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Real Leaders Embrace Change
ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- Too often, leadership is confused with a title or position and people believe that authority is enough to alter people and move organizations. Not so, says a researcher at the University of Michigan Business School.In his new book, Building the Bridge as You Walk on It: A Guide for Leading Change, Robert Quinn says that half of all organizational change efforts fail because of ineffective change leadership and the failure to recognize that anyone who embraces deep change can become a leader who attracts others to join in the change process.Quinn generated two concepts of leadership to explain his findings: a normal state and a fundamental state.Most people, whatever their position, spend the majority of their time in the normal state, he posits. Although they may claim they are committed to changing some undesirable condition, they actually are committed to remaining comfort-centered (staying on the path of least resistance), externally driven (complying with existing social pressures), self-focused (egocentric) and internally closed (neutralizing external signals for change).When a person faces a crisis and is forced to make a deep personal change, he or she has to move forward without control, Quinn says. In effect, that person has to learn to "build the bridge as he or she walks on it." In the process, people tend to move from the normal state to an alternative state in which they become more results-centered, internally driven, other-focused and externally open.When people make the shift, they often report surprising observations, Quinn says. They are more focused, feel increased integrity, are more connected to others and experience great increases in awareness and learning. They empower themselves and become more influential than at any previous time. Quinn calls this condition the fundamental state of leadership."There is a universal tendency to call high-level administrators 'leaders' simply because they are in positions of authority," he said. "Yet, the majority of people, including those in the highest administrative positions, spend most of their time in the normal state. They honestly believe they are trying to bring change when they actually are working to preserve things the way they are."Quinn's book is an example of a new body of research called Positive Organizational Scholarship. Pioneered at the Michigan Business School, this new movement has been tabbed by Harvard Business Review as one of the "Breakthrough Ideas for 2004."Drawing on path-breaking work in the organizational and social sciences, POS focuses on the dynamics in organizations that develop human strength, produce resilience, foster vitality and cultivate extraordinary individuals.Visit the University of Michigan Business School: www.bus.umich.edu"