Strategic Leadership
Strategic Leadership
Strategic Leadership
PRESENTATION
Semi nar Go lf
STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
PART I PRESENTATION
Sequence of Presentation
Introduction
Strategic Leadership
Strategic Vision
Strategic Culture
Dimension of Combat
STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
Ø Significant Change:
INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
GEORGE C MARSHALL
Chief of Staff, USA
End of Introduction
CHAPTER 1
STRATEGY AND STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
SCOPE OF PRESENTATION
STRATEGY
STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
EXECUTIVE LEADERSHIP
STRATEGIC ART
STRATEGY FORMULATION
THE SEARCH FOR GRAND STRATEGY
EVALUATION AND ANALYSIS
CONCLUSION
RECOMMENDATIONS
REFERENCES
STRATEGY AND STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
STRATEGY AND STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
STRATEGY AND STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
STRATEGY AND STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
STRATEGY AND STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
STRATEGY AND STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
STRATEGY AND STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
STRATEGY AND STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
STRATEGY AND STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
STRATEGY AND STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
STRATEGY AND STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
STRATEGY AND STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
STRATEGY AND STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
STRATEGY AND STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
STRATEGY AND STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
STRATEGY AND STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP
The Road Ahead: Visioning, Change, and Continuity
Chapt er 2
Semi nar Go lf
CHALLENGES TO LEADERSHIP
VUCA
ØInability to know everything about the current
ØExists when a decision maker does not understand
situation
Capacity for
§the -significance
System of atimely
complexity system
impacts
given event change.
onsituation
or Either
the capacity
of anticipate
leaders to or adapt to
formulate & environmental
execute effective
Ø change
Difficulty to
of maintain
predicting competitive
what the advantage
effects
Occurs when leaders have insufficient mentalof a
policy
Ø
proposed change today will be on the future
models
§ Cause- Accurate,
& effect comprehensive,
relationships areenvironmental
difficult to
Ø ØAlso
see scan
Arises
and because
assess,
occur when an decision-makers
when
eventthere are domany
can legitimatelynot
behave
good
interpreted
causes, “intelligence”
&inwhen
- Accurate moremany gathering
than one
articulation operations
waykey
divergent
of effects
values,existbeliefs
Leaders &must:
assumptions
§ Determination
ØStrategic
- Creativity of
to cause
leaders must be& effect
formulate new relationships
willing to take
options
is difficult;
measured uncertainty
Expect ambiguity
and aboutsituations
in complex
prudent risks; theable
be time in lag
to of
their
assess
- Tolerance
organizations
effects in complex of risk involved in new course
systems
risk accurately and develop risk management
strategies
Do a great deal of consensus building
VUCA
§ Coping with VUCA is the essence of
strategic leadership
§ If the Philippines is to aspire to
Southeast Asian leadership, VUCA
requires understanding different:
- Cultures
- Kinds of national objectives, &
- Means other nations employ to achieve
their objectives
§ The logic for working effectively with
nations in the region must include not
only competitive advantage for the
Philippines but “value added” for other
nations
External Environment Impact
THREATS
Increase civil wars, insurgencies, terrorism,
drug trafficking & weapons proliferation
INTERNATIONAL
ALLIANCES
Understanding of Political, Economic
and Cultural factors that influence
decision making
NATIONAL CULTURE
Armed Forces cannot survive if they isolate
themselves from the society they serve
PUBLIC OPINION
§ Consistently examine their anticipated
decisions and action
§ Media attempts to provide a balance
view
§ Skilled in information operations and
strategic communications
§ Credibility is the leader greatest asset
§ Greatest aspect is the general
confidence of the public
Environmental Factors
TECHNOLOGICAL FACTORS
§ Significant effects on the capability of
the Army to perform its various
missions
§ Significant advantage in networking,
command and control, situational
awareness, decisive combat power.
§ Increased the tempo of operations
§ Enhanced the ability of the Army to
effectively function.
§ Technology is a two-edged sword
Environmental Factors
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
§ Military is subject to civilian
government control
§ Proactively involve with numerous
organizations and agencies
§ Plays a key advisory role in the
development in the national security
strategy
§ Develop necessary strategies, plans and
policies
§ Provide counsel to civilian executive
authorities
§ Development of un understanding and an
Environmental Factors
PRIVATE ORGANIZATIONS
§ NGO, PVO have become key
components
§ Frequently interact with these
organizations
§ Spell the difference in effectively
shaping change
THE INTERNAL ENVIRONMENT
§ Internal environment and the
military structure are just complex
and demanding as the external
environment
§ Impractical to describe all the
organizations
§ Practical to describe the multitude
of interlocking relationships
§ Effectively institutionalized both in
policy and in culture
SUMMARY
Chapt er 3
Semi nar Go lf
Sequence
§Vision
- Definition
- Purpose
- Characteristics
§Samples
Vision
§What it is not?
- Not just a dream
- No religious connotations
- Not wishful fantasy
Nirvana
Vision
§What it is?
- Realistic, credible, attractive future for [an] organization
(Nanus, 1999)
§PMA’s vision
by 2015, is “to be the country’s premier leadership
school producing military professionals of
character, dedicated to protect and help build the
nation.”
Pictures from:
www.PMA.ph
Vision
§CGSC vision
A world-class institution for
academic
excellence in higher military
Vision
Taken from the movie : Braveheart , 1995 Warner Brothers accessed via
www.youtube.com
References:
VISION STATEMENT
- IT CAN CONVEY A
CONCEPTUAL IMAGE
BROAD AND POWERFUL
ENOUGH TO GIVE
AUTHORITY AND VALIDITY
- EASILY REMEMBERED
VISION STATEMENTS READY FOR IMPLEMENTATION
Joel A Barker
VISION AS ELEMENT IN ORGANIZATIONAL PROCESS
PURPOSE:
DEVELOPMENT OF
TO SHAPE THE ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE -
CULTURE CREATE, REVISE OR REAFFIRM
ORGANIZATIONAL PURPOSE, DIRECTION,
ENERGY, IDENTITY AND VALUES.
MANAGEMENT OF
CHANGE CREATE CHANGE - MOVE THE
ORGANIZATION TOWARD A MORE
EFFECTIVE FUTURE STATE.
INTERACTION WITH THE POSITIVELY INFLUENCE- SHAPE THE
ENVIRONMENT. ENVIRONMENT OF THE ORGANIZATION
LEADERS VISION-RELATED TASKS:
GEORGE C MARSHALL
VISION CREATING PERMANENT CHANGE
One of the most fateful decision of the war in Vietnam had been
Lyndon Johnson’s refusal to call up the reserves. All the Joint Chiefs,
but especially Harold K. Johnson, the Army Chief of Staff, had found
this traumatic thing; Johnson even coming close to resigning in protest
—and at the end of his life describing his failure to do so as his
greatest regret. Abrams as Vice Chief of Staff during the build up for
Vietnam had to cope with the disabilities induced by the lack of
mobilization. Now, as Chief of Staff, he appeared determine to ensure
that never again would a President be able to send the Army to war
without reserves maintained for such a contingency. The vehicle for
doing this was a revised force structure that integrated reserve and
active force elements so closely as to make the reserves virtually
inextricable from the whole.
VISION CREATING PERMANENT CHANGE
2. ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE
3. CULTURE vs. CLIMATE
4. CULTURES AND SUBCULTURES
5. CULTURAL CHANGE
6. SUMMARY
Values
statements of what is important to an organization
What strategic leaders must do
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
professional journals
historical and biographical publications
audiovisual media
ceremonies
folklore of the organization
Culture vs Climate
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Climate
a short-term phenomenon created by the current
leadership
the most important determiner of which is the
behavior of the leader
Culture
2. ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE
3. CULTURE vs. CLIMATE
4. CULTURES AND SUBCULTURES
5. CULTURAL CHANGE
6. SUMMARY
CHAPTER 4 – STRATEGIC CULTURE
In multiple subcultures -
effective leaders focus not on
what separates but on what
unites them.
Value-laden end state : peace,
stability and individual rights
4. CULTURAL CHANGE
4. CULTURAL CHANGE
4. CULTURAL CHANGE
2. ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE
3. CULTURE vs. CLIMATE
4. CULTURES AND SUBCULTURES
5. CULTURAL CHANGE
The Army reflects the culture of selfless
service
~INFORMATIONS WERE
IGNORED BECAUSE IT DID NOT
“FIT ANY PATTERN”
Encarta Encyclopedia
VU CA occurring,
“well begun is
change & half
develop
done” the
clearest possible visualization
of the end
Complexity resultsof
– Intricacy
-Horace
ofkey
change,
decision factorslead time to
with enough
Ambiguity – Vagueness about the
current situation & potential
outcomes
CHAPTER 5-STRATEGIC
LEADERSHIP COMPETENCIES
CHAPTER 5 – STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP COMPETENCIES
CO MPET ENCIE S
Frame Of Reference Deve lo pme nt
~Stu dy t he p ast;
~Se e the p at te rn of th e
pre sen t;
~Ex pa nd to fit, no t re duc e t o
fit
“Those who will not study the past
are bound to repeat it”
pre con ceiv ed idea s
-Anonymous
CHAPTER 5-STRATEGIC
LEADERSHIP COMPETENCIES
CHAPTER 5 – STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP COMPETENCIES
CHAPTER 5-STRATEGIC
LEADERSHIP COMPETENCIES
CHAPTER 5 – STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP COMPETENCIES
CHAPTER 5-STRATEGIC
LEADERSHIP COMPETENCIES
Chapter 5 - Strategic Leader Competencies
Agenda
Competencies
Knowledge, skills, attributes and capacities which enable a
leader to perform his required task. (US Army Strategic Leadership Primer 2nd
edition, 2004, 37)
Technical Competencies
Interpersonal Competencies
Chapter 5 - Strategic Leader Competencies
“Strategic leadership
requires appropriate
emphasis on leadership
and management [sic] to
achieve success.”
-International Council on
Management of Population
Programmes (ICOMP) (2006)-
References
Chapt er 6
Semi nar Go lf
ETHICAL REASONING
STRA TE GI C LEAD ERSH IP TAS KS
§ PR OVIDE VI SI ON
§ SH APE CULT URE
§ BU IL D & SHAP E
- JO INT
- INTER AGEN CY
- MULTI-N ATIONAL
- INTR A-AGEMCY RELAT ION SH IPS
§ PRO VI DE VI SI ON
§ SHAP E CULTU RE
§ BUI LD & SHAP E
JOINT
INTERAGENCY
MULTINATIONAL
INTRA-AGEMCY RELATIONSHIPS
STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP TASKS
§ PRO VI DE VI SI ON
to create a vision for their organizations. The vision, which sets
the tone for the future of the organization,
Include future required operating capability
The strategic leader’s vision sets the long-term direction for an
organization.
The solutions to short-term requirements should be consistent
with the articulated vision.
Institutionalize strategy to implement the vision
STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP TASKS
§ SHA PE C UL TURE
Culture is built on va lue s deemed essential by the members of the
organization.
Related to the strategic visions
- communicated
- internalized
Structural changes and programs with distant completion dates that
must be institutionalized.
Commitment to train other leaders by picking the right people for the
right jobs.
Reward structure reinforces desired values and behaviors.
STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP TASKS
The Congress shall have the power To…provide for the common
Defense..of the United States;…To raise and support the Armies;…
To Provide and maintain a Navy; To make rules for the government
and regulations of the land and naval Forces
Responsibilities:
ØManagement of Change
Identifying necessary force capabilities to
accomplish National Military Strategy.
ØManagement of Change
Create resource and sustain opn’l structures,
system and processes to include C4I system etc.
Developing & improving opn’l doctrine and training
methodologies.
Understanding and planning the effects for the
second-and-third order effects of actions to
implement change.
Maintain effective leader development program and
other human resource programs.
Chapter 6- Strategic Leadership Tasks
ØSUMMARY
Provide Vision and shape the culture of the
organization.
Influence and shape organizational culture to meet
the unified, joint, combined and interagency arenas.
Manage the organization’s relationship with all
national level agencies and organizations.
Represent the organizations to Congress, media
and other influential opinion groups.
Facilitate the management of change.
THE STRATEGIC LEADER AND
THE HUMAN DIMENSIONS
Chapt er 7
Semi nar Go lf
STRATEG IC LEAD ERSH IP
Combat stressors;
SUMMARY
environment.
challenges.