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How to lead in a crisis

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    We think of a great leader
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    as the unwavering captain
    who guides us forward
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    through challenge and complexity.
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    Confident, unwavering leaders,
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    armed with data and past experience
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    have long been celebrated
    in business and politics alike.
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    But sometimes and certainly now,
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    a crisis comes along
    that is so new and so urgent
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    that it upends everything
    we thought we knew.
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    [The Way We Work]
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    [Made possible with
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    One thing we know for sure
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    is that more upheavals are coming.
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    In a completely interconnected world
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    a single political uprising,
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    a viral video, a distant tsunami,
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    or a tiny virus can send
    shock waves around the world.
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    Upheaval creates fear,
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    and in the midst of it
    people crave security,
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    which can incline leaders
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    toward the usual tropes of strength,
    confidence, constancy,
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    but it won't work.
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    We have to flip the leadership playbook.
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    First, this type of leadership requires
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    communicating with transparency,
    communicating often.
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    So how can leaders lead
    when there is so little certainty,
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    so little clarity?
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    Whether you are a CEO,
    a prime minister, a middle manager
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    or even a head of school,
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    upheaval means you have
    to ramp up the humility.
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    When what you know is limited,
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    pretending that you have
    the answers isn't helpful.
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    Amidst upheaval, leaders
    must share what they know
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    and admit what they don't know.
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    Paradoxically, that honesty creates
    more psychological safety for people,
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    not less.
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    For example when the pandemic
    devastated the airline industry
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    virtually overnight,
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    CEO of Delta Airlines Ed Bastian
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    ramped up employee communication
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    despite having so little clarity
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    about the path ahead,
    facing truly dire results.
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    At one point in 2020,
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    losing over a hundred
    million dollars a day,
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    it would have been far easier for Bastian
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    to wait for more information
    before taking action,
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    but effective leaders during upheaval
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    don't hide in the shadows.
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    In fact, as Bastian put it,
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    it is far more important to communicate
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    when you don't have the answers
    than when you do.
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    Second, act with urgency
    despite incomplete information.
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    Admitting you don't have the answers
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    does not mean avoiding action.
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    While it's natural to want
    more information,
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    fast action is often the only way
    to get more information.
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    Worse, inaction leaves people
    feeling lost and unstable.
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    When New Zealand
    Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern
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    laid out a four level
    alert system very early
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    in the COVID-19 crisis,
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    she lacked information
    with which to set the level.
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    Despite lacking answers,
    she did not wait to communicate
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    about the threat with the nation.
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    At first she set the level at two,
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    only to change it to four
    two days later as cases rose.
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    That triggered a national lockdown,
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    which no doubt saved countless lives.
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    Later, when cases began to dissipate,
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    she made subsequent decisions
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    reflecting that new information.
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    Third, leaders must hold
    purpose and values steady,
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    even as goals and situations change.
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    Values can be your guiding light
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    when everything else is up in the air.
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    If you care about customer experience,
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    don't let go of that in times of upheaval.
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    If a core value is health and safety,
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    put that at the center
    of every decision you make.
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    Now doing this requires
    being very transparent
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    about what your values are,
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    and in this way, your steadfastness shows
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    not in your plans but in your values.
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    Prime Minister Ardern's
    clear purpose all along
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    was protecting human life.
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    Even as the immediate goal
    shifted from preventing illness
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    to preparing health systems
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    and ultimately to bolstering the economy.
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    And finally, give power away.
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    Our instincts are to hold
    even more tightly
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    to control in times of upheaval,
    but it backfires.
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    One of the most effective
    ways to show leadership,
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    if counterintuitive,
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    is to share power with those around you.
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    Doing this requires asking for help,
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    being clear that you can't do it alone.
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    This also provokes innovation
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    while giving people a sense of meaning.
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    Nothing is worse in a crisis
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    than feeling like there's
    nothing you can do to help.
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    We follow this new kind
    of leader through upheaval,
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    because we have confidence
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    not in their map but in their compass.
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    We believe they've chosen
    the right direction
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    given the current information,
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    and that they will keep updating.
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    Most of all, we trust them
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    and we want to help them
    in finding and refinding
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    the path forward.
Title:
How to lead in a crisis
Speaker:
Amy C. Edmondson
Description:

Humility, transparency and urgency are the keys to successfully steering an organization -- big or small -- through the challenges that come your way. Leadership expert Amy C. Edmondson provides clear advice and examples to help any leader rise to the occasion.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
04:34
Erin Gregory approved English subtitles for How to lead in a crisis
Erin Gregory edited English subtitles for How to lead in a crisis
Ivana Korom accepted English subtitles for How to lead in a crisis
Ivana Korom edited English subtitles for How to lead in a crisis
Ivana Korom edited English subtitles for How to lead in a crisis
Ivana Korom edited English subtitles for How to lead in a crisis
Erin Gregory edited English subtitles for How to lead in a crisis
Erin Gregory edited English subtitles for How to lead in a crisis

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