Chief Change Officer - Jennifer Selby Long: Navigating Power, Politics, and Personal Change
Episode Date: December 14, 2024Jennifer Selby Long, the executive coach for tech leaders with 30 plus years of experience, dives into the art of navigating organizational politics and leading effective change. She explores the root...s of workplace power struggles, from unhealthy leadership dynamics to competing stakeholder needs, and shares how empathy can transform political challenges into progress. Jennifer breaks down common missteps in handling ineffective bosses and highlights the importance of aligning personal and organizational goals during times of transformation. Whether you’re managing a team or managing your own career pivot, her insights offer a practical roadmap for thriving in complex environments. Key Highlights of Our Interview: Aligning Change with Personal Motivations “People don’t move mountains for stock prices or cost savings. They do it when the change connects to their personal ‘why’—what matters most to them as individuals.” Recognize the Root of Politics “Politics can stem from unhealthy leadership, but more often, they arise from competing needs and varied skill levels among stakeholders. Identifying the source is key to navigating them.” Empathy as a Superpower “The path through political challenges begins with empathy. Understand the needs of those with power—even if you think they don’t deserve it—and align your strategy with their goals.” Avoid Playing Psychologist “Trying to diagnose your boss’s issues only disempowers you. Focus on what you can control instead of guessing why your boss behaves the way they do.” Assess the Real Problem “Ask yourself: Is the boss genuinely ineffective, or am I resisting the changes they’re implementing? Recognizing your own resistance can help you approach the situation constructively.” _________________________ Connect with us: Host: Vince Chan | Guest: Jennifer Selby Long Chief Change Officer: Make Change Ambitiously. Experiential Human Intelligence for Growth Progressives Global Top 3% Podcast on Listen Notes World's #1 Career Podcast on Apple Top 1: US, CA, MX, IE, HU, AT, CH, FI, JP 2.5+ Millions Downloads 80+ Countries
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Hi everyone, welcome to our show, Chief Change Officer.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host. I'll show it is a modernist community for change progressives in organizational and
human transformation from around the world.
In our last episode, we sat down with Jennifer Selby Long. She spent 30 years helping tech leaders navigate the ever-changing world of technology and
lead organizational transformation.
In recent years, her focus has been on cybersecurity, digital transformation, and user experience.
But don't tune out if these areas don't apply to you.
What Jennifer shares is relevant for anyone who wants to thrive in today's fast-paced world.
Stick with me for 30 minutes, and you'll
find something valuable in this conversation.
This episode and the last one is all about guiding yourself
through personal transformation is about stepping into your next opportunity.
Leaders can't successfully drive organizational change without, first, mastering their own
personal growth. In the last episode, we talked about the natural process of personal change.
We also touched on self-doubt and self-sabotage.
In this episode, we'll dive deeper. We'll discuss how neuroscience can help manage self-sabotage.
We'll explore how to make career moves that work in your favor instead of just jumping
from one bad situation to another?
It's such a great question and as you were talking about this experience of you leaving, you're starting a business, you see your colleagues get promoted,
they're still sitting in their six-figure incomes.
Oh, believe me, that one resonates with me personally.
And it's not a straight line.
When I started this business, which is actually my second business, a few years after it started,
we hit the dot-com bust and the business sank, right?
And really struggled.
And then again, we got hit in 2008 when the economy collapsed in the United States.
And it is so easy to fall into the self-sabotage.
The reason, though, is really interesting.
And this, I think, has been documented extremely well
by a man whose work I greatly admire.
His name is Shirzad Shamin.
I will spell that as S-H-I-R-V-A-D,
C-H-A-M-I-N-E, Shahrzad Shamin. And he writes a great deal about the neuroscience of this
because that self-sabotage is something that develops in very early childhood.
It is almost entirely wired into our brains by the time we're five years old.
Now, why is that in there?
Those saboteurs, as he calls them, are neural networks that very tiny children develop to ensure their
survival. If a little tiny kid recognized that their parents were not infallible, which
is actually true, it would be terrifying because they cannot care for themselves, right? So
these neural networks form as a vital part of early childhood.
They're just part of that survival mechanism.
However, in adulthood, we don't need those anymore.
But at that point, they're really strong.
They've been there for decades, right?
Getting stronger and stronger, and they're just lurking in there.
And I want to really convey the important message that when you start to feel yourself self-sabotage,
that's not you. That's the saboteur neural networks in your mind firing up. That's all that is.
And they're sitting in there and they jump out when they get a signal that indicates that there's
a threat to survival. Of course, if you go after a contract in your new business and you work really hard on it
and you put all this time into it, when you were an employee, if that contract didn't
close you still got your paycheck, but now all of a sudden you're looking at can I pay
my rent?
Can I make my mortgage?
So that, of course, your brain fires that up as risk to survival.
And so the saboteurs jump in there. The universal saboteur is called the judge. Every single one of
us has this. And the judge has snuck in there and is getting in your way when you feel a negative
feeling and you are judging either yourself or someone else or the situation.
That is a sign that your judge is in there.
Your judge is going to tell you, you need me.
I am good for you, but you don't need that judge to be talking and the judge is not good
for you.
So the way that you can recognize that again, you feel a negative
feeling, you're feeling stress, frustration, anxiety. These are all signs that the judge
is in there and your thoughts are in the direction of, ah, I'm such a fool. Why did I do this?
Or why? What's wrong with them that they didn't sign my contract, right?
Or if only we had such and such process in place, we wouldn't have this problem, would
we?
Those are all signs that the judge neural network has fired up, and you just need to
weaken that judge.
How do we do with judgment?
Judging ourselves? Judging others?
Honestly, this aspect of judgment has come up a lot for me.
In fact, in the second episode of season 3, in which I spoke to Benedict from France,
he'd mentioned the importance of being kind or kinder to ourselves.
Yet we often forget that.
Yes.
If a colleague or someone else makes a mistake,
I would say, it's OK.
Let's fix it. No need to blame, just move forward.
But when I make the mistake, what do I do? Yes, I fixed. But at the same time, I start
blaming myself. I think, why did I make this mistake? What's wrong with me? I become
harsh on myself, much harsher than I am with others. In those moments, I realize
I'm not loving myself enough. This constant self judgment can be really detrimental if we
don't learn to manage it properly. Don't you think? Yes, absolutely. And people
have asked me why is it so hard to make this judge go away and I say we don't
necessarily want to make the judge entirely go away. And I say, we don't necessarily want to make the judge
entirely go away.
That's almost impossible.
It's a neural network that's in there.
But boy, can we weaken that judge.
And the reason I say we don't necessarily want the judge
to completely go away,
because that negative feeling,
it's like a warning sign.
It's just a little warning sign
that there's something you need to attend to.
But it's like a hand on a hot stove.
You want to feel it.
You want to feel the pain.
You want to feel that negative emotion of the pain so that you recognize there's something
you need to attend to.
But as soon as you feel it, it's important to just call out, oh, that's my judge, versus I can't believe I made that mistake.
Oh, stupid, what am I gonna learn?
It is, by the way, it is no better
to be a judge of yourself and not of others
than to be a judge of others and not yourself.
It's all the judge, it's all negative, right?
It all is contagious.
The judge energy is contagious to others,
no matter which direction it's headed.
And so it's so vital to call out and recognize,
oh, that's my judge versus it's me.
There's something wrong with me.
Well, it's my judge.
And then you can weaken that judge
in so many different ways.
One is to gently make a little fun like you would with a little kid.
Oh, I see you.
I caught you.
Right, I found you.
Hide and seek.
You can be dismissive of your judge and go,
oh, judge, you're so late to the party.
I can't believe you didn't bring me down earlier.
You can do all kinds of things, but the most important thing is call out that judge.
You can just respectfully say, hey, judge, thanks.
I don't really need that help.
I got this.
Right?
So literally it is having these conversations with yourself because one of the things that
the judge does is the judge also calls up what's
called an accomplice saboteur. It's another saboteur or two or sometimes
three that have taken root in the fertile soil of your brain and wrapped
themselves around whatever your gifts are. I had a client who went into his
first see-aw roll ever.
A number of my clients are in their first C-suite roll ever.
That in and of itself is a huge personal change to manage.
And then they're having the surprise
of what they learn as they're in that roll.
And in this case, this client had gone
from a highly regulated industry
to a barely regulated industry,
which is a whole different ball of wax.
And then Vince, as if that weren't enough, he discovered that his organization, which
he inherited, which had a 40-0% attrition rate and had many people who were actually
too junior for the roles that they had, there was also, they were swept up in a company-wide
quote unquote optimization effort,
which is to say cost cutting, headcount reduction.
He actually needed to replace people.
He needed to spend more because he needed to hire
more senior people to manage them.
And there was this huge pressure on him,
which was particularly being driven by a guy
who was a peer of his, who had his boss's ear,
and who drove him nuts,
which is to say he triggered my client's saboteurs.
So we spent the first three months of our coaching
completely focused on recognizing the saboteurs and
weakening them because one of the things his accomplice saboteur a hyper
achiever was telling him was pretty much I have to win and the only way I can win
at this chain is if this guy loses because this guy is my enemy.
What was that going to do?
I can guarantee you my client is sharp and this guy was right.
And he was going to win, but what was the cost going to be in that organization?
Right.
What was that cost going to be?
So with him, we worked on calling out when his judge was judging this guy
If only that guy weren't here I could do everything I need to do, right?
We focused on calling out his judge when it was judging him. Geez, if only I were a better see-saw
Oh
We wouldn't have this problem, right?
So, ah, we wouldn't have this problem, right?
We called out his accomplice saboteur who was saying, in order for me to win,
that dude's got to lose.
And so instead of that, we did something which is the, it is the kryptonite to the judge, which is empathy.
We called up empathy for this poor colleague of his who was heading a highly
unpopular initiative and frankly wasn't doing it in a very effective way and was triggering
people all around him. And my client really truly put himself in that person's shoes.
In one meeting, I even had him speak as that individual to me so that he was completely
in that guy's shoes and he was able to make his case and build his argument in a way that
was compassionate, right?
That was not competitive, that wasn't even about this other guy.
The end result was that my client was much happier day in and day out.
He was much more successful. Not only was he able to fend off this drive to cut costs,
he was able to get the several million dollars additional funding that he needed to do that
the higher level headcount that he needed to add. He was able to slow his attrition a great deal and get that under control.
And this is not something that would have come for him so quickly with such success.
He becomes the guy who has the boss's ear where he becomes the guy whose organization
is turning around and performing, how did he not really face that judge and that apoclyphal saboteur and weaken
them by calling them out and then in this case, calling forth his empathy for someone who was
in his mind incompetent and to really deeply have empathy so that he's not trying to compete against this guy,
but to just get the right thing done.
Through all these years,
you've worked with so many different people.
Each with their own unique characters and situations.
I'm curious, looking back, can you recall any cases where you feel you
didn't succeed in helping a client navigate or take charge of a change?
By failure, I don't necessarily mean they disengaged with you, but rather the impact
you aimed to create didn't work out as well as expected.
Could you share one of those experiences?
More importantly, what did you learn from it?
Why do you think it was so challenging in that
specific situation? Oh absolutely, absolutely. And we've had a couple of
those. One that comes to mind had such a surprising conclusion in that what I came to recognize was that this leader fundamentally did not
want to change and grow and as a result we would make a few steps forward and
then a few steps back. Interestingly that particular leader was very strong in
some other areas and the individual that person reported to,
I guess you could say was my core client,
actually concluded that he needed to go find
a better opportunity for this guy.
Because this guy was absolutely not gonna change
in his own style to what was needed there.
And he wasn't gonna change in his fundamental beliefs
about what the strategy should be
of that division.
And I learned a lot from that, from watching him, because he was an extraordinary role
model of not letting that judge and that hyper achiever neural network drive you to do something
stupid, right?
Instead of trying to force this guy to go along or to try to butt heads with him endlessly,
he saw that he had tried that and it didn't work.
He actually went and advocated that this other man should head one of the most exciting new
divisions that the company was creating.
And this man did go over and do that.
And he did lead that division in its early days quite well, because in part he didn't
need to change to lead that.
He was already kind of reasonably well suited to it.
And so it was extremely enlightening to me because until my client made that decision
and that commitment, we struggled.
We really struggled.
That team had been brought together through two acquisitions.
That team was so far behind Vince.
They actually had worked very hard on two software releases that they had to literally
cast aside because they fell so far behind
because they did not move as one that the other technology leapfrogged it and it no
longer was appropriate, right?
It no longer fit with the company's other technology.
So this was an organization that was in crisis.
And it was when he was able to just recognize, hey, this is a failed exercise, right?
We cannot bring this guy along to where we need to, and I'm going to stop trying.
This was, by the way, about 20 years ago.
And so I found myself really admiring and recognizing the joy of learning something about change from
one of my own clients. Whereas usually I'm the one in the teacher's seat and I
really learned deeply from that experience because me on that idealist
I never want to give up on anybody. So it was so helpful for me to see someone willing to say,
I think we need to give up on this.
This is not succeeding and we need to not judge the efforts
that we made to make it succeed.
We need to find a totally different path here,
totally and completely different.
It was fantastic and so eye-opening for me, so eye-opening.
Fantastic and so eye-opening for me.
So eye-opening.
Earlier, you mentioned the do's and the don'ts when going through change.
That reminded me of an elder model often applied to organizations from the well-known
organizational psychologist, Kurt Lewand. I've brought this up in Season 1, Episode 2, about Tim Pei-Ling's own transformation.
His model is simple but powerful.
There's the first stage, freeze, where you pause and assess. Then comes
change, where you go through the transformation. Finally, there's unfreeze, where you solidify your new identity or the new you.
So it's like, freeze, change, and unfreeze.
A lot of business school professors reference this model for organizational change.
Are you familiar with this?
Yes, I think that there are a lot of parallels to Bill Bridge's model.
But something that you said there about his third,
his unfreeze again, his third and final stage,
is that you emerge with a new identity.
And I think that this is so vital for us
as leaders to understand that when we are asking our people
to make a significant change, they
often do have a change in their fundamental identity or how they see themselves.
And it can be hard to recognize because often in the leadership role, we already see them
in that way.
If we didn't see that they had the potential collectively and individually to make this
change successful, we probably wouldn't have started down that path.
Only would it have brought in some different people to lead them.
So it is so vital to understand that you're not change management is about hitting the
target, right?
Implementing the change on time, within budget, to a set standard. But
this can actually be much more profound for others than we recognize because they can
come out of it with new identity. Think of, for example, my clients who are financial
analysts. Today, even just as recently as three years ago, the technology didn't really exist for them
to spend the bulk of their time, truly advising senior business leaders on what they should
be doing in the business.
They had very little time to say things like, hey, here's a market force that I see going
on in Japan, and I think we need to focus 40% more of our sales effort there on this product.
Like, no way.
They were too busy being Excel jockeys, right?
Today, that technology has come a very long way.
But what happens to someone who for 10 years has been spending most of their
time, maybe not real happily, but spending most of their time
just getting those numbers accurate.
And now suddenly you are telling them
that within a matter of months,
those leaders are gonna be able to press a button
and see the data that you used to have put together for them.
And they are now going to turn to you
and say, what should I do?
Or what happens when the leader doesn't turn to them and say, what should I do?
Now suddenly it's a new identity and they're recognizing they have to earn it.
They have to earn that credibility as something more than a master Excel jockey.
And that is terrifying.
That's terrifying. That's terrifying.
That's a whole new set of skills.
They're gonna have to learn how to convert
that data into a story.
They're gonna have to learn how to influence.
They're gonna have to learn how to read that person
and speak in their language.
It's terrifying.
It's terrifying.
And so really recognizing that people are gonna come out
of this change with a new identity helps you as a leader to have that empathy on the path and to be able
to really encourage and support them and put in place what they need to get there
that you otherwise might not have recognized whether it's training and
development, mentoring, coaching, whatever it may be that they're going to need.
I'm really glad you brought up the freeze, unfreeze, freeze model,
because that new identity in the last stage is the single most important part of that model.
Would you say that if someone gets stuck in the freeze phase, but eventually
freeze face, but eventually manages to unfreeze themselves. It's a win?
How would you personally define a successful change or a win
when it comes to going through transformation?
The win sometimes looks different at the end
than we thought it would at the beginning. So I think absolutely it's fair to step back throughout the change
and say this is what we thought the wind would look like.
Is this still true?
Or have we come across new information and new learnings along the way
that allow us to see what the wind looks like differently?
So I think that's entirely valid
because it might not look like you have a win yet,
but maybe you do.
Maybe it looks different than you think.
Maybe what you have here is a small win along the way
that you need to celebrate for the progress,
even if they've not quite yet gotten
to where you see that they could be celebrate for the progress, even if they've not quite yet gotten to where you see
that they could be in the long run. Because certainly when we look at those key elements,
as a leader, you're not doing change alone. Even if it's a personal change, I bet you have friends
or family members that come along. And one of those foundations that you really need to attend to
those foundations that you really need to attend to is celebrating the dickens out of wins that are so small that you wouldn't normally think to celebrate them.
Because this requires that you focus a lot more of your attention on what's working
in the win, in the chain, versus focusing your attention on what's not working.
And guess what?
Those saboteurs are hardwired to focus on what's not working.
But there is ample evidence that a great deal of attention
on what's working and doing more of that
is correlated with getting to that organizational outcome.
And the classic sense, we're gonna define those outcomes
as, for example, a positive change in the stock price.
But that's a really hard one for, say, an individual employee
to connect to their progress through the change, isn't it?
That's so big, right?
One person out of hundreds or
thousands saying the stock price moved after we were able to implement this
large-scale system, but it's hard to see the individual connection. So I think
that also speaks to something that is so extraordinarily important, which is
connecting your vision to their big whys, not yours,
not the company's, right?
Their big whys, it goes back to that personal vision.
What does that success mean to you individually?
Not just the company, right?
But for you as an individual, what's the alignment there?
People will move mountains for you if they really understand how this large scale change
is connected to something more than a bump up in the stock price or a decrease in operational
overhead but to them, their personal big-wis. So far, through our interview, we've
focused a lot on how you help leaders drive, lead,
and manage change within the teams and organizations.
Many of our listeners might be change leaders or change managers in their own spaces or organizations.
Yet the other group of people listening might be experiencing changes themselves.
They could be considering making a change, or they may be forced to make a change because they've left their
previous employer. You mentioned to me before that a situation often arises
when people make a big career leap, sometimes wanting to escape workplace politics or ineffective boss. They might land
a new job with similar terms, only to find themselves working for another ineffective boss. The goal, the real goal, is to make a change for the better.
But these people end up jumping from one lousy situation to another.
I know you got some really good insights about that.
About how people should try to manage the situation differently.
Even if they eventually decide to change jobs,
they could and they should aim for a truly better outcome.
Could you share with us some common mistakes people make
when dealing with ineffective boss,
and how they might better handle the situation in order to set themselves up for more positive change.
I'm so glad you asked about this because I've had this conversation with so many people
over the years.
And I was having this conversation with someone whose boss was a micromanager and it was driving
him nuts.
And I sat down and said, this would be a great blog post.
And this was when people were blogging on LinkedIn.
That LinkedIn post garnered 45,000 views and counting.
It was shared out on the main thread through that weekend.
I am a coach, right?
I'm not a famous person.
I have never had so many views on a LinkedIn post or a blog in my life.
And I recognize this is a really big deal.
Everyone faces this, right?
Everyone faces this at some time.
And you know, what happens when we exit a situation
because our boss is ineffective,
we're running from something versus running to something.
But of course, making a change
because you're running away from something
usually doesn't pan out as well
as when you're running towards something.
So I think there are three mistakes that I really see that these talented professionals
making when they find themselves working for an ineffective boss.
The first one is playing psychologist.
Oh, passive aggressive, bad childhood, won't make a decision, commitment phobic, right? These
may or may not be real issues that your boss is facing, who knows? But when you,
again, this is the judge in action, when you're playing psychologist with the
ineffective boss, you're inadvertently disempowering yourself because you're
hypothesizing about a psychological issue that even if it turns out you're
right, you can't personally
treat it.
You're not the psychologist, right?
So if you find yourself starting to go down that path of that judging, that negative emotion,
just let it go.
Second one, losing perspective by getting attached to one and only one solution, right?
And I've seen this many times in which the individual is saying, I have to persevere.
I have to turn this product line around no matter how much my funding gets cut or how
often my boss and her boss change direction or I must get a win, bid win so that boss
can see how wrong he is or a common one.
I'm going to HR and I'm not giving up until they fight for what's right.
Now there's just rarely one clear-cut superior solution to the myriad problems that are caused
by an ineffective boss, but there are probably better solutions and there are certainly more
options. Shozad Shamin calls it turning on your explore neural network, where you open up to exploring more solutions
to the problem before you jump ship, right?
A third one is create an emotional sinkhole by making it personal or taking sides in political
battles.
So we get this little dynamic, right?
Your ineffective boss leads to lower performance on the team, which leads to stress, which
leads to making it personal and taking sides in what we might call a backside covering
political battle.
So when you find yourself thinking about your boss in these kind of sweeping terms, and
again, you feel your judge coming on, you're recognized that you're only feeding the intensely
negative energy that's there. And it does nothing to help you and does nothing to help your
teammates, the people around you. So instead there are really five things
that I think you can try to view the situation from a different perspective
and then handle it in a way that's gonna work well for you, whether that's staying
in it or
making that leap toward another job or toward starting your own business.
The first one, step back from that situation and first size up the degree to which his
or her incompetence is truly affecting you.
Sure, it's disappointing when your boss routinely lets you down.
But maybe slowing down your professional growth for a few months because they're new to the
role and they're not good at it yet, that's one thing.
But that's not in the same league as your entire bonus being on the line, or even worse, your personal reputation
being put in jeopardy with people you respect
because the boss is ineffective.
So size it up.
It's a reflective exercise.
It's subjective.
It looks different for you from someone else,
and even for you in different situations
at different times in your life.
But it helps
you calibrate that situation a little bit, quiet down those nasty saboteurs so that you're
calibrating it to your unique needs, right? Is it short term and you just want to let
it stop bothering you before you make a big change? Or is this something that's really
added up and you need to go and And you just need to do that.
Secondly, assess if you're in a politically messy situation.
Oh, I hate this tip, but if you do think you're in a politically messy situation,
you do have to begin some basic defensive action, right?
Employees have lost their jobs due to ineffective managers who failed to protect them. Right?
So if you sense that level of risk and you feel it's important to keep your job, oh,
it pains me, but you got to start documenting conversations, agreements.
You got to document open items and follow up emails after conversations.
Try to have more group conversations.
Oh, God, I just want to gag when I say this, but look, if you objectively size it up
as politically messy, start doing those basic defensive actions. And no matter what, you must
maintain your composure in a politically messy situation, no matter how absurd it becomes.
The most absurd one to date is one that happened to a client about 24 years ago.
He found himself receiving the wrong performance review from his general manager, who mixed him up with another direct report and launched into the review sheet prepared for the other man.
Now, I will admit these two gentlemen
were both Scandinavian. They looked a lot alike, but come on, they weren't twins. So he just
maintained his composure, told her that the objectives she was covering were for the other
man's projects. He also made sure he paid more attention to having accurate data about his performance in writing, which
did prove to be helpful later.
And please don't become ultra paranoid.
Please don't stop trying to build a positive working relationship.
Even in this situation, it is still good to try to build a positive working relationship.
A couple more, consider multiple ways to deal with the situation, right?
Is the ineffectiveness entrenched?
Or is the boss just having a bumpy transition?
Look at options like going out of your way to ensure that the team achieves its goals
while the boss gets up to speed on new responsibilities.
Or if there's something that you recognize the boss is always going to be ineffective
at this part, offer to help out in an area that your boss doesn't enjoy and doesn't do well.
I had one client who's great at team building, initiated team building outing.
This boss just isn't good at that.
I had another one who is great, has an eagle eye on a project plan, just offered to validate that
project plan because she could see she's always going to be better at it than the boss.
And then honestly, this one's a little touchy, but honestly ask yourself, is it that the boss is completely ineffective,
or are you resisting adapting to a change that the boss is implementing. So gosh, it's painful to admit, right? That it might be that the
strategy is sound, but you hate it, or you just don't buy into the direction. And if
that's the case, at least you're recognizing you're resisting adapting to this change.
You don't want to go along with it. And so in that situation, you have a choice.
You can either say, you know what, I'm going to voice my concerns and I'm going to commit
to making it successful for as long as I'm here because that's my job.
That's what I'm here to do, right?
Or you're going to decide from a healthier, more grounded place, this change just isn't
for you and you are going to leave.
And maybe that's when you are going to go to build that business, but you're going to do it in a way that is very positive and
constructive for those people around you and for yourself because you'll have made a more intentional
informed choice rather than a choice that's driven by unexamined and unconscious feelings.
That's when you wind up just working for a, working for a different flavor of a bad boss. Does that help?
Yes, absolutely. There's still so much to unpack and not just when it comes to
dealing with a boss, but also navigating office politics. These dynamics aren't just about one-on-one relationships.
There are other players involved too.
Interestingly, some people avoid using the term politics when discussing office environments.
In fact, if you search for office politics on Google or LinkedIn,
you won't find as much conversation about it as you might expect. But in reality,
whether you're in a large corporation or a small team, as long as you're working with people,
as you're working with people, there's an inherent level of politics at play,
and these politics play a crucial role,
especially when it comes to driving change.
You mentioned how some of your clients,
including senior leaders, face power struggles
or have to navigate complex stakeholder relationships.
Power dynamics come into play, and as they think about leading a job or dealing with ineffective
boss, they also have to consider the bigger political picture they're in.
political picture therein. I feel like this is an element often overlooked in the discussion of change management and
leadership.
Could you share your thoughts or experiences in helping clients manage these risks? How do you support them in balancing personal and urbanization
change while surviving, navigating the politics that comes with it?
Absolutely. Politics can exist for a couple different reasons.
And I think it's important to recognize which of those situations you're in.
So politics can exist for extremely unhealthy reasons in all seriousness because you have
a leader at the top who quite literally has a personality disorder.
Now people who suffer from that problem often aren't aware that they're suffering from
it but also do not respond to coaching. Now, people who suffer from that problem often aren't aware that they're suffering from it,
but also do not respond to coaching.
And the politics that they drive are from a whole different place.
And it is going to be extremely difficult in that environment to manage your way through
the politics and to drive change.
And that is one whole animal that is it is just beyond the scope.
I think of what we could cover in this particular episode of the podcast.
But the other driver, which I find much, much more common, is that politics exists
because people have different needs and because people have different skill levels.
And so someone who is particularly good at recognizing the needs of the people who wield the most power
is going to be better at figuring out how to get those people on board with the change, right?
And so it becomes, so again, it's so funny that politics triggers our saboteurs,
make us want to defend ourselves,
right? They are all about survival. But in fact, we circle right back to empathy,
because being able to understand and empathize the competing needs of the many stakeholders involved in a change is the path forward.
It is the path forward.
You cannot move through the creative process that you need to have to construct that change
in such a way that it meets multiple needs.
You will not without empathy be able to bring together leaders who need to come
together and who don't especially want to.
So that again is the foundation above and beyond that multiple steps and maybe that's
the subject for another podcast, but you will want to defend yourself against politics, but opening yourself up to really putting yourself in the
shoes of all of these people who seem to have power that perhaps you think they don't deserve
is the foundation to understanding what's going on and to being able to navigate or,
as I like to think of it, surf your way through those political waves
and those choppy waters.
Thank you so much for joining us today.
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I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host. Until next time, take care.