HomearticleLeaderless Teams: The Team as a System

Leaderless Teams: The Team as a System

Author:

IECL

Published:

29/09/2020

In our current climate of continued uncertainty where organisational and societal structures are being challenged, I’m coming across an increasing number of teams who are without formal leaders in the traditional sense of the word.

Whether this be a result of re-structure, substantive roles not being replaced at this time or difficultly in securing the right talent for the role it’s creating some interesting situations in terms of team dynamics.

Team leadership has traditionally been understood through the role of a ‘team leader’, a role where the leader holds a formal position of authority over a group of individuals united in a collective purpose. There are many, many theories, books and articles available on what effective leadership looks like which are all interesting if leadership is present but what if it isn’t? Where does that leave the team?

Team as a system

Working on the premise that a team is a social system which is a subset of a larger organisational system we can explore how leadership emerges in a social system. In some cases, the absence of a leader can throw a team into chaos, this absence becomes a destabilising factor in the system around which the team (or system) needs to reorganise. We also know from chaos theory that complex systems will organise themselves into patterns of interaction that can be functional or dysfunctional, either way they will reorganise so let’s take a closer look at the two patterns.

The functional pattern

Leadership emerges from within. It’s a shared experience of discovery and efficacy. The fact that the formal role of leader is absent in time becomes somewhat irrelevant. The team learns to self-manage as the system adapts in an effective manner. Leadership in the team is not a destination, it is adaptive and may be collectively held or shift from one individual to another depending on the required performance outputs. At its core the team learns to be an effective learning unit as it becomes aware of both its processes and its performance objectives as it unites around a common purpose where accountability is mutual.

The dysfunctional pattern

The absence of the formal leader leaves the team without a rudder. The team feels they have lost their purpose and direction and no longer have representation upwards in the organisation. Victim and blame like team narratives develop and individuals in the team turn their focus to the performance of their own business units and away from the collective purpose of the team. Mindsets become fixed and whilst the team might be a formal collective in the organisational structure they begin to operate more as a group of individuals focusing on the performance of their own business areas.

Hackman and Wageman (2005) believe that team leaders are often viewed as more influential in shaping team performance than is warranted by research evidence, sometimes referred to as the Leadership Attribution Error. Working with this idea along with what we know about leadership in social systems it suggests that leadership is always available in the system of a team. If it’s not available in a traditional ‘role’ structure then how can we help teams re-think leadership and help them discover what is already sitting in the system.

Team Coaching Mindset

When we teach our Team Coaching Certification at IECL one of the concepts we explore relates to the potential of the team, more specifically exploring where the potential of the team actually sits; helping the team become aware of both its potential and its ability to develop it. Discovering leadership in the team is one way of working with this concept. Following Hackman and Wageman’s view then the potential of the team to discover the leadership it needs is always on the table albeit possibly buried in significant amounts of both external and internal interference. Just to be clear I’m not advocating that we remove all our formal team leadership roles yet and whilst there are some interesting studies available on the benefits of emergent leadership versus traditional leadership I’m curious about the opportunity to support teams to re-think how they operate when traditional team structures may not be available.

Team Coaching can of course be about much more than discovering leadership in the team, it is a powerful way of helping teams achieve high performance by enabling them to become aware of their process dynamics whilst working towards their collective performance objectives.

Peter Hawkins (2017) in his book Leadership Team Coaching describes it as: –

‘the process by which a team coach works with a whole team, both when they are together and when they are apart, in order to help them improve both their collective performance and how they work together, and also how they develop their collective leadership to more effectively engage with all their key stakeholder groups to jointly transform the wider business.’

Leaving the broader opportunities for Team Coaching for another day let’s come back to the question of leaderless teams. If leadership is truly available in the system rather than within a specific individual, whilst the role of leader may be inhabited by an individual at various points in a team’s evolution so much more become possible once the invisible leadership potential of the team system can be made visible for the team to develop.

“When a team outgrows individual performance and learns team confidence excellence becomes a reality” – Joe Paterno

By IECL Head of Coaching and Coach Accreditation – Jane Porter

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