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Permission to Lead

At the office I so rarely visit I have a quote that I’ve
printed and pinned to the wall. It comes from Rear Admiral Grace Hopper, who was a
U.S. Naval officer and an early computer programmer (she developed the first
compiler for turning source code into object code).

In a couple of my recent
posts
I’ve made mention of a cultural evolution that’s underway in my workplace. It’s
not a revolution – it’s us collectively choosing to be much more deliberate
about using the values we already hold to better deliver benefit to our
customers. As a part of that we’ve defined ten core values, or mantras, or
whatever you want to call them. I don’t know whether or not my employer would
want me to reveal them in a public forum like this. Probably not yet, at least,
given that the evolution is in its infancy: we’re still in the process of socialising
them internally and defining what they mean to each of us individually, to our
workgroups and teams, and so on. In lieu of the ones from my organization, here’s
an example of a similar-in-spirit core value from
another company
(Zappos.com):

  • Do more with less

Today one of my colleagues and I were talking about our ten
and poking some gentle fun at them. We were coming up with a handful of jokey
possible additions:

  • Try turning it off and back on
  • “That’s what she said”

Anyway, I said that “it’s easier to ask forgiveness than it
is to get permission” should be added to our list. I was joking. But should I
have been?

I like Grace Hopper’s quote so much because, on the face of
it, it’s about rebelliousness and lack of respect for authority. That’s
typically someone’s immediate takeaway when they first read it, and those are
qualities I like to pretend I have. Except I don’t, really – I pretty much do
what I’m told.

It’s been a good while since I printed that and first pinned
it to the wall of my cube, though. I’ve gained some seniority in that time, and
as I was thinking about this today it occurred to me that nobody really tells
me what to do anymore. My leaders set direction, provide clarity around what’s
important (and why) where necessary, provide guidance where I need it, and then
they trust me to do whatever it is that I do.

Dig just very slightly beyond the surface of Grace’s quote,
and this is, I’m sure, exactly what she was talking about. Grace was, after
all, a senior military officer: I highly doubt she was advocating for a lack of
respect for authority. What she’s talking about is ownership, and
accountability. She’s saying that if you don’t have the necessary autonomy to
demonstrate those qualities then that’s a problem so serious that you should be
taking immediate action. If there’s red tape or dumb business rules that are a
barrier to doing what you know to be the right thing then you absolutely need
to be finding a way through it, and sooner rather than later. I think that’s
something worthy of inclusion in any organization’s core values.

Thinking about all this also got me thinking back to how the
quote became words that I choose to live by in the first place. A couple of years
ago I worked at my company’s call centre, on a team responsible for operations
and process improvement initiatives. I used to provide coaching to a handful of
junior teammates. From time to time we would identify an opportunity for
improvement in one of the ancillary, supporting business processes, but being a
process on the edge of the core business we’d sometimes struggle to find
someone from the key leadership to identify as owning the process and provide
sponsorship for improvement. I’d always provide the same wisdom: “If there’s
one thing I’ve noticed about where we work,” I’d say, “it’s that if you act
like you’re in charge of something then you’ll very quickly find that you are.”

I think at the time I thought I was joking about that too,
and that little running joke is what led me to first put Grace’s quote up on
the wall. Even if I did think it was a bit of a joke though I did endeavour to embody
those words, and with the benefit of reflection it now seems as though I’ve advanced
my career since then in part off the back of simply acting like I’m in charge
of stuff. Interesting.

Really though, this shouldn’t be surprising. My vocabulary
has become more sophisticated in that time too: I now see more clearly that “acting
like I’m in charge of stuff” is just a slightly tongue-in-cheek synonym for our
theme of ownership and accountability.

Once upon a time I used to wonder to myself why merely
acting like I was in charge of stuff so often proved to be such a powerful tool
in my toolbox. When you frame it in those more sophisticated terms the answer
is clear. The reason it worked so well at my workplace is because we have a
culture that recognizes, values and rewards leadership attributes like these no matter the level of the employee they come from.
The question I should have been asking is why wasn’t it like that at previous
companies I’ve worked for?

Thankfully, the answer to that one doesn’t matter to me
anymore.

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