Monday, 13 April 2015

Sub Culture, teams and Leadership... Is it a good idea?

Building a better tomorrow or simply swimming upstream?



In our earnest effort to be good leaders, we often think of a utopian paradise where we are loved and everybody looks forward to the start of each working day as much as they are sad leaving their extended family at day’s end. Nothing wrong with this vision, but we often allow good intentions to overly influence our leadership style, our strategic direction and where we think we can go with our team over time.


This can be counter productive and result in disaster if not checked early enough so can apply a more discerning approach to consultative leadership? Being discerning, we need to focus on the details of our leadership and the path ahead through things like:

Team Composition. What type of team do we have? Are the personalities takers, matchers or givers? Are there any functional or dysfunctional Alpha characters? Are there any passive aggressive types on board? Who are the social leaders and are they consistent with your leadership style and compatible with your forming vision for the team’s culture/operating state going forward?


Company Culture. What is your preference for an operating environment and company culture?? Is this combined vision (with your leadership style) to be found in the company leadership handbook, actual company culture and business practice??? Does the meld of all three elements into company culture suit your vision for an operating environment or do you have to create a sub culture for your leadership plans??

Management Practice. Are management ‘laissez faire’ in their actual practices leaving you free to practice leadership as you see fit or do they insist on a particular style?? Do management micromanage you, mentor you and/or coach you??? Will their practices impact your ability create a cultural connection for the team or instantiate a sub cultural environment for you and your team to operate in?

Social Hierarchy. Where do you and your team sit in the company’s social hierarchy structure? Will this impact your leadership plans in creating a consistent working environment to allow the group process to form, storm, norm and perform to set goals and objectives?

These are some conditional elements to consider when you are thinking of creating a productive sub culture in your company that suits your leadership style. Its context, acceptance probability and operational/cultural impact need to be understood in detail before proceeding.

If you find your company’s culture and management practices are consistent with your vision for leadership and a resulting operating environment, then you are in the right place! Well done, proceed with enthusiasm and create a sense of ‘we did it!’

If you find yourself upon reflection in difficulty, learning that management are negative or non responsive to your pitch, where you will drive changes with your team in approach, practices and procedures with a distinct sub culture instantiated, then don’t despair you are not alone! 

Whether it’s a case of management not understanding, not caring or disapproving, I would surmise that your vision may highlight a lack of vision on their part, which can happen for many reasons that have little or nothing to do with you. One needs to think of the follow on approach in terms of these questions:

  1. ·       After pushing for an answer with management, is the response consistent with support or no support bearing in mind that the absence of expressed support is “no support”?
  2. ·       Is the company culture likely to respond aggressively to the sub culture creation (i.e. giver taker culture clash) where your team’s social status is perceived in the company as “weak” due to the collaborative aspects of your leadership and environmental maintenance?
  3. ·       Are there any political considerations above the ‘normal’ limit of office politics where your plans, goals and objectives are perceived to interfere with powerful people or functions within your organisation?
  4. ·       Are your goals unrealistic to the environment you are in? After careful analysis and consideration, are you being asked to build ‘castles in the sand’?
  5. ·       Do you think your direct manager is uncharacteristically keeping his or her distance from you and your plans (not seeing inter company support of you to other company departments and members by your manager can qualify as keeping one’s distance)?

If you are thinking “yes” to all of the above, then the chances are quite real that your leadership style and vision may well fail due to a lack of suitability with your company’s practices, culture and attitude towards what you do and how you want to do it.


What to do? You could solicit direct counsel from your manager as to how he or she wants you to resolve the team/department situation and leave your effective zone of leadership to carry out the resulting instructions. However, in the long term your efforts will be in vain, as you will become a ‘proxy leader’ and not likely to gain the credibility from staff you need to succeed. Best advise if you are hitting a “yes” to those key questions is to find another position within the company or another company that is more suited to your cultural needs and leadership style. I submit that finding a good cultural fit is more important for the incoming employee then it is for the company as we perform best where we belong, not where we are employed! Marry the two together, and you enter a win-win relationship with your employer!




Great leadership starts with great vision, which in turn starts with seeing the situation for what it is, enacting a picture of what will be and then mapping the key milestones to getting there.  If you can do this, then you are on the right track. If you can’t see this or your company wont allow you to, then find another company who shares your passion for doing it right. What’s “right” depends on finding those of like mind to surround you! When you do, you will do great things!!



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