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Empowerment—Selecting Your Own Leader

When a group is involved in selecting its own leader, you get the best candidate and a motivated, committed team.

 

"My lead manager suddenly resigned and I am looking for a replacement." My friend added that he didn't know if the opening would be filled with somebody from his own team or from another division. I suggested that he could use this unexpected vacancy as an opportunity to engage the people most affected—his Department Managers—in the selection process. Done right, the process would reveal the best candidate, and further develop the division's culture. Here's what we discussed.

Invite the Department Managers to a meeting, "To discuss the selection of your new leader". In the meeting, outline this group decision process. With your leadership they will:

 

Be clear that the results of their discussion will not necessarily be the final decision. At minimum what they say will be an important part of the selection decision process.

 

Ask for their agreement before using this process. It involves peer feedback. People might be apprehensive. You might hand out copies of this paper so they better understand the process before agreeing to it. Emphasize that what is discussed in the meeting is confidential—it must "stay in the room". Get their commitment to this.

Develop the Selection Criteria

You can stop the process at this point with some valuable information, or you can continue and rank the candidates.

Rank Order the Candidates

Discuss the Results

Each manager now knows how the group rates each person against the criteria they all developed. Some will rank high, others low. Sometimes one person stands out as the group's clear favorite. Leave plenty of time for discussion. It may move in surprising and productive directions. For example, with an experienced team, they might decide that those scoring high in one area might coach those scoring low. Be open to developments.

 

Do a "Plus/Delta" on the meeting. Thank everyone for participating. Remind them of their agreement on confidentiality.

 

Caution

 

My friend the director was quite apprehensive about using this process with his managers. It is not for all groups. In a competitive or mistrusting group, the results might be used outside of the meeting as ammunition. This is dangerous and unfair. Because of the potential for misuse, discuss the process in detail with the group ahead of time. Get their full understanding and agreement before using it.

 

In the right setting this process is exciting and informative. It identifies a leader who can move the team to new heights.

 

This process:

 

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