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picture1_Leadership Pdf 165041 | Ln Leadership Continuum   Mike Cardus


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File: Leadership Pdf 165041 | Ln Leadership Continuum Mike Cardus
www leadershipniagara com mike cardus leadership balancing art craft and science leadership that process in which one person sets a purpose or direction for one or more other persons and ...

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                  www.leadershipniagara.com                                                                              Mike Cardus 
                                   Leadership: Balancing Art, Craft, and Science 
                   
                           Leadership: that process in which one person sets a purpose or direction for one or more other 
                           persons, and gets them to move along together with him or her and with each other in that 
                           direction with competence and full commitment (Clement & Jaques. Executive Leadership 2009) 
                            
                           Leadership: adding value to the problem solving and decision making of others  
                   
                   
                           Leadership does not exist in a vacuum it is observed by others while a person is leading,  
                  found while it is experienced within a particular context. Removing the person leading from the 
                  context creates confusion and uncertainty. Leadership is seen within the practice. To make 
                  sense of this practice I am arguing that leadership is a continuum that combines art, craft, and 
                  science each useful and practical when in balance, while ineffective and useless when out of 
                  balance.  
                   
                      The table below lists various characteristics of leading under art, craft, and science.  
                      o  Art encourages creativity, resulting in ‘insights’ and ‘vision.’  
                      o  Science provides order, through systemic analysis and assessments.  
                      o  Craft makes connections, building on experiences.  
                   
                      Accordingly, art tends to be inductive, from special events to a broad overview; science 
                  deductive, from general concepts to specific applications; and craft is iterative, back and forth 
                  between specific and general. This is expressed most evidently in how each approaches 
                  strategy:  
                      o  as a process of visioning in art,  
                      o  planning in science,  
                      o  venturing in craft.  
                   
                                                       The Three Poles of Leadership 
                                               Science                      Art                          Craft 
                  Based on                     Logic                        Imagination                  Experience 
                                               (the verbal)                 (the visual)                 (the visceral) 
                  Relies on                    Scientific facts             Creative insights            Practical experience 
                  Concerned with               Replicability                Novelty                      Utility 
                  Decision making as           Deductive                    Inductive                    Iterative 
                  Strategy making as           Planning                     Visioning                    Venturing 
                  Metaphor                     The Earth (rational)         The air (spiritual)          The sea (sensual) 
                                               so can get stuck             so can get lost              so can go adrift  
                  Contribution                 Science as systemic          Art as comprehensive         Craft as dynamic 
                                               analysis, in the form of     synthesis, in the form of    learning, in the form of 
                                               inputs and assessments       insights and visions         actions and 
                                                                                                         experiments 
                                                                     Page 1 of 7              
                   
                  www.leadershipniagara.com                                                                              Mike Cardus 
                   
                   
                   
                   
                                                                         Art 
                                                             Vision creative insights 
                   
                   
                                                                     Narcissistic 
                                                                        style 
                   
                   
                   
                   
                                                                         Visionary 
                                                                         Insightful 
                                                                             style 
                                                                            
                                                                            
                                                                         Too 
                                                                            
                                                                      balanced? 
                                                                            
                                                                                        Engaging 
                                                                                          style 
                                                    Cerebral 
                                                      style                 
                                                                  Problem-solving 
                          Calculating                                    style                                    Tedious 
                              style                                                                                 style 
                                                                            
                              Science                          Dispirited leadership                          Craft 
                  Analysis systemic evidence                                                    Experience practical learning 
                                                                            
                                                                            
                                                                            
                                                                                              
                                                                     Page 2 of 7 
                   
                  www.leadershipniagara.com                                                                              Mike Cardus 
                           Effective leadership requires all three, while they need not exist in perfect balance they 
                  do have to reinforce each other. Accordingly, the outer triangle above labels each style in 
                  negative terms:  
                      o  narcissistic at the pole of art, namely art for its own sake;  
                      o  tedious at the pole of craft, where the leader may never venture beyond their own 
                           experience; 
                      o  calculating at the pole science, with relationships that can become dehumanized.  
                   
                      To the use the metaphors listed in the table on page 1.  
                      o  Art, as spiritual, rises into the air but risks getting lost in the clouds;  
                      o  craft, more sensual, floats on the sea but can go adrift;  
                      o  science, so rational, sits firmly on the ground, where it can get stuck.  
                            
                           The figure above labels the three lines of the triangle negatively, too, since each 
                  combines two of the dimensions but leaves out the third.  
                      o  Art and craft without the systemic scrutiny of science can lead to disorganized 
                           leadership.  
                      o  Craft and science without the creative vision of art can lead to dispirited leadership, 
                           careful and connected but lacking spark.  
                      o  Art with science, creative and systemic without the experience of craft, can produce 
                           rootless, impersonal, disconnected leadership.  
                      o  The triangle also shows a particular example of the latter, labeled heroic, closer to 
                           science but with a hint (or illusion) of art.  
                   
                           Effective leading tends to happen within the triangle in what is illustrated in the middle 
                  layer, where the three approaches coexist, even if there may be a tilt towards one or the other. 
                  A third smaller triangle is shown at the center to suggest that too much balance of the three 
                  may also be dysfunctional since it lacks any style.  
                   
                           Many functional leadership styles are possible within this middle triangle. The figure 
                  shows three in particular. One near the top, towards the right side, is labeled visionary. It is 
                  mainly artistic but rooted in experience, and supported by a certain level of analysis (or else it 
                  would go out of control). This suggests that the “big picture” does not appear as some 
                  apparition but has to be painted, stroke by stroke, out of the tangible experience of craft. The 
                  visionary style seems to be especially common among successful entrepreneurs.  
                   
                            A second style, labeled problem-solving, especially combines craft and science. It 
                  appears to be common amongst first line operating managers, such as factory foremen and 
                  project managers. This style may be slightly analytic, but is firmly rooted in experience and 
                  dependent on capability for insight as well.  
                   
                   
                                                                     Page 3 of 7              
                   
                  www.leadershipniagara.com                                                                              Mike Cardus 
                           A third style, labeled cerebral, takes its majority from science and mixes in a bit of art. 
                  The research and development manager or lead scientist will tend to favor the rigorous analysis 
                  that stems from science. The cerebral style works best when the vision of an artist is slightly 
                  combined with the rigor of data and science, to continue leading towards a breakthrough or 
                  discovery. 
                   
                           Toward the lower right is shown a people-orientated style, labeled engaging, favored by 
                  leaders who do lots of coaching and facilitating. This is mostly craft, but with enough art to 
                  make it interesting and enough science to make it viable.    
                   
                   
                         Where do you fit on the Art, Science, and Craft Leadership Continuum? 
                                                                                                                                     
                   
                                                                            
                   
                   
                                                                     Page 4 of 7              
                   
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