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Battlefield
Leadership for CIOs
IT executives find
lasting lessons at
News Story by Kathleen Melymuka
MARCH 01, 2004
Each October, a group of IT leaders walks
the hills and hollows of the
Dick Dooley (www.thedooleygroup.com), a founding member of the Society for Information Management and creator of the Leadership Legacy Forums, and Hal Nelson, a military historian and retired U.S. Army general, have combined two learning strategies to create a new concept in IT executive education: the battlefield leadership seminar.
For Nelson, the seminars are grounded in a long Army tradition of "staff rides," in which military personnel visit battlefields to study leadership. For Dooley, the basis is "cross-industry field trips" in which IT people move out of their comfort zones to absorb leadership lessons in a different environment.
"We found that if we took bankers to a bank, they didn't see what we wanted them to see," Dooley explains. In a familiar environment you "know it all" and are less open to learning. Bring those bankers to a battlefield, and suddenly they're novices again. "Against the background of your ignorance you can see things in higher relief," Dooley explains. "You can turn your ignorance into a learning element."
"It's interesting to be taken
completely out of the normal context," agrees John Fisher, CIO at SmithBucklin Corp. in
Kicking Rocks
The seminars take place at
He adds, "We also enjoy the fresh air and kick the rocks."
Some participants question the link between war and business, but not for long. "Plenty of people don't think they can learn much from a military organization because the leaders just give orders and people carry them out or they get flogged," Nelson says. "But armies are large human organizations characterized by human activity like work-arounds and foot-dragging. You see a lot of that on the battlefield, so that brings a big 'Aha!' People realize leadership makes a difference."
"War is about leadership, and business
is about leadership," agrees Linda Fraley, CIO at Lincoln National Life
Insurance Co. in
Making Connections
The seminar helps participants make those kinds of connections. However, "it's not a how-to kind of seminar," Fisher says. "You are challenged to think about things and try to understand your assumptions and your way of approaching things. It shows you the consequences of actions. You're left to figure out how to apply that yourself when you go back. It's not easy."
Participants have drawn a wide range of lessons and applied them in a variety of ways. For example, "don't try to make a cavalry guy work the artillery," Fraley says. "You're not doing anyone a favor by keeping someone in the wrong position. You won't just lose that person; you may lose the entire flank."
"At
Robert E. Lee badly underestimated the size of the Union army he was about to confront because the cavalry -- his eyes and ears -- was out in the countryside, Fisher says. "We think everybody has the same base of information we have, but they don't. You really do need to make sure everyone knows what you know all up and down line. If they don't, people will make decisions based on the information they have."
Some might say it's crass to use life-and-death struggles to illustrate business leadership concepts. But Nelson says the differences and similarities between the two are part of the perspective the seminar brings. "Maybe people are too convinced that they're in a life-and-death struggle at work - and they aren't," he says. "They're doing a hard job to the best of their ability. But that's what people do in life-and-death struggles.
Melymuka is a Computerworld contributing writer. She can be reached at kmelymuka@yahoo.com.
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Sidebar: History's Lessons for IT
News Story by Kathleen Melymuka
The connection between the Battle of Gettysburg
and life in IT may not be immediately apparent, but
participants in battlefield seminars have drawn interesting
parallels. Here are just a few:
History: Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson had a
tremendously trusting relationship. When Lee lost Jackson, his new direct
report, James Longstreet, hadn't yet earned that level of trust when he
argued forcefully against George S. Pickett's charge. Lee ignored his advice,
and the battle was lost.
Lesson: Trust among the executive team is critical.
History: The Confederate army communicated primarily through
signal flags, which were highly unreliable because of smoke and weather
conditions. The
Lesson: Effective use of communications technology can enable a company
to excel.
History: President Lincoln's goal was preservation of the
Lesson: When trying to lead change, choose your issues carefully.
History: The North moved supplies in a supply train. The
South didn't have an enterprise wide supply-train effort and Confederate
soldiers were often distracted by the need to live off the land.
Lesson: A better supply chain is a competitive advantage
© Computerworld, March 1, 2004
Updated September 30, 2005