Radical Inclusion: What the Post-9/11 World Should Have Taught Us About Leadership
By Martin Dempsey and Ori Brafman
4.5/5
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About this ebook
NAMED BY THE WASHINGTON POST AS ONE OF THE 11 LEADERSHIP BOOKS TO READ IN 2018
Radical Inclusion: What the Post-9/11 World Should Have Taught Us About Leadership examines today’s leadership landscape and describes the change it demands of leaders. Dempsey and Brafman persuasively explain that today’s leaders are in competition for the trust and confidence of those they lead more than ever before. They assert that the nature of power is changing and should not be measured by degree of control alone. They offer principles for adaptation and bring them to life with examples from business, academia, government, and the military.
In building their argument, Dempsey and Brafman introduce several concepts that illuminate both the vulnerability and the opportunity in leading today:
- Radical Inclusion. Fear of losing control in our fast-paced, complex, highly scrutinized environment is pushing us toward exclusion―exactly the wrong direction. Leaders should instead develop an instinct for inclusion. The word “radical” emphasizes the urgency of doing so.
- The Era of the Digital Echo. The speed and accessibility of information create “digital echoes” that make facts vulnerable, eroding the trust between leader and follower.
- Relinquishing Control to Preserve Power. Power and control once went hand in hand, but no longer. In today’s environment, control is seductive but unlikely to produce optimum, affordable, sustainable solutions. Leaders must relinquish and share control to build and preserve power.
The principles discussed in Radical Inclusion are memorable and the book is full of engaging stories. From a young vegan’s confrontation with opponents in Berkeley to a young lieutenant’s surprising visitor during the Cold War, from a reflection on the significance of Burning Man to a discussion of challenges faced in the Situation Room, Radical Inclusion will provide you with leadership tools to address real leadership challenges.
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Reviews for Radical Inclusion
2 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Excellent book for current and aspiring leaders, from one of the best leaders of the US Forces.
Book preview
Radical Inclusion - Martin Dempsey
PREFACE
Often the best things result from the most unexpected collaborations. Based on this belief—a belief at the very core of this book—we set out to examine today’s leadership environment and to share some insights about how to navigate it. We concluded that a forty-one-year-old UC Berkeley professor and a forty-one-year-veteran U.S. Army general have very little in common except a deep and unwavering belief that most of the hard problems we face in our businesses, in our local communities, at the national level, and internationally can be solved with better leadership. Along the way, we learned that listening to each other was the first and most important step in our journey and that including diverse perspectives always produced surprising and valuable leadership insights. Ultimately we arrived at a message and how we would deliver it, a task that felt both more difficult and more important with the passage of time.
We feel a genuine urgency about our message. Few would dispute our assertion that the world began to change dramatically in 2001, but we have found the character and pace of change since 2001 more remarkable than we expected: challenges to the predictable and familiar order of things
in business, government, international relations, and even our sense of national identity; increasing religious extremism; the emergence of global peer competitors; the proliferation of technology, and—since about 2010—ubiquitous access to data and information for virtually everybody, all the time, everywhere. Status quo companies, militaries, countries—those that for a very long time enjoyed unchallenged power—are now palpably fearful that their power is eroding. Their instinct is to exert control. It’s the wrong instinct.
• • •
Although the world has changed, the way we think about leadership hasn’t kept pace. Often the result is suboptimal objectives decided upon too late, measured with the wrong metrics, and implemented with overconfidence by a workforce that is not sufficiently empowered to deliver them.
This book challenges us to refresh our thinking about leadership. It’s not that the things we’ve always done as leaders won’t work anymore. In fact, we will suggest that some of them should be reinforced. But we’ll also suggest that there are several emerging leadership principles and instincts that are gaining in importance and that demand careful thought and serious consideration—that is, if we want our leadership to match the times and meet their challenges.
To be sure, this book was written during a period of considerable political disagreement about our country’s future, especially about how much selectivity to exert about who belongs within and who is excluded outside our borders and our communities. But this book is not a commentary on political leadership. While we’d like to think that it has something to offer to those who have been elected to lead the country through the most pressing issues of our time, we believe that it will most strongly resonate among organizational leaders, especially those facing industry, market, and cultural transformations. This book is an exploration of what happens when there’s a mutation in the very core DNA of an organization.
Whether it’s being a member of a family, attending a school, or serving our country, belonging to a community or a cause bigger than ourselves is core to our very humanity in three specific ways: belonging shapes our identity, it provides our sense of security, and it creates the order we need to survive.
We develop our identity based on the communities we join (I’m a dad,
I’m an American,
I’m a soldier
). Being part of a community, in turn, provides us with security—when a parent sacrifices everything for their kids, when a teammate stays late to help a coworker finish a project, and in a thousand other ways, being a part of a community means that there are others who are committed to our success. Finally, in being a part of a community, we can expect our fellow members to abide by a certain set of rules, making our day-to-day existence predictable and thus productive.
Part of the very contract of belonging, though, is exclusion. We cluster ourselves in neighborhoods, hold tryouts for sports teams, and require exams for certain schools, thereby creating a sense of belonging among those who make the cut. Soldiers will often do anything—even against their own interests—to help a fellow combatant. This bond is so strong that we have a name for it: brothers in arms. You are brothers because you’ve both gone through boot camp, you both wear the same uniform, you both fight for the same country.
But what happens when there’s a simple change in a company’s organizational structure, or even a country’s? Rather than being selective—or having any barriers to entry at all—what happens when a community is open for anyone to join?
We’ll begin by looking at the forces knocking down organizational fences and checkpoints. We’ll explore how selectivity—border control, if you will—comes at an economic cost that may or may not make sense.
What are the costs of control? Clearly, there’s a measurable economic price to keeping a sentry at the gate. But in exerting control, we may be paying a more serious but harder-to-measure cost: the ability to accurately view reality.
Indeed, it has become a cliché to say that we live in a complex, unpredictable, and rapidly changing world—so cliché, in fact, that we fail to appreciate how profoundly people are affected by it.
In 1770 John Adams declared that facts are stubborn things.
Today, we argue, facts are vulnerable. Emerging technology is making facts increasingly vulnerable, and all of us will soon have trouble discerning what is actually true. Simply put, we’re about to enter an age where facts will no longer be reliable. The information we think is 100 percent accurate may be flawed, and even our best attempt to find the truth may fall short.
In a 2004 book, Ralph Keyes used the term post-truth
to describe an emerging period in our history where the borders blur between truth and lies, honesty and dishonesty, fiction and nonfiction.
¹
We build on that observation and explore what the world will look like when, to gain understanding of the reality around us, there is no longer a debate of facts but rather a competition of narratives. As competing narratives vie to present a picture of the world, we will have a harder time determining what’s real and accurate.
Welcome to the era of the digital echo, where information passes from individual to individual more quickly but in the process often becomes distorted.
We will explain the phenomenon of the digital echo in great detail, but it is important to note from the start that it is a neutral force. It can inform, misinform, educate, entertain, inspire the human spirit to great acts of compassion, or unleash mankind’s darkest instincts. It can inspire the generosity of the ice bucket challenge
or the hatred of the ISIS terrorist ideology. It presents both a leadership challenge and a leadership opportunity.
One thing is clear about the digital echo: it creates the need for inclusion.
In this new world, we need to leverage inclusion to gain better information about the world around us and to effectively communicate our message.
In order to help you accomplish these two imperatives, we provide concrete leadership tools to create an environment of inclusion:
1. Belonging isn’t optional: give them memories. We will argue that the first step in building a team is developing in its members a sense of belonging. Consider the alternative: if leaders don’t make those who follow feel a sense of belonging, someone or something else will. And the ubiquitous presence of the digital echo makes this not only possible but likely.
2. Connect effort with meaning: make it matter. We will show that persuading members of the team that their contributions matter is crucial to team success. We all want to believe we make a difference. Leaders help their followers understand what that takes.
3. Think about what you’re not thinking about: learn to imagine. We will encourage leaders to develop mindfulness, awareness, and imagination through a lifelong commitment to learning. We believe and will convince all who aspire to lead that imagination is a learned attribute.
4. Prevent decision paralysis: develop a bias for action. We will demonstrate that, when presented with a problem, leaders must look for what they can do in the moment. They must avoid information paralysis. They must act to change the environment and to learn, and then act again, in a deliberate pattern of persistent learning and proactive leadership.
5. Collaborate at every level of the organization: co-create context. We will discuss how the most effective leaders harvest knowledge and empower the organization from bottom to top. We will show the benefits of concentrating the what
while distributing the how.
6. Expand the circle: relinquish control to build and sustain power. We will assert in the strongest terms that finding optimal, enduring, affordable solutions to complex problems requires leaders to reconsider and rebalance their understanding of the relationship among leadership, power, and control.
The leadership instincts are listen, amplify, include.
Neither the principles nor the instincts are an à la carte menu. Effective leaders must understand and practice all of them.
We’ve titled our book Radical Inclusion because we believe that the traditional relationship among leadership, power, and control has changed. Solving our problems by leading with an emphasis on exclusion, jealously husbanding power, and aspiring to greater control is producing suboptimal, fragile, and costly outcomes.
The alternative is to rebalance the relationship among leadership, power, and control with an emphasis on inclusion, to selectively and purposefully relinquish control to enhance power, to define success less in terms of power and control and more in the ability to achieve optimal, enduring, and affordable outcomes.
Counterintuitive? Perhaps. But as the digital echo spreads, as complex issues multiply, as uncertainty increases, as technology exponentially changes, and as risk rises, it seems reasonable that we should seek to lead by sharing our challenges rather than owning them outright.
That said, this book’s proposition about leadership is not that we ought to surrender our hard-earned power because possessing it is becoming a liability. Rather, it is that we must develop an instinct for seeking opportunities to share control in order to preserve and even enhance the power we possess.
Ours is a pragmatic proposal. We advocate sharing control in problem solving not because we wish to become somehow more egalitarian but because we want to solve problems effectively and efficiently, and we want them to stay solved!
Finally, we chose the adjective radical
to describe the kind of inclusion we advocate because it speaks to the extremes we encounter as leaders in the world today. It is our belief that concentrations of power and exclusivity will continue to form but cannot endure in a world that sees all, a world in which technology levels all, a numbingly fast-paced world of rising expectations, glaring disparities, and declining trust.
If we’re right about that, about the environment in which the affairs of business, industry, international relations, and national security must be managed, then only the leader who can harness the power inherent in inclusion will make lasting progress and achieve enduring success.
PART 1
THE OPERATING
ENVIRONMENT
CHAPTER 1: THE DIGITAL ECHO
The Fog of War Descends on Berkeley
Berkeley police sergeant Sabrina Reich wore a clear and focused expression when we talked to her in the basement of Sproul Hall on the UC Berkeley campus.
The sergeant’s voice nonetheless shifted as she told us, "In the entire history of the campus, what happened is unprecedented. We didn’t expect something like this."
By unprecedented
the sergeant meant Molotov cocktails, damaged property, and masked perpetrators who were either right-wing extremists, paid agitators, or anarchists out of control. In the blink of an eye Berkeley had turned into a war zone; dozens of civilians took to the streets and engaged in full-on armed conflict.
What was most alarming was that the violence seemed to emerge out of nowhere. The police were taken so completely by surprise that they simply stood by and watched. The shockwaves from the day’s events reached all the way to the White House, escalating tensions between the federal government and the State of California.
And no one saw it coming. Wednesday, February 1, 2017, started out as a glorious Bay Area day. Over the previous month, after years of severe drought, California had finally been getting the drenching it so desperately needed. This week offered a respite from the rain. As temperatures rose in the afternoon, UC Berkeley students basked in glimpses of sunshine as they lounged on the steps of Sproul Hall.
Unlike the manicured, palm-lined drives of Stanford, its archrival an hour to the south, Cal has a decidedly gritty feel to it. It’s an urban campus where you’re as likely to run across a drum circle as you are to be caught up in a political debate. The guy in front of you in line for coffee could be a hippie, or he could be a Nobel laureate (Cal has reserved parking spots for Nobel Prize recipients)—or he could be both.
While the tech start-ups and venture capitalists may get more attention, it’s impossible to understand Silicon Valley without understanding what’s happening at Berkeley.
We often think of the transformational innovation coming from San Jose, Cupertino, and Mountain View, all home to the massive tech companies. Likewise, in Menlo Park and Palo Alto venture capital funds deploy billions of dollars. But Berkeley is the epicenter of social imagination—the place where the conscience of Silicon Valley originates.
It was on the Sproul Hall steps that Mario Savio stood to lead the free speech movement, and he walked through the administration building’s doors for the very first sit-ins just forty years ago. This is where protest movements from civil right to animal rights were launched.
Berkeley is no stranger to diversity of speech, and the campus is no stranger to controversial voices. At the peak of the AIDS epidemic, for instance, Professor Peter Duesberg gave a talk claiming that HIV wasn’t caused by a virus but was instead the product of drugs and a party lifestyle. Protesters objected to the presentation, predicting that it would impact HIV policy— and indeed, South Africa went on to base its policies on Dues-berg’s theories.
For decades the campus has prided itself on being accepting of an eclectic cast of characters, from religious protesters to antinuclear activists to proud nudists. So tolerant are the