1 00:00:00,300 --> 00:00:01,530 - We think of a great leader 2 00:00:01,530 --> 00:00:04,470 as the unwavering captain who guides us forward 3 00:00:04,470 --> 00:00:06,360 through challenging complexity. 4 00:00:06,360 --> 00:00:08,860 Confident, unwavering leaders, 5 00:00:08,860 --> 00:00:11,250 armed with data and past experience 6 00:00:11,250 --> 00:00:14,960 have long been celebrated in business and politics alike, 7 00:00:14,960 --> 00:00:18,350 but sometimes and certainly now a crisis comes along 8 00:00:18,350 --> 00:00:21,290 that is so new and so urgent that it upends 9 00:00:21,290 --> 00:00:22,677 everything we thought we knew. 10 00:00:22,677 --> 00:00:25,260 (upbeat music) 11 00:00:27,180 --> 00:00:28,590 One thing we know for sure 12 00:00:28,590 --> 00:00:30,470 is that more upheavals are coming. 13 00:00:30,470 --> 00:00:32,580 In a completely interconnected world 14 00:00:32,580 --> 00:00:34,710 a single political uprising, 15 00:00:34,710 --> 00:00:37,790 of viral video, a distant tsunami, 16 00:00:37,790 --> 00:00:42,110 or a tiny virus can send shockwaves around the world. 17 00:00:42,110 --> 00:00:44,870 Upheaval creates fear, and in the midst of it 18 00:00:44,870 --> 00:00:47,860 people crave security which can incline leaders 19 00:00:47,860 --> 00:00:52,040 toward the usual tropes of strength, confidence, 20 00:00:52,040 --> 00:00:54,490 constancy, but it won't work. 21 00:00:54,490 --> 00:00:56,590 We have to flip the leadership playbook. 22 00:00:56,590 --> 00:00:59,060 First, this type of leadership requires 23 00:00:59,060 --> 00:01:02,780 communicating with transparency, communicating often. 24 00:01:02,780 --> 00:01:05,770 So how can leaders lead when there is so little certainty, 25 00:01:05,770 --> 00:01:07,380 so little clarity? 26 00:01:07,380 --> 00:01:11,360 Whether you are a CEO, a prime minister, a middle manager, 27 00:01:11,360 --> 00:01:13,000 or even a head of school, 28 00:01:13,000 --> 00:01:15,930 upheaval means you have to ramp up the humility. 29 00:01:15,930 --> 00:01:17,400 When what you know is limited, 30 00:01:17,400 --> 00:01:20,430 pretending that you have the answers isn't helpful. 31 00:01:20,430 --> 00:01:24,140 Amidst upheaval leaders must share what they know 32 00:01:24,140 --> 00:01:26,020 and admit what they don't know. 33 00:01:26,020 --> 00:01:29,250 Paradoxically that honesty creates more psychological 34 00:01:29,250 --> 00:01:31,680 safety for people, not less. 35 00:01:31,680 --> 00:01:34,600 For example when the pandemic devastated 36 00:01:34,600 --> 00:01:36,810 the airline industry virtually overnight, 37 00:01:36,810 --> 00:01:39,060 CEO of Delta Airlines Ed Bastian 38 00:01:39,060 --> 00:01:41,340 ramped up employee communication 39 00:01:41,340 --> 00:01:43,210 despite having so little clarity 40 00:01:43,210 --> 00:01:46,890 about the path ahead, facing truly dire results. 41 00:01:46,890 --> 00:01:48,300 At one point in 2020, 42 00:01:48,300 --> 00:01:51,000 losing over a hundred million dollars a day, 43 00:01:51,000 --> 00:01:52,780 it would have been far easier for Bastian 44 00:01:52,780 --> 00:01:56,110 to wait for more information before taking action, 45 00:01:56,110 --> 00:01:58,290 but effective leaders during upheaval 46 00:01:58,290 --> 00:01:59,910 don't hide in the shadows. 47 00:01:59,910 --> 00:02:01,600 In fact as Bastian put it, 48 00:02:01,600 --> 00:02:03,960 it is far more important to communicate 49 00:02:03,960 --> 00:02:06,770 when you don't have the answers than when you do. 50 00:02:06,770 --> 00:02:10,840 Second, act with urgency despite incomplete information. 51 00:02:10,840 --> 00:02:12,840 Admitting you don't have the answers 52 00:02:12,840 --> 00:02:15,210 does not mean avoiding action. 53 00:02:15,210 --> 00:02:18,040 While it's natural to want more information, 54 00:02:18,040 --> 00:02:21,660 fast action is often the only way to get more information. 55 00:02:21,660 --> 00:02:25,260 Worse, inaction leaves people feeling lost and unstable. 56 00:02:25,260 --> 00:02:28,050 When New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern 57 00:02:28,050 --> 00:02:31,130 laid out a four level alert system very early 58 00:02:31,130 --> 00:02:32,750 in the COVID-19 crisis, 59 00:02:32,750 --> 00:02:35,670 she lacked information with which to set the level, 60 00:02:35,670 --> 00:02:39,610 despite lacking answers she did not wait to communicate 61 00:02:39,610 --> 00:02:41,260 about the threat with the nation. 62 00:02:41,260 --> 00:02:43,480 At first she set the level at two, 63 00:02:43,480 --> 00:02:47,540 only to change it to four two days later as cases rose. 64 00:02:47,540 --> 00:02:50,170 That triggered a national lockdown 65 00:02:50,170 --> 00:02:52,910 which no doubt saved countless lives, 66 00:02:52,910 --> 00:02:55,900 later when cases began to dissipate, 67 00:02:55,900 --> 00:02:57,820 she made subsequent decisions 68 00:02:57,820 --> 00:02:59,850 reflecting that new information. 69 00:02:59,850 --> 00:03:03,210 Third, leaders must hold purpose and values steady, 70 00:03:03,210 --> 00:03:05,690 even as goals and situations change. 71 00:03:05,690 --> 00:03:07,510 Values can be your guiding light 72 00:03:07,510 --> 00:03:09,490 when everything else is up in the air. 73 00:03:09,490 --> 00:03:11,400 If you care about customer experience, 74 00:03:11,400 --> 00:03:13,900 don't let go of that in times of upheaval. 75 00:03:13,900 --> 00:03:16,510 If a core value is health and safety, 76 00:03:16,510 --> 00:03:19,530 put that at the center of every decision you make. 77 00:03:19,530 --> 00:03:22,440 Now doing this requires being very transparent 78 00:03:22,440 --> 00:03:24,080 about what your values are, 79 00:03:24,080 --> 00:03:26,980 and in this way, your steadfastness shows 80 00:03:26,980 --> 00:03:29,610 not in your plans, but in your values. 81 00:03:29,610 --> 00:03:31,840 Prime minister Ardern's clear purpose 82 00:03:31,840 --> 00:03:34,240 all along was protecting human life. 83 00:03:34,240 --> 00:03:38,020 Even as the immediate goal shifted from preventing illness 84 00:03:38,020 --> 00:03:40,470 to preparing health systems and ultimately 85 00:03:40,470 --> 00:03:42,130 to bolstering the economy. 86 00:03:42,130 --> 00:03:44,650 And finally give power away. 87 00:03:44,650 --> 00:03:47,240 Our instincts are to hold even more tightly 88 00:03:47,240 --> 00:03:50,480 to control in times of upheaval, but it backfires. 89 00:03:50,480 --> 00:03:53,490 One of the most effective ways to show leadership, 90 00:03:53,490 --> 00:03:56,350 if counterintuitive, is to share power 91 00:03:56,350 --> 00:03:57,500 with those around you. 92 00:03:57,500 --> 00:03:59,840 Doing this requires asking for help, 93 00:03:59,840 --> 00:04:02,210 being clear that you can't do it alone. 94 00:04:02,210 --> 00:04:04,240 This also provokes innovation 95 00:04:04,240 --> 00:04:06,100 while giving people a sense of meaning. 96 00:04:06,100 --> 00:04:08,180 Nothing is worse in a crisis 97 00:04:08,180 --> 00:04:10,880 than feeling like there's nothing you can do to help. 98 00:04:10,880 --> 00:04:13,805 We follow this new kind of leader through upheaval, 99 00:04:13,805 --> 00:04:16,060 because we have confidence 100 00:04:16,060 --> 00:04:19,390 not in their map, but in their compass. 101 00:04:19,390 --> 00:04:21,870 We believe they've chosen the right direction 102 00:04:21,870 --> 00:04:23,890 given the current information, 103 00:04:23,890 --> 00:04:25,850 and that they will keep updating. 104 00:04:25,850 --> 00:04:28,430 Most of all, we trust them 105 00:04:28,430 --> 00:04:32,440 and we wanna help them in finding and refinding 106 00:04:32,440 --> 00:04:33,509 the path forward. 107 00:04:33,509 --> 00:04:36,092 (upbeat music)