On leadership, emotion, decision-making and Sir Ernest Shackleton…
In 2015, I am reflecting on the leadership and courage shown Sir Ernest Shackleton, and his fellow expeditioners, who in 1914 embarked on the task of crossing Antarctica from sea to sea. In Shackleton’s own words:
After the conquest of the South Pole by Amundsen who, by a narrow margin of days only, was in advance of the British Expedition under Scott, there remained but one great main object of Antarctic journeyings—the crossing of the South Polar continent from sea to sea.
Shackleton was an acclaimed veteran of Antarctic expeditions, so when he announced his latest expedition he received nearly 5,000 applications from which he selected 56 men.
While I am reading about Shackleton adventures of 100 years ago, researchers at respected business schools are telling me, ‘Don’t let emotions screw up your decisions’ and ‘Take Bias out of Strategy Decisions’. I do wonder what Shackleton would make of such advice. Or, what he would make of the breathless claim that a review of the 35 years of research into emotion reveals that:
…emotions constitute potent, pervasive, predictable, sometimes harmful and sometimes beneficial drivers of decision making.
Apparently, this review, and a ‘revolution in the science of emotion’, heralds a potential ‘paradigm shift in decision theories’.
For me, leadership and decision are intertwined and inseparable. Talking about one without the other seems strange. Management research heralding that ‘emotion’ can (and should) be taken out of managerial decision making, for me, describes a workplace dystopia.
People are led by other people. Wishing away the limitations and strengths of human cognition, behaviour and interaction in the workplace strikes me as an odd path to take toward improving individual and organisational performance.
The peaks of human endeavour are often achieved by people (and groups) not taking the purely rational course. Rather, an emotional commitment is made to achieving a greater good that inevitably involves a leader committing to others and seeking that same commitment in return. A relationship of confidence and trust that is in large part founded on emotional attachment. These types of commitments don’t need to be heroic to be effective. Indeed, they are made every day by leaders and workforces in every conceivable form of organisational activity.
People want to be led. However, they exercise choice in the level of commitment they give, to who and for how long. Committing to the leadership of another cannot be an entirely rational decision. It is a commitment that goes beyond the purely economic balance of pros and cons and costs and benefits. It is a human relationship.
All organisations rely on leaders who have the knowledge and flexibility to meet the challenges of unfamiliar problems presented in unfamiliar contexts. Leaders work with partial knowledge, uncertainty, changing circumstances, and perhaps most importantly, the emotional states of others.
Leaders work with people’s fears, aspirations, experience, and capabilities. They encounter daily other people’s happiness, sadness, fear, surprise, anger, and disgust. They also grapple with their own emotional states. In order to do what is asked of them in achieving the organisation’s goals leaders must incorporate emotion in decision making. It is unavoidable.
For me, while there is much conversation today (as there always has been) about ‘leadership’ the prescriptions, advice and recommendations seem to be centralist, controlling, managerial and process bound. Simplistic advice that speaks to taking emotion out of decision-making takes us further in that direction.
In 1919, recounting his experiences, Shackleton observes that:
We failed in this objective [crossing the Antarctic continent from sea to sea], but the story of our attempt is the subject for the following pages, and I think that though failure in the actual accomplishment must be recorded, there are chapters in this book of high adventure, strenuous days, lonely nights, unique experiences, and, above all, records of unflinching determination, supreme loyalty, and generous self-sacrifice on the part of my men which, even in these days that have witnessed the sacrifices of nations and regardlessness of the self on the part of individuals, still will be of interest to readers…
Shackleton is not recounting the emotionless management of an expedition where every decision was subject to a rationality test or where every decision is carefully weighed to determine the optimum outcome. He is describing the art of leadership, the pressure of taking decisions in uncertain conditions, engaging with risk, adapting to circumstances, and honouring the implicit confidence and trust that comes with leadership.
I think I’ll stick with Shackleton on this one.
Thanks for taking the time to read this post.
Sources:
Sir Ernest Shackleton, CVO, (1919), South: The Endurance Expedition, (xii, Penguin, 2008).
Ernest H. Shackleton, 1874-1922, http://www.south-pole.com/p0000097.htm
Jennifer S. Lerner, Ye Li, Piercarlo Valdesolo, and Karim S. Kassam, Emotion and Decision Making, 2014, http://scholar.harvard.edu/files/jenniferlerner/files/lerner.li_.valdesolo.kassam_in_press_annual_review_emotion_and_decision_making_edited_proof.9.29.2014.pdf
Don’t let emotions screw up your decisions, https://hbr.org/2015/05/dont-let-emotions-screw-up-your-decisions, May 6, 2015
Take bias out of strategy decisions, https://hbr.org/2014/01/take-the-bias-out-of-strategy-decisions/, January 15, 2014
Picture Credit:
Photo by martin_vmorris - Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License https://www.flickr.com/photos/24108242@N05