I recently joined a client in Reykjavik, Iceland for a meeting of its top leadership team. The theme of the meeting was global leadership, a topic that is getting more and more attention now that the world is getting flatter and flatter, as Thomas Friedman has observed. In preparation for this meeting I reviewed the most recent data from our research, especially the Leadership Practices Inventory — we are now in the process of reviewing LPI data from over 300,000 respondents from about 60 countries— and our Characteristics of Admired Leaders survey. I also reviewed data from Project GLOBE. GLOBE stands for Global Leadership and Organizational Behavior Effectiveness, and it’s an undertaking involving 170 researchers studying over 17,000 managers in 62 different countries. If you are ambitious and want to read the data for yourself, you can sit down with a few cups of coffee and read the 800 plus pages of Culture, Leadership, and Organizations, the book that reports on the GLOBE findings to date.
What struck me in reviewing our data and the Project GLOBE data from around the world was not the differences, but the commonalties that are shared across the many cultures represented in the findings. There is a set of universally positive leadership attributes and practices that cross cultural boundaries. Effective leadership is not something that is idiosyncratic to one country or one region, but instead a mostly shared set of dimensions that are transferable. Sure, there are some culturally contingent approaches, but there are fewer of these than there are universally appropriate ones. This is good news, because if this weren’t the case then a leader from Indonesia could not effectively lead someone in Mexico, a Chinese leader could not lead someone in Germany, and a U.S. leader would only be working in the 50 states. We’d all be confined to our national borders and have to practice only stay-at-home leadership. We all recognize the absurdity of this notion, especially in a global economy.
And what are these universally positive attributes and practices? In my next four weekly blogs I will discuss each of them. Following that we’ll talk about the implications of these positive global leadership practices and what each of us can do to strengthen our abilities to better function in a global economy.
In this blog I present the first, and the most important, dimension. There is no surprise here. Exemplary global leaders are credible. They have high integrity, are honest, and trustworthy.
For the last twenty-five years Barry Posner and I have been asking working people around the world to answer the question, “What do you look for and admire in a leader, someone whose direction you would willingly follow?” Honesty has consistently come out on the top of this list of admired leader qualities no matter where we ask this question. Over the last three weeks I have asked this question in Reykjavik, Atlanta, Dallas, Dayton, and Napa, and "honest" has always been at the top of the list. On average 89 percent of people admire and look for leaders who are honest. While I 'm not surprised to find this in other academics’ research, it is comforting to know that what Barry and I have learned from the leaders we’ve studied is not biased by our sample.
It’s clear that if people anywhere are to willingly follow someone— whether it’s into battle or into the boardroom, the front office or the front lines—they first want to assure themselves that the leader is truthful and free from deception. No matter what the setting, everyone wants to be fully confident that their leaders are genuine, real, principled, and of unquestioned authenticity. Sure, we want our team to win, but we don’t want to be led—better to say, misled—by someone who cheats in the process of attaining victory.
Of all the qualities that people look for and admire in a leader, honesty is by far the most personal—to leaders and constituents. A leader’s honesty is a reflection of our own honesty. Perhaps that is why it consistently ranks number one. It’s the quality that can most enhance or most damage our own personal reputations. It’s the quality that makes everything else a leader says and does believable.
Posted by Jim Kouzes