Security Focus Africa June 2020

Page 6

editors comment

Of looking forward, real leadership in a crisis and finding opportunities Every Friday morning I get a newsletter from the Good Things Guy, an initiative started by Brent Lindeque in 2015. Committed to promoting only positive news and inspirational stories, it’s a welcome read when it arrives in the inboxes of his million-plus followers – me included – and especially now when mainstream media news is pretty bleak.

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his week’s inspirational quote “Look up and not down. Look forward and not back. Look out and not in, and lend a hand” by Edward Everett Hale is a challenge which, if met, will bring its own rewards. To comply with it will require self-discipline but it’s doable if we implement certain boundaries such as setting time limits on news watching and social media engagements. These are areas that can sap positive energy and leave people feeling afraid and demotivated. My interpretation of looking up and forward is focusing on possibility and opportunity. In any crisis, there are always going to be those who rise to the top on the back of their “can-do” and “will-do” attitudes. (I googled Mr Hale by the way: he was an American author, historian and clergyman who also penned these words: “I am only one, but I am one. I cannot do everything, but I can do something. And because I cannot do everything, I will not refuse to do the something that I can do.” Also powerful words. In her article “Real leaders are forged in crisis” which appeared on the Harvard Business Review website, Nancy Koehn

Give people a role and purpose shares her findings, the result of two decades of study. (And a shout-out to Harvard at the same time, which has made its coronavirus coverage free for everyone). “Real leaders are not born,” she says, and “the ability to help others triumph over adversity is not written into their genetic code. They are, instead, made. They are forged in crisis. Leaders become “real” when they practice a few key behaviors that gird and inspire people through difficult times. As Covid-19 tears its way through country after country, town after town, neighborhood after neighborhood, here’s what we can learn from how some of history’s iconic leaders acted in the face of great uncertainty, real danger and collective fear.”

Acknowledge people’s fears, then encourage resolve Nancy urges leaders to be honest with their staff with regard to the challenges they’re facing, and to give them hope that derives from available resources as well as determination, solidarity, strength, shared purpose, humanity, kindness and resilience. “Recognise that most of your employees are anxious about their health, their finances, and, in many cases,

Editorial Policy Statements made or opinions expressed in articles in Security Focus Africa do not necessarily reflect the official views of the Security Association of South Africa (SASA) nor those of any of the other security associations listed in Security Focus Africa. Similarly, advertising in this publication does not imply in any way endorsement or approval by these security associations of any products or services. It is the policy of the Security Association of South Africa that any office-bearer who has an executive position in a company, or companies, which supply security products or services should on no account allow his position to be used to promote his company or its objectives in the editorial content of Security Focus Africa, the official journal of the Association. If, at any time, an office-bearer’s position has been quoted in relation to his company or product, this does not imply the Association’s approval or involvement.

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Security Focus africa June 2020

their jobs,” she urges. “Explain that you understand how scary things feel, but that you can work together to weather this storm.”

Real leaders give their employees jobs, she says, citing the example of Reverend Martin Luther King Junior, who “exhorted his followers to sit in, march and otherwise protest against racial discrimination. Other examples include US President “FDR”(Franklin Delano Roosevelt), who asked citizens to keep their money in the banks to avert a banking crisis, and his wife Eleanor who encouraged American women to work in the factories while their menfolk fought in the Second World War. “In the current crisis,” says Nancy, “leaders must act in a similar fashion – giving their followers direction and reminding them why their work matters. In organisations providing essential services such as government agencies, hospitals, pharmacies, grocery stores, food and healthcare equipment manufacturing plants, news outlets, scientific labs, non-profits serving the poor and many others – this raison d’ etre will be immediately apparent. But it’s still vitally important to emphasise the key role that each person involved in the operation plays.”

Emphasise experimentation and learning True leadership comes with a commitment to working with and navigating through confusion, she maintains. It about adjusting, improvising and redirecting as the situation changes and new information emerges as well as acknowledging that they’re going to make mistakes, learning as they go.

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