Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T06:56:06.113Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Resilient Leadership as Paradox Work: Notes from COVID-19

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 September 2020

Luca Giustiniano
Affiliation:
Luiss University, Italy
Miguel Pina e Cunha
Affiliation:
Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal
Ace V. Simpson
Affiliation:
Brunel University London, UK
Arménio Rego
Affiliation:
Universidade Católica Portuguesa, Portugal Instituto Universitário de Lisboa, Portugal
Stewart Clegg
Affiliation:
Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal University of Technology Sydney, Australia
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Dialogue, Debate, and Discussion
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The International Association for Chinese Management Research

Crises and tragedies befalling individuals, teams, organizations, or communities call for leadership that builds resilience in the face of danger. The COVID-19 pandemic, full of both known and unknown unknowns, is no exception and variable national responses to it epitomize the importance of resilient leadership. In such situations there is always the expectation that ‘something has to be said’ in response to commentators and authorities calling for a clear unambiguous direction (in politics, in business, and in communities) and that it is best said by ‘the leader’. Saying something and dealing with a reality unravelling in the midst of uncertainty and ambiguity can lead to paradoxical situations. In the words of Deloitte Global CEO Punit Renjen (Reference Renjen2020), COVID-19 has challenged leaders with ‘fixing the plane while it flies’. For passengers to remain calm while doing so requires the tension-laden goal of ‘building recovery on a foundation of trust’. The balance between saying something reassuring and responding to something threatening in process is difficult to weigh. While to lead means to guide, to resile means to respond or be guided by circumstances through a process of adaptation and growth within a risky environment. In this commentary, we discuss resilient leadership as paradox work, i.e., guiding while being guided by contingencies.

RESILIENT LEADERSHIP: BUILDING WALLS AND WINDMILLS

As highlighted in Lewin, Li, and Välikangas's (Reference Lewin, Li and Välikangas2020: 225) call for commentaries, the COVID-19 pandemic ‘will be a test of resilience and responsible leadership at the global, country, industrial, firm, family and individual level’. We interpret that challenge in light of an interesting proverb: ‘When the winds of change blow, some people build walls and others build windmills’. Resilient leadership might be conceived as simultaneously providing protection from wind while finding a process with which to exploit its force. Protection is a sine qua non condition for avoiding harm. While effective protection supports survival and prevents collapse, processes exploiting a crisis can nourish thriving that builds further protection. Leadership that is instrumental to these goals must formulate actions paving the way for change, while also pacing its tempo, being continuously aware of and responsive to the ongoing unpredictability that any change of state and affairs ensues.

Resilient leadership is the enactment of the two components that have recently attracted increasing scholarly attention and acquired centrality in managerial debate: resilience and leadership (e.g., Zheng, Kark, & Meister, Reference Zheng, Kark and Meister2018). Resilience is intrinsically paradoxical, integrating strength and vulnerability (Cameron, Reference Cameron2008), agency and communion (Zheng et al., Reference Zheng, Kark and Meister2018). Drawing upon the parable of the fox and the hedgehog by Greek poet Archilochus’ where ‘The fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing’, Gaddis (Reference Gaddis2018) has analyzed historical accounts of leaders embracing strategic approaches characterized by hedgehog like idealism or fox like pragmatism. The most effective (and resilient) leaders, however, were characterized as neither of these but as a combination of idealistic and pragmatic (March & Weil, Reference March and Weil2009), pursuing one grandly ambitious strategy thoroughly within a consistent framework over the long-term (hedgehog, idealism) and cautiously exploring many alternatives, remaining attentive to details, even accepting losses in the short-term (fox, pragmatism) – i.e., pragmatic idealism. Resilient leadership accordingly implies vigorous combinations of contrary elements such as preparedness and improvisation, clear direction-setting and flexibility in the face of specific circumstances. It is this integration of opposites, more than a focus on a single dimension, that defines ‘resilient leadership’ in responses to the COVID-19 pandemic as ‘paradox work’.

RESILIENCE AND LEADERSHIP

Resilience etymologically derives from the Latin resilire, which means to jump back or recoil. This sense of resilience has been adopted by many disciplines including psychiatry, psychology, engineering, biology, and ecology. Managerial resilience connotes the aptitude to absorb and learn from external shocks, while at the same time preparing to respond to whatever will come (Välikangas, Reference Välikangas2010). Resilient leadership therefore has two facets which seem to be its antipodes (Giustiniano, Clegg, Cunha, & Rego, Reference Giustiniano, Clegg, Cunha and Rego2018): reactive and adaptive.

Contradictory tensions (such as anticipation/adaptation; solidity/flexibility; efficiency/redundancy; boldness/prudence; compassion/hardiness; profit/purpose; updating information/being aware that information may not mean knowing; courage to make unpopular decisions/humility to listen the crowd, etc.) must be synthesized into an overarching whole to characterize resilient leadership. Pursuing resilience means balancing and handling contradictions, rather than confuting one or other term, positioning leaders, be they managers or policy makers, for more effective decision-making. As the COVID-19 pandemic attests, emergencies imply both preparation and reaction. We see this illustrated in the motto ‘go hard, go early’ that New Zealand authorities – led by Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern – adopted in an ongoing process of both preparedness and adaptation as the COVID-19 crisis evolved (Wilson, Reference Wilson2020). New Zealand, among the best responses to COVID-19 globally, derived its success from a preparedness to react in ways that enhanced preparedness for effective responding in future (un)predictable situations. Being prepared to react to be prepared requires that leaders do everything possible to create enabling conditions that cultivate trust and a sense of purpose in teams and organizations (Joly, Reference Joly2020).

Resilient leadership in the face of pandemic requires rethinking the way work activities are conducted and how roles as citizens, managers and decision-makers are enacted. Apparent contradictions, including rationality/empathy, stability/flexibility, present/future, local/global, autonomy/control, individual/collective, require directing. The guiding thread of resilient leadership is the talent for balancing responses to contradictory forces that present themselves as non-alternatives during periods of high ambiguity. The COVID-19 pandemic has tested the capacity of leaders to be both firm and flexible, gritty and empathic, tough and compassionate, directive and empowering, willing to set the pace and to be responsive to the emerging realities, steering and sharing leadership, leading while being led by experts (Wilson, Reference Wilson2020); in other words, conducting paradox work in the purposeful balancing of interdependent yet opposing forces (Smith & Lewis, Reference Smith and Lewis2011). The task is complex, requiring the navigation of unstable combinations of synergy and tradeoff (Li, Reference Li2014), yet the best examples of leadership through the pandemic have expressed this paradoxical quality (Wilson, Reference Wilson2020).

PARADOX WORK IN FRONT OF COVID-19

Achieving resilient leadership and healing apparent contradictions between reaction and adaptation requires learning. A restaurant owner in Rome, known by the first author, turned her business into a food delivery service during the first lockdown. The food packs her team delivered included a note saying something like: ‘Dear customer… I'm scared, we're scared… this is all new to me and my team; please help us improve, we'll learn this new business together’. To survive and thrive, businesses and other organizations need to transform stressors, crises and shocks into new and sustainable solutions. The process necessitates playing with the unlearning-learning balance to integrate the reactive and adaptive components of resilience. Unlearning is not forgetting but rather the ability to switch to an alternative mental model. Such ‘learning to unlearn and learn’ is about embracing experimentation and overcoming the resistance acting as barriers and obstacles to doing new things. Fostering resilience requires leaders to react and adapt while avoiding adopting partial solutions and eliminating dispositions of ingrained cognitive prejudice.

Resilient leadership emerges as the synthesis of two paradoxical forces: risk factors can destroy but where they do not, resilience can be energized. The role of leadership is crucial, as resilience is based not on individuals alone but also on collectives. A group of resilient individuals does not guarantee a resilient team (e.g., if the team lacks a collaborative and socially supportive culture) while entire communities can express resilience, even in the absence of resilient individuals. Resilient leadership can therefore be essential to achieving collective resilience. For example, collective resilience was cultivated in some companies that were victims of 9/11, by leaders who ‘turn[ed] the toxicity and damage from a crisis into substantial learning and improved, rather than damaged, performance’ (Clair & Dufresne, Reference Clair and Dufresne2017: 63).

The COVID-19 lockdown is providing countless opportunities for employing ‘generative doubt’ and the ability to ‘learn to unlearn and learn’, as well as other expressions of paradox work: engaging the base while offering clear direction from the top; focusing on central processes while scrutinizing the more opaque periphery in order to stay alert to unexpected developments; making short-term improvised decisions while considering long-term implications; providing flexibility for adapting to changing circumstances while maintaining control; conducting deliberate search while being open to serendipitous emergence. Resilient leadership means ‘dropping the (usual) tools’ (Weick, Reference Weick1993) that made sense up to January 2020 and developing new ones, via trial and error. To survive and prosper, policy makers, managers, and professionals should consider managerial resilience being built within an integrative framework premised on having cultivated both reactive and adaptive resilience.

Leading, as guiding and steering is crucial to the diffusion of resilience, as the latter cannot be designed or imposed from the top down. When acting as leaders, managers and policy makers can only facilitate its emergence by investing in organizational learning through constructive interactions. Planning and improvising are necessary. Following traditional patterns will not teach or design resilient leadership as it is best developed by cultivating strategic foresight with room for improvisation in anticipation of potential contingencies as unforeseeable events play out (Cunha, Kamoche, & Clegg, Reference Cunha, Kamoche and Clegg2012). Building strategic foresight requires questioning existing answers and foreseeable problems to which they are envisaged as solutions. McNulty and Marcus (Reference McNulty and Marcus2020) ask of leaders in the era of COVID-19, ‘Are you leading through the crisis … or [just] managing the response’? Cultivating strategic foresight is the difference between just managing as compared to leading resiliently. Resilient leadership requires understanding what to eliminate and what to rationalize by questioning the usefulness of certain customary routines and mental patterns in the face of events. To build strategic foresight and cope with futures unknown, it is necessary to put aside everyday routines and embedded dispositions by cultivating preparedness that can be switched on effortlessly. Foreseeable but temporally unpredictable events such as the COVID-19 pandemic offer evidence of the value of mastering paradox in resilient leadership. The mark of resilient leadership builds on this mastery so that, when the next unknown unknown occurs (its occurrence, although not its content, is undoubtedly predictable), it can be handled through the foresight that makes of it an organizationally anticipated, if temporally unknown, event.

Footnotes

Accepted by: Deputy Editor Peter Ping Li

Miguel Cunha and Arménio Rego thank the Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (UID/ECO/00124/2013, UID/ECO/00124/2019, UID/GES/00315/2019, UID/GES/00731/2019) and Social Sciences DataLab, LISBOA-01-0145-FEDER-022209), POR Lisboa (LISBOA-01-0145-FEDER-007722, LISBOA-01-0145-FEDER-022209) and POR Norte (LISBOA-01-0145-FEDER-022209).

References

REFERENCES

Cameron, K. S. 2008. Paradox in positive organizational change. Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, 44(1): 724.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clair, J. A., & Dufresne, R. L. 2007. Changing poison into medicine: How companies can experience positive transformation from a crisis. Organizational Dynamics, 36(1): 6377.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cunha, M. P., Kamoche, K., & Clegg, S. R. 2012. Improvisation as ‘real time foresight’. Futures, 44(3): 265272.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gaddis, J. L. 2018. On grand strategy. New York, NY: Penguin Press.Google Scholar
Giustiniano, L., Clegg, S. R., Cunha, M. P., & Rego, A. 2018. Elgar introduction to theories of organizational resilience. Cheltenham, UK: Elgar.10.4337/9781786437044CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Joly, H. 2020. A time to lead with purpose and humanity. Harvard Business Review [Cited on 24 March 2020]. Available from URL: https://hbr.org/2020/03/a-time-to-lead-with-purpose-and-humanityGoogle Scholar
Lewin, A. Y., Li, P. P., & Välikangas, L. 2020. Resilience, resilience, resilience. Management and Organization Review, 16(2): 225227.Google Scholar
Li, P. P. 2014. The unique value of yin-yang balancing: A critical response. Management and Organization Review, 10(2): 321332.Google Scholar
March, J. G., & Weil, T. 2009. On leadership. New York, NY: Wiley.Google Scholar
McNulty, E. J., & Marcus, L. 2020. Are you leading through the crisis … or managing the response? Harvard Business Review [Cited on 25 March 2020]. Available from URL: https://hbr.org/2020/03/are-you-leading-through-the-crisis-or-managing-the-responseGoogle Scholar
Renjen, P. 2020. The essence of resilient leadership: Business recovery from COVID-19. Deloitte [Cited on 30 June 2020]. Available from URL: https://www2.deloitte.com/global/en/insights/economy/covid-19/guide-to-organizational-recovery-for-senior-executives-heart-of-resilient-leadership.htmlGoogle Scholar
Smith, W. K., & Lewis, M. W. 2011. Toward a theory of paradox: A dynamic equilibrium model of organizing. Academy of Management Review, 36(2): 381403.Google Scholar
Välikangas, L. 2010. The resilient organization: How adaptive cultures thrive even when strategy fails. New York, NY: McGraw Hill.Google Scholar
Weick, K. E. 1993. The collapse of sensemaking in organizations: The Mann Gulch disaster. Administrative Science Quarterly, 38(4): 628652.10.2307/2393339CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilson, S. 2020. Pandemic leadership: Lessons from New Zealand's approach to COVID-19. Leadership, 16(3): 279293.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zheng, W., Kark, R., & Meister, A. L. 2018. Paradox versus dilemma mindset: A theory of how women leaders navigate the tensions between agency and communion. The Leadership Quarterly, 29(5): 584596.10.1016/j.leaqua.2018.04.001CrossRefGoogle Scholar