In my previous article I indicated that my research
suggested that employees gave or withheld their commitment to an
organisation on the basis of universally held criteria. These criteria
were based on the degree to which management was seen to have a
genuine interest in employee wellbeing and were willing to empower
or grow their subordinates. I referred to this model as the “Care
and Growth” model of leadership. In this article I would like
to explore the idea of empowerment or growth a little deeper.
There is a very commonly held metaphor for empowerment, namely
the fishing metaphor. This metaphor holds that if you give a person
a fish you feed them for a day, but if you teach them to fish then
you will feed them for the rest of their lives. This is more or
less true, of course, but like all useful metaphors it also runs
the danger of obscuring the full implications of the notion of “empowerment”.
This confusion arises out of the fact that empowerment is then seen
to be purely a question of knowledge or skill, something which may
be taught. This implication does not stand up to the most basic
and common sense examination of what empowerment must mean.
Sticking to our fishing metaphor, I have found that people generally
offer two categories of things to the question of “how would
you enable or empower someone to fish?”. The firstly raise
a list of things which one could call means. These are things that
are not associated with either skill or knowledge. In the case of
fishing these would include things such as a rod, reel, line, hooks,
bait, authority to fish, a dam or fish resource and so on. The second
category one could call ability. Under ability one would understand
both the knowledge and skill of how to fish, as well as an understanding
of why one should fish.
The problem with these two categories, though, is that they are
not sufficient to account for someone really being committed to
feeding themselves with fish that they themselves have caught. For
example, assume you wish to enable someone to fish and you give
them all the means as well as the ability to do what is required
of them. However, at the same time made them aware that you have
a big freezer full of fish and will quite happily give them some
should they not catch any for themselves. The question here is,
how willingly will this person fish.
If there were no consequences that followed on them not catching
their own fish, but indeed were rewarded for not catching then it
seems pretty obvious to me that such a person would not fish will
great enthusiasm or willingness. This suggests that if I were serious
about empowering this person then I would deliberately withhold
the fish in the freezer. I would, in other words, hold them accountable
for what they have been entrusted with.
This indicates that any proper and useful definition of empowerment
would have three categories in it, namely those of means, ability
and accountability. By accountability I would understand that there
are consisted rewards and punishments that are exercise with regard
to what a person has been entrusted with. If they had done what
was required of them they would be rewarded, if not, then they would
be censured. |
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In an organisational context the category of means
would include things such as tools, resources, standards, time and
authority. By tools one would generally understand those things
which people add value with. This could include anything from a
production operator’s machine to an artisan’s tools
to a secretary’s computer. By resources one would understand
those things which people add value on. A few examples could be
the sculptor’s stone, the chef’s vegetables and the
thatcher’s grass.
By standards I would understand what needs to be done, which would
include a specification of both quality and quantity. Time has two
significances here, namely that the person doing the task should
be given sufficient time to do it, and that their leader should
spend whatever time is required in order to provide the subordinate
with the means, the ability and the accountability to do what is
required of them. Finally, authority would imply that people are
allowed to do what is required of them.
As far as ability is concerned the most simple category really
relates to how the task should be done. A less straightforward concern
relates to the problem of why the task should be done. I have come
to refer to this why as the benevolent intent of the task. The reason
for this is that people are really only motivated to do a task if
they see it to be meaningful. Meaningfulness is essentially about
a sense of contribution. By brother Jerry frequently argues that
if you took an average person, paid them three times the salary
that they were getting currently but required them to sit in an
empty room staring at the wall for 8 hours a day they probably would
not accept the job. The reason for this is that the task nice inherently
meaningless. A task is only meaningful if there is a real sense
of making a contribution to others in doing it.
The issue of accountability suggests that any person’s behaviour
could be above or below the standard required of them. Should they
be careful, in other words do what is required of them, then they
should be recognised. Should they be deliberately benevolent, in
other words, do more than what is required of them they should be
rewarded. On the other hand, should they be careless then they should
be censured, and should they be deliberately malevolent they should
be punished.
I am therefore suggesting that the process of empowerment requires
the deliberate use of three instruments, namely that of means, ability
and accountability. Not to use all three these instruments is to
disable people. Further, the instrument of accountability has four
strings, namely reward, recognition, censure and punishment. Not
to be able to play all four strings where appropriate is equally
disabling.
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