Tuesday 26 March 2019

From Prescription to Exploration


One of the participants in a focus group session we had recently with a Kampala based US owned Telecommunications Tower Company, said at the end of the session that ‘most of the answers came from us’, almost to his surprise. And another asked, ‘do you have anything to add or were we just spot on?’. As I reflected on the comment and the question, it reminded me of one of the mindsets of adult learning, that is adults are inherently resourceful with a wide reservoir of experiences which people bring to attend to any problem or opportunity at hand.

And to quote Malcolm Shepherd Knowles, the American educator well known for the art and science of adult learning, because adults see themselves as independent and self-directing, there develops a ‘’deep psychological need to be perceived by others, and treated  by others as capable of taking responsibility for ourselves’’ and if ‘’others are imposing their wills on us without our participating in making decisions affecting us, we experience a feeling, often subconsciously, of resentment and resistance’’.

So to get the comments from the participants who felt the process we used had afforded the opportunity to the group to participate in the idea generation process with minimal input from the facilitators, was an affirmation that adults do have the answers and what is needed is a process that allows the unpacking, sharing and mutual exploration to take place. When we do this well, we build trust and create the synergy necessary solve problems and take advantage of significant business opportunity.

However, this process of ceding space and trusting participants to navigate their solutions have not come easy to me. In my over twenty years of management and other senior leadership roles in business, the United States Army, in Executive Coaching and Faculty in Executive Education, learning to let go, is been quite a journey. It is easy to prescribe solutions and pontificate on the 12 steps to greatness than to listen and ask questions for which we have no answer and genuinely look to build trust.

So, what does it take to engage in mutual exploration? Firstly, it takes a mindset that believes in the inherent resourcefulness of people. That everyone has the capacity and innate greatness to contribute and our role as leaders, coaches, supervisors, is to unlock and call out that greatness. To do this effectively, we must be guided by a set of principles. For example, we can draw from the Columbia Executive Coaching framework, three principles that can facilitate this process. These principles are (a) focus on the participants agenda and not ours (b) Involve participants in the problem solving and solution provision process and (c) earn the right of the participant to advance the conversation.

To do the opposite, is to assume we know and proceed to make prescriptions for problems we have little knowledge or expertise in. It will be like going to the Doctor who writes a prescription without diagnosis. Or a sales person who sends a proposal to a client without a meaningful dialogue.

Secondly, we must develop the skill of asking high leverage questions designed to open the conversation to gain understanding of the participant context. Here the use of the ORID (Objective, Reflective, Interpretive, and Decisional) is a form of question and listening framework designed to surface facts, feelings and to ask about implications and make decisions. As an Executive Coach, I have found the ORID method very useful in one-on-one and group coaching sessions because It helps you achieve the following (a) Surface facts, direct observable data, generate a common pool of “knowledge” needed to understand what the presenting situation is and why its important to the individual or group (b) explore feelings and emotions that connected to the situation – it unlocks the internal context of the presentation situation (c) make sense and meaning of the situation by examining assumptions, values, significance and implications and (d) determine the expressed commitment to future action – what change in conduct will happen next.

Thirdly, I found the use of a few tools helpful to facilitate the process of mutual exploration. Sometimes our conversations require a medium to enable people express themselves in pictures and stories. For example, in our work with the Kampala based Tower Company, we used the Visual Explorer (VE) cards developed by the Center for Creative Leadership (CCL). VE is a tool for enabling dialogue by putting images in the middle of the conversation. We framed a question around the past and present context of the organization with regards to its ability to execute on its business objectives and a second question on what the participants will like the future to look like.

With limited prodding the participants came up with a variety of images to communicate the current state and why they chose those images and built a common understanding of the type of future that will enable this team to close the gap between the talent and capability of the team and its results. And as you observe, you can see how a team that has gone through a process like this will have greater commitment to implementing its outcome than if that outcome was recommended by a facilitator or outside consultant. In the end its true that where teams are not involved you cannot expect whole person commitment, at best you get malicious compliance.

In conclusion, the mindset, skills and tools necessary for mutual exploration is consistent with the findings of how our brains work. Recently, we had the privilege of listening to American cultural anthropologist, Judith Glaser, author of Conversation Intelligence, among other works, at the International Coaching Conference in New York.  Where we learnt that the truth about our brain’s evolution is that we are designed for ‘creating space’ for aspirations and dreams to grow through conversations. The neurochemistry of aspirations is about how different conversations activate chemicals and networks that either open or close the space for aspirations to grow.

So, we can stay stuck at the level where we confirm what we know by asking and telling adults what to do or we can be courageous to move up the conversational ladder by sharing and discovering with participants through questions for which we do not have the answer. When we do this, to use Judith Glaser’s analogy of the conversational dashboard, we move from low trust to high trust, from resistor to co-creator and build a process that generates transparency, relationship, understanding and shared success.