Paul L. Dann

Managing and Leading Nonprofit Organizations


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not start reading from Chapter 1, would you? With the water pouring down I am confident that you would jump straight to Chapter 4 and realize that step one is to cut off the water. Feel free to use this book in the same manner. For example, when I walked into my first leadership role, now more than 40 years ago, I would have turned to Chapters 4 and 6 before reading Chapter 1.

      As you will see in the Appendix, I have also included several tools that relate to specific topic areas within the various chapters that you can use to assess your own, your team's, or your organization's leadership and management practice. Each tool is connected to what is explored in a specific chapter and as a result the tools can be used to support as well as advance the information in the related chapter. For example, the Employee Engagement and Performance Assessment tool can help you to operationalize what is discussed in Chapter 6, not only for yourself but also for your team. Each tool has been tried and tested in my own leadership practice and has played a role in advancing effective leadership practice at the individual, team, and organizational level. I think you will find that these tools serve you well as you work to move from theory to practice and implement the various strategies shared within this book.

      Malcolm Gladwell (2008) is credited with defining the amount of practice needed to master a desired skill. His observation that excellence in any endeavor requires 10,000 hours of practice is widely quoted and, while pundits argue about the veracity of the claim, we can agree that anything worth learning takes practice. While some people seem to have a natural ability for a given activity it is also true that people can be taught. This is true for leadership as well (Doh, 2003). Some people may have characteristics that support their ability to be an effective leader while others may find themselves with fewer innate abilities to support them at the onset. Despite these differences individuals have the capacity to build their leadership capability through thoughtful practice.

      The notion of actively pursuing your own leadership development means, in a practical sense, that you commit yourself to a path of continual leadership development, a path that ensures you build on your existing strengths and areas for improvement in an ongoing way. Commit yourself to pursuing ongoing learning about leadership and take what you are learning to build your leadership practice. If you do not learn and then practice, you will cut short your own development and stunt your growth as a nonprofit leader.

      Leadership development is like muscle development. If you do not work out, then you will not build muscle mass. Conversely if you commit to working out, then you will build muscle mass. As an illustration of this, if you have ever broken a bone and had a cast, you will be familiar with the surreal feeling you had as you looked at your arm the moment the cast was removed. The muscle on the recently healed arm is essentially gone and the first thought you have is “Whose arm is this?” The arm still belongs to the original owner, it is just that the lack of exercise and mobility has caused muscle atrophy. In a like manner if you do not regularly exercise your leadership skills, you will experience the loss of leadership muscle.

      In addition to working to develop your own leadership muscle it is important to consider strategies to build leadership capability at the team as well as organizational level. In today's complex nonprofit organizations, we come to recognize the importance of expanding the entire organization's leadership prowess. No longer can we rely on the individual positional leader to carry the team and the organization forward. We are better served if the entire team has the ability to act in a leadership capacity.

      As we explore some of the specific tools that you will want to develop, it's important to consider several perspectives about leadership practice that I have found to be extremely helpful. Each of the practice perspectives explored in this chapter provides a lens to help you better understand your work as a leader.

      My long‐standing mentor often says that to be effective we must often be “antigravitational.” The notion itself conjures up odd visions of people floating above the ground, but despite the humorous nature of the vision the conceptual frame is a useful one. To be gravitational is to simply go with the flow. To be antigravitational means that there are times when one should move against the flow, to work in a way that moves in the opposite direction of what would come naturally, to give pause to the pull that typically exists—at least long enough to understand what other options might exist.

      To be gravitational is to risk action without thought. To be antigravitational is to ensure that you have exercised a thoughtful examination of your and others' actions to determine whether a different course of action—one that is against the flow—is the better course of action. The key here in understanding this perspective is to understand the role that awareness and mindfulness plays in determining whether to be gravitational or antigravitational. The notion is not to always be a contrarian, but rather to ensure that your leadership practice includes the mindful consideration of your and your team's actions. Understand that there are times when you must go against the flow, and that in order to know when to do this you have to be aware of exactly what the flow is and where it comes from.