.
The cinch at the end is when together they get to participate
in the important closure of an after action review, or a post-mortem.
They get to analyze their experience with respect to the course
focuses, and create better ways to perform in the future.
The experience really excels when attention is given to building
bridges between the lessons learned and the student's workplace
and life.
David Kolb explains in his book Experiential Learning that
a cycle of learning exists. It is a good exercise to place
our guided experience onto his well-used framework. We provide
the opportunity for what he calls abstract conceptualization
when we make the introduction of our focus subjects. Our students
take these new concepts and use their time as a leader to
actively experiment with their implementation as they have
a concrete experience. Finally, they have the opportunity
to perform reflective observation. It is in this reflective
period that we derive lessons learned and build bridges to
the workplace and life. In my book, No Excuse Leadership, I sadly
acknowledge that after the nine-week immersion training that is U. S. Army
Ranger School, some people fail in life and in work. "The
reason is simple - they failed to take advantage of at least
two opportunities provided by the school. They either did
not think about what there was to learn or didn't take action
on the lessons they did learn." For various reasons,
ranger school does not have a mechanism for such feedback
and it is the individual's responsibility to take that extra
step. Fortunately for us, corporate immersion training can
use a much shorter period of time utilizing extensive feedback
and achieve remarkable behavioral results.
The power of rapid repetition:
The compression of time for behavioral changes is because
the same leadership patterns that exist in the workplace are
mimicked in the training, only they are rapid and clear. In
the unguided and unanalyzed workplace, decisions are made,
yet the consequences of those decisions are days or months
in the future and are rarely completely seen or understood.
Certainly, the interpersonal communication aspects of impressions,
perceptions and clarity are never addressed. Compress this
pattern and repeat it multiple times in a matter of days in
a guided environment where the decision-consequence link is
clear, and you will rapidly change behaviors.
After traveling the cycle once, it would be nice to stop
there and pat each other on the back, but in immersion training,
there is always more to do to. There is a superposition achieved
by moving immediately into another round of introduction,
experience, analysis and bridging; then another and then another,
etc. This training gets leaders leading; making mistakes,
evaluating decisions, and doing it again in rapid succession.
This superposition of progress was logged by a university
study performed on the Leading Concepts' Ranger TLC (teamwork,
leadership, communication) Experience, a four-day, 80 hour
training course. It showed consistent improvement in the areas
of trust in peers, group awareness, group effectiveness (cohesion),
group bonding and interpersonal communications. Although those
were the only areas considered in the study, the lessons can
be much farther ranging. In addition to the focus areas selected
for instruction, a recent Entrepreneur Magazine article showed
how immersion training can inspire people. "Many enter
leadership training believing their most valuable lessons
will be in the areas of policies and procedures, but they
come away with more fundamental insights that are ultimately
more valuable." The article went on to say that, "owners
who rated their experiences most highly were those who detached
themselves the most."
Those who are detached the most and who have no outside distractions
have the greatest opportunity to develop a clear picture of
what the teaching and experience mean to them. They have time
to reflect, not only during the analysis and bridge period,
but during their downtime also. It is that hidden after-hours
time that can lock the principles and values into a person's
decision cycle. Facilitation of the learning of the intended
message as clearly and deeply as possible is the beginning
of the future, and it is another product of experiential training
that less-involved methods cannot match.
Have your message received clearly:
One of the reasons there is so little progress on the soft-skills
despite mountains of writing, speaking and training, is because
the teachers are writing on a crowded blackboard of the student's
education. The distortion of writing with a big piece of chalk
in the small, open places of the blackboard, or in giant letters
over existing writing, obstructs even the understanding of
the intended lessons. If proper understanding is never achieved
then the persistence needed to take a lesson and create a
habit cannot start.
Compounding the difficulty of implementation of new behaviors
is the fact that the work environment, where these behaviors
are intended to work, is not a guided experience. There is
a mash of activities that don't lend themselves to 8-1/2 x
11 margins. If we get to the point of attempted application,
we see mutated lessons, adapted by a person in a job where
the cause and effect of leadership are rarely evident. The
results are mutated and misattributed if they are recognized
at all. This approach leaves everyone shrugging their shoulders in
frustration.
Some would rightly say that it is precisely a person's background,
education and work experience that make it possible for them
to learn new materials quickly. They are able to link new
information with existing experience to create new understandings. That is completely accurate, and extremely
valid in a hard skill. The problem this encounters in the
soft-skill environment is that people's existing leadership
experience, if they have any, is trial and error and seldom
firmly planted in accurate guiding principles. Their experience
then becomes the confusing scribbling on the blackboard.
The way to overcome the whiteout conditions of the student's
education is to find their clean blackboard. You must have
a place where a clear message can be communicated, and in
a method that will change behaviors beyond the last slide.
The immersion method gives you a clean blackboard for nearly
everyone in your company. In the top left hand corner of the
board write "Guided Leadership Experience." (table
2) Underneath that, write, "Actual Leadership Experience."
For the most efficient progress, these two must go together.
Actual experience is often called on-the-job experience, the
preponderance of which is unguided. Guided experience is what
we call professional development. To add to my definition
of experiential training, it starts beyond books, speeches
and seminars at a level where a person is making leadership
decisions that will have consequences.
Table 2. Guided Experience is characterized by:
Focus subject instruction - Education on focus subjects.
(Teamwork, Leadership, Communication)
Free-play scenarios - Leaders and followers experience real
stresses of teamwork and the consequences of their actions
with as few controls as possible.
After action reviews - Discovery, structured around focus
subjects, by students of lessons learned and discussion of
potential improvements.
Table 2a. Guided Experience is augmented by:
Bridge building - Creating links from the lessons
learned to work and life application.
Post training follow-up - Consistent reinforcement
of lessons learned through complimentary instructional material,
chain of command interaction, and advanced guided experiential
training.
Guided leadership experience is nearly non-existent. To be
fair, most of the top business schools have incorporated experiential
training and role-playing into their curriculum. Unfortunately,
the guided nature of the experience does not have a foundation
of actual experience on which to build. In an informal survey
of one of the top business schools, only 10-15% of the student
body had ever had leadership responsibility for other people
prior to enrollment.
Harvard Business School professor Linda A. Hill in her book,
Becoming a Manager warns, "Newly minted MBAs who have
never had subordinates reporting to them before may take jobs
in which they will have considerable people management responsibilities,
with little sense of the risk in doing so."
This leadership risk can be mitigated, not only for the new
MBA, but for everyone - EVERYONE. Leadership is risky. Arranged
properly, it is the leader's leather chair that is on the
line for consequences of decisions made. By giving the person
the best possible chance for success, the risk of monetary,
morale and self-esteem losses are all mitigated. The best
chance for success is achieved when leaders at all levels
are allowed the privilege of testing and developing their
leadership skills in non-job threatening, guided environments.
Conclusion:
Write your message on the clean blackboard of guided leadership
experience and purposefully develop your company's leadership
core. Immersion training offers the best way to communicate
a clear message that will quickly change people's behaviors.
The relatively dramatic nature of the training also prepares
people for receptivity to new information that can in turn
transform your corporate culture - no matter what you want
it to be.
Individuals are the building blocks of teams, of companies,
and of corporate cultures. The good news is that you do have
the ability to influence and build individuals in a rapid
fashion. You have to remain dedicated to the ideal and with
a firm hold on the flag pole of experiential training.

Brace E. Barber works extensively in the field of immersion
soft-skill training. His partnership with Leading Concepts,
Inc.(http://www.leadingconcepts.com)
has allowed for the expansion of this extraordinary level
of experiential training.

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