How to Overcome Leadership Blindness: The Challenge of Seeing Differently
Leadership lessons from the backstage
The world of business mimics that of entertainment. Both artists and top executives have two lives. The one glamorous of success and perfection; and the other one human, vulnerable, the life behind the scenes.
âWhat you donât see backstage is what really controls the show.â â Sarah Sutton
Most articles about âwhy leaders see differentlyâ present a Hollywoodesqueversion of their sharp vision. By portraying it as something that sets leaders apart from the rest, they miss the downside.
Itâs precisely that superpower that can make top executives myopic or blind them.
Letâs go behind the curtains of glorified corporate videos and business books: what really controls the show.
Understanding The 80% / 20% Vision
âLead from the back â and let others believe they are in front.â â Nelson Mandela
Iâm lucky enough to have frequent access to the backstage of several organizations. Fortune 500 or Startups. US or Foreign. Iâve learned a lot from observing leaders without makeup.
A couple of months ago I was invited to give a speech and run a couple of workshops on change leadership in Europe. As it usually happens, I was also asked to observe the preparation behind the scenes: âthe leadership moment of truth.â
Though they request my presence backstage to understand the company better, the underlying reason makes it more interesting.
Many CEOs want someone they can confide behind the scenes. Sometimes Iâve realized they need more than candid feedback and expect me to take their side. But that deserves a post of its own.
Letâs visit the backstage of a large global hospitality organization.
This particular corporate event was about accelerating internal innovation. Hundreds of senior leaders across the globe came to see the new jewel in the crown. Expectations were high: this recently built hotel would set the new standard.
Did I say built? Well, thatâs the first tension I noticed. The CEO kept talking as if the hotel was actually finished when the rest of the team kept referring to it as âunder construction.â
We were just a small group during the rehearsal. I could feel the top executiveâs frustration. âItâs ready.â â he kept saying said. âWe can start planning activities. Talk to our key corporate partners. What can we do together?â
The CEO had a clear vision of his dream. For him, the almost finished construction equaled to âcompleted.â
Thatâs when I came with this 80%/20% formula. For many leaders, 80% completion means their dream is coming true. For most people, 20% left to be finished means thereâs still a long way to go.
Leaders see differently. But not understanding othersâ perspective widens the âChange Gap.â
5 Ways Leaders See differently
âA dream you dream alone is only a dream. A dream you dream together is reality.â â Yoko Ono
1. Leaders visualize the big picture:
To drive change forward requires balancing tensions and risks with the ultimate outcome successfully. Leaders avoid being distracted by the irrelevant details. They anticipate opportunities and make connections among things that seem unrelated.
Good leaders have a higher vision: they find a route to cross the forest, rather than get stuck with the first tree that gets in the way.
2. Leaders see their dreams come true:
As it happened with the CEO of this hotel chain, leaders see their dreams alive even before they are finished.
Leaders harness the power of visualization to picture the future. âIf you can dream it, you can do it.â This phrase captures the mindset of a leader that, though it was coined by a Disney employee, the organization now attributes it to Walt Disney himself.
3. Leaders encourage others to see things differently:
Great leaders make their dreams contagious. Challenging people is how they get them to rally behind their vision. Like John F. Kennedyâs famous words: âThis nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to the Earth.â
Kennedyâs influence went beyond the 60âs generation. The term âmoonshotâ is now widely used to describe ambitious innovation challenges.
4. Leaders see the whole movie:
Life is like a movie. The storyline brings the past, present, and future together. Most people get stuck in what happened, what could have happened or whatâs not happening. They are at war with reality.
Leaders see the whole movie and donât get stuck in one particular scene. They see everything in motion and act as screenwriters of their journey.
Leaders are in harmony with their environment. They realize the world is never perfect. They are continually juggling balls and keeping all of them in the air.
5. Leaders see simplicity beyond complexity:
Visualization also helps leaders see the essence of the problem. Like the stroke of an artist, they just capture the substance.
Experts get caught in details and explanations. True leaders focus on the root cause and aim all efforts to solve the real challenge.
Removing irrelevant things from what matters is how leaders simplify reality.
But that superpower has a downsize. Leadersâ unique vision widen the change gap.
When Leadersâ Vision Get Them into Trouble
âFrom our myopia arose our dystopia.â â Anthony Marais
According to the âEmployee engagement and organizational culture studyâ by TINY, half of all employees are not satisfied with their direct supervisor.
Poor communication, not being present, and lack of knowledge/ understanding are the top three reasons behind this tension.
The study shades some light on when leaders are blind to essential employeeâs expectations. Or, in other words, their approach is myopic.
1. When leaders are blind to different perspectives:
âWhen you change the way you see things, the things you look at change.â â Wayne Dyer
That a leader has clarity doesnât mean that he/she owns the truth. Even worse, the obsession with achieving a dream can make them blind to other peopleâs point of views.
The same way leaders challenge their teams, they need to encourage their teams to challenge them. This is one of the hardest exercises for a leader. To let go of being right and embrace vulnerability.
2. When leaders see just what others have to change:
âOur worst fault is our preoccupation is with the fault of others.â â Kahil Gibran
A couple of months ago, I was helping a large firm accelerate their new vision. Their new CEO was brought a year ago and was struggling to unify the team. âThey are backstabbers, donât see each other in the eye, donât have any accountability.â â she told me during the initial interview.
Long story short, after working with the team I realized she was right, yet with proper coaching and challenge, everyone started to acknowledge their flaws and committed to moving forward.
As change progressed, the CEO turned out to be the most significant resistance. Her âmeâ versus âthemâ approach was not helping. She wasnât promoting a culture of transparency either. I told her it was time for her to change her behavior too.
Change is a two-way street. Think about it, what can you change yourself to promote others to change?
3. When leaders miss that dreams are full of details:
âAmateurs talk strategy. Professionals talk logistics.â â General Omar Bradley
We can debate for ages which one is more critical â strategy or logistics. Having a well-oiled operation without the proper vision wonât drive innovation. But when leaders donât want to get past the details, they can get stuck in a dream.
It happened to me more than once as a former CEO. Iâm very good at seeing simplicity within complexity. But by focusing too much on the bigger picture, Iâve minimized the operational difficulties that some changes initiatives demanded.
Iâve learned not to minimize operations. Thatâs why I keep an eye on it as a consultant now, to make sure leaders donât fall into the same trap.
4. When leaders forget that âseeing is believingâ:
âSeeing is not believing, it is only seeing.â â George MacDonald
Going back to the â80%-20%â vision we discussed earlier You might tend to see the finished project. Your team will see whatâs missing.
Some people require more evidence than others. And though you shouldnât stop promoting your dreamâ just like my European client â donât let your vision make you myopic.
5. When leaders only see whatâs missing:
âThere is always an optimal value, beyond which anything is toxic, no matter what: oxygen, sleep, psychotherapy, philosophy.â â Gregory Bateson
Focusing just on the big picture can fuel intolerance, frustration or anxiety. The gap between where you want to be and where the rest of the people are causes many tensions.
Iâve been there myself many times. Being so focused on what can be improved, that I failed to acknowledge what weâve accomplished. Or continuously feeding the gap by reminding people of âwhatâs still missing.â
As you might have noticed, this is a paradox. Leaders see their dreams completed but also get stuck on otherâs flaws.
Also, constant improvement requires a pause from time to time. Pushing people too relentlessly can drive fear and fatigue.
How Leaders Can Adjust Their Unique Vision
âDonât find a fault, find a remedy.â â Henry Ford
CEOs (and other leaders) need to be more mindful of their unique perspective. And avoid becoming myopic.
Having a sharper vision doesnât mean that others are wrong.
Learn to switch from âbig picture visionâ to âdetailed focusâ depending on the nature of the topic or the audience you are dealing with. If you want to drive better engagement among âdetail-drivenâ employees, change your behavior rather than expecting them to see like you see.
Donât confuse different perspectives or the pushback with lack of commitment.
Train and coach your team to see things through a CEOâs eyes. Find a translator or a compatible code to minimize misunderstandings.
How can you push back in a way that it doesnât seem you are becoming a distraction?
How can you embrace an 80%=100% vision without losing perspective of what still needs to be done?
How can your team bring up details without irritating the âbig picture guyâ?
Let go of your âglamorous life.â Embrace your human and vulnerable self when interacting with your team behind the scenes.
Seeing things differently starts with you. Look at yourself in the mirror.
What behaviors can you adjust to inspire others to change too?
About the Author
Gustavo Razzetti is the CEO and founder of Liberationist and author of Stretch for Change. He helps leaders ignite and accelerate a culture of change and innovation.
In his capacity advising CEOs of everything from start-ups to Fortune 500 companies, Razzetti has led and transform organizations for over twenty years. He has helped companies in almost every business category bridge âThe Change Gapâ.
Interested in building a culture of where people and creativity can thrive?
- Reach out to Gustavo: gustavo@liberationist.org
- Check out our change programs: https://liberationist.org/change-leadership-programs/
- Learn more about our consulting services: https://liberationist.org/innovation-consulting/
Demystifying Culture | I equip leaders with actionable insights and tools to accelerate team collaboration and innovation | Change facilitator and best-selling author ð
6yThanks Angela Szabo for your kind words.
Intelligently written article that leaves me with thoughts to ponder. Thank you.
Senior Manager Innovation & Delivery | Driving Strategic Technology Solutions
6yA good read, thanks!