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How can leaders learn during times of crisis

• By Dr. Gerry
How can leaders learn during times of crisis

Without warning, the COVID-19 pandemic has created a once-in-a-generation global crisis for managers who have little or no experience in leading their teams under such stressful circumstances.  

A crisis is more than difficult. Our usual competencies, from which we normally derive our self-confidence and self-esteem, are temporarily insufficient. For a while, we must attempt to do things knowing that we will fail more often than we will succeed. As a result, people need to know that their leaders will provide the necessary support for them to grow and learn new ways of coping and mastering challenges.

Hard-earned trust between organizational leaders, managers, and their subordinates may be temporarily fractured during this time of crisis. Managers must focus on leading in ways that convincingly support their employees to overcome their fears, recover their self-reliance, and reaffirm their confidence and trust in the organization and its leaders. 

Recognizing the four phases of every Crisis

It is important for managers to understand that their employees will typically go through difficult, but predictable, phases in order to accurately counter the stress, distraction, and fear their employees have of making mistakes and failing.  

Practical Applications 

Throughout all four phases of every crisis, the best leaders set clear direction and work to leverage their employees’ potential by engaging commitment, aligning judgment, and developing capabilities. Think L.E.A.D.

Leaders engage their people’s commitment by providing:

Leaders develop their people’s capabilities by:

Learning during times of crisis 

A discussion of the current COVID-19 crisis inevitably leads to the concept of adaptation.  All living creatures (viruses and humans) must continuously adapt to changing environmental demands.  Adaptation requires more than surviving or recovering.  It demands acquiring new capabilities that increase one’s ability to master and thrive in new, unfamiliar, and often-threatening environments.  

By helping employees harness their previously “untapped potential” and become even more capable and confident than before, leaders can instill in them a culture of “adaptive readiness.”   Employees will begin to take the initiative to search for new opportunities to innovate and more fully apply their innate capacity and creativity to create incremental value.