Pharos Institute

Reflective Leadership Practice

28.04.24 08:36 PM By admin

Reflective Leadership Practice
​by Dr Eric Perez

I have had the absolute good fortune to speak with leaders, entrepreneurs, and consultants through my leadership podcast. The topic of individual leader reflection was raised in many of the discussions and offline. The need for reflective leader practice is not a ground breaking observation but understanding why reflection is important for the individual leader, the longevity of organisations and impacts on team building and cohesion is critically important.

 

There is no shortage of academic research and consultancy attention to understanding why reflective leader practice matters. In a more connected world of work, the constant need to focus on the viability of the organisation and the management and leadership of teams I believe the reality of the modern workplace is that leaders simply do not have the time to reflect in a meaningful way. Not because they do not want to but that commodity that is supremely valuable is in short supply, time. Add to this the pressing need to achieve a work-life balance and its clear that setting aside time for reflection as a leader is a difficult proposition.

 

Jennifer Porter, writing for the Harvard Business Review in 2017 observed that the practice of reflection is critical noting1, ‘At its simplest, reflection is about careful thought. But the kind of reflection that is really valuable to leaders is more nuanced than that. The most useful reflection involves the conscious consideration and analysis of beliefs and actions for the purpose of learning. Reflection gives the brain an opportunity to pause amidst the chaos, untangle and sort through observations and experiences, consider multiple possible interpretations, and create meaning. This meaning becomes learning, which can then inform future mindsets and actions. For leaders, this “meaning making” is crucial to their ongoing growth and development’.

 

More recently, I spoke with Anita Hobson-Powell, Director of Advancia Consulting, and the former CEO of Exercise & Sports Science Australia on the topic of reflective leadership2. Part of the discussion focused on the need for understanding how you ‘show up’ for work and how do display what you value and why that matters. On the need for reflective leader practice, I also spoke with Dr Wade Azmy3 who noted that reflective leader practice is not an innate skill but on that is consciously developed over time. Wade noted leaders can consider the – ‘the what, the so what and the now what’. More specifically, the what – trying to understand what has happened; the so what – what does it mean for me; and the now what – what am I going to do about it.

At its most basic level, reflective leader practice is a process that helps to identify what our blind spots, what do they mean for leaders and the teams we lead. Reflective practice is not always a solo endeavour and after speaking with Anita and Wade effective leader practioners invite feedback to improve their metacognitions, thinking about how we think.

 

References

1) Jennifer Porter (March 21, 2017), ‘Why You Should Make Time for Self-Reflection (Even If You Hate Doing It), https://shorturl.at/alqC2

2) Anita Hobson-Powell (2024), Talking Leadership TV, Ep 48 - Reflective Leadership Practice, https://shorturl.at/czGSV

3) Dr Wade Azmy (2024), Ep 53 – Reflective Leadership Practice, https://shorturl.at/lmJKY

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