MANAGEMENT LEADERHIP SPECIAL How Great Leaders Make Work Meaningful
Mired in day-to-day
tasks, people easily lose sight of their work’s higher purpose. That’s where
great communicators come in.
U.S. President John
F. Kennedy once met a custodian mopping floors at NASA headquarters long after
normal work hours and asked, ‘‘Why are you working so late?’’ The custodian
replied, ‘‘Because I’m not mopping the floors, I’m putting a man on the moon.’’
If this story seems too good to be true, it does have a parallel in the
historical events that illustrate how the United States created a remarkably
successful space programme, and it offers an important lesson in leadership.
In a new article in Administrative Science Quarterly, Andrew Carton
reports on Kennedy’s leadership of NASA in the 1960s, culminating with the moon
landing in 1969, and lessons that leaders today can draw from the space
programme’s success. Specifically, when people find meaning in their work,
everyone benefits: the organisation benefits because its employees work harder
and smarter, and individuals benefit because work is an important part of life
and success and meaning at work increases well-being. So what’s the dilemma?
Usually meaning is best gained from a mighty goal, but such goals are often
abstract and distant from any one task at work. Linking lofty goals to concrete
actions is difficult, but the loftier the goal, the harder it gets. Meaningful
work is wonderful, of course, but it’s hard to create and maintain.
Two examples
illustrate this difficulty. First, Amazon’s goal is to be the earth’s most
customer-centric company. How can this mission give meaning to one of its
distribution centre workers, who could be pulling products from shelves or
overseeing a robot pulling products from shelves? Second, part of INSEAD’s
mission is to reduce poverty in the world, because economic growth is the cure
for poverty, and improved management helps economic growth. But the daily work
of INSEAD professors and staff is all the ordinary tasks associated with
education.
Ladder to the moon
Kennedy provided a
simple, powerful and very general way to address this dilemma in his direction
of NASA. He distilled its mission to one of advancing science. Advancing
science itself is not the daily work of a custodian, or of an electronics
expert designing control circuits, so the gap between the lofty goal and
concrete actions remained. So Kennedy gave NASA’s workers the concrete
objective of a manned mission to the moon before 1970. Putting a man on the
moon was not the same as advancing science, but it was an embodiment of the
mission of advancing science that staff members could work towards.
Still, many years of
hard work lay between framing the objective and its fulfilment. Kennedy was
careful to set out a series of more immediately achievable milestones in the
form of the Gemini and Apollo programmes, together known as the manned lunar
landing programme. “The goal of Gemini was to perform docking in space, and the
goal of Apollo was to build all remaining capabilities needed to land on the
moon,” Carton states in the paper.
Kennedy’s vision for
NASA outlived him. In November 1967, with the end objective in sight, NASA
wrote the final six milestones on blackboards throughout Mission Control Centre
in Houston, vertically arranged to represent “a ladder to the moon”.
Kennedy also used
metaphorical language to fuse the concrete goal of walking on the moon with the
abstract aspiration of advancing science. In a 1962 speech, he said, “Space is
there, and we’re going to climb it, and the moon and planets are there, and new
hopes for knowledge and peace are there.” Kennedy’s rhapsodic tone rubbed off
on NASA leaders such as Eugene Shoemaker, who remarked in 1966, “direct
observations on the moon will initiate a new phase in man’s quest for
knowledge.”
Inspiring faith
Before Kennedy’s
mission, NASA employees were entirely focused on day-to-day responsibilities.
His challenge to reach the moon was initially met with a good deal of
scepticism from employees who had a decidedly short-term outlook. But it was
made more plausible when attainable milestones, both major and minor, that the
mission entailed were collected into a small number of “stepping stones” (the
Mercury, Gemini and Apollo programmes). Consequently, scepticism was replaced
by a feeling of progress toward a highly meaningful goal.
Employees’ sense of
making a personal contribution to something as awesome as the moon landing
produced enormous camaraderie and pride. As one staffer said, “The Apollo
missions were like a giant jigsaw puzzle…My role in the puzzle, though small,
was a necessary activity.”
As work ramped up,
employees started to think of “putting a man on the moon” as their job,
regardless of their individual responsibilities. Increasingly, participation in
the president’s mission became its own reward, an accomplishment in itself.
Finally, employees
began to see their work in Kennedy’s symbolic terms. A man on the moon became
an embodiment of the ultimate mission: advancing science and thereby bettering
the lives of humankind. The abstract and concrete became one.
Carton suggests that
Kennedy’s symbols opened a pathway between pragmatism and idealism. His
symbolic framework was necessary inspiration to an organisation that had
initially scoffed at the notion of getting to the moon before the decade was
out which went on to accomplish just that.
The idea of finding a
way to embody an overall mission as a more concrete objective is related to an
essential insight in management. Management practice often centres on “fluffy”
performances such as missions, speeches, goal statements, and quick tours and
interactions. None of this fluff helps if it is disconnected from the
activities and meaning of all members of the organisation. Mission
and goal statements contribute to success if they are oriented toward the
embodiment of concrete activities that people can use to choose their own
actions and construct meaning.
Henrich Greve, INSEAD Professor
of Entrepreneurship | October 13, 2017
Read more at https://knowledge.insead.edu/blog/insead-blog/how-great-leaders-make-work-meaningful-7421?utm_source=INSEAD+Knowledge&utm_campaign=bbc918ab98-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2017_10_26&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_e079141ebb-bbc918ab98-249840429#2e8Fg5LfKjSKlx10.99
1 comment:
This how great visionaries propagate their vision to generations to come. I will definitely hear J.F.Kennedy's speeches on YouTube after reading this post.Sir, Thanks for sharing it !
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