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Overcoming Barriers to Innovation
Through Influence and Impact
Learning Objectives
• Definitions
• Key characteristics of
influencing
• Strategies for overcoming
barriers to innovation through
influence and impact
• Building and leveraging your
personal brand
The true measure of leadership
is influence — nothing more.
Nothing less. —John Maxwell
Power & Influence Defined
Power is the potential
ability to:
• Influence behaviour
• Change the course of
events
• Overcome resistance
4 Types of Influencing Power
1. Positional
2. Personal
3. Expertise
4. Connections/Centrality
Leadership is the activity of
influencing people to cooperate
towards some goal which they come
to find desirable and which motivates
them over the long haul. — Ordway Tead, author of The Art of Influence (1935)
Social Networks
Social Network Analysis reveals the hidden
connections between people.
• Who are the influencers?
• Where is collaboration is breaking down?
• Where are decisions are getting bogged down?
Cardinal Richelieu 1585-1642
• Brought France to position of
unrivalled political dominance and
cultural pre-eminence until
Revolution of 1789
• Orchestrated patronage of artists,
architects and intellectuals
• Achieved national unity through
glory of France, the glory of God,
the virtue of loyal service to the
crown and against heresy and
discord.
Prime Minister to Louis XIII
Columbia Space Shuttle
• ―Knows how to influence up in a constructive way‖ — scored last place on managerial effectiveness in all items when people evaluated their managers in NASA – immediately before the Columbia space shuttle exploded. (Warner Burke cited by Goldsmith)
• While lack of effective upward influence was not the only cause of the explosion, it was a clear contributing factor.
IBM’s Grassroots Innovation
John Patrick: "Gopher epiphany."
1993
"Get Connected‖ manifesto
IBM created Internet division 1995
(www.fastcompany.com/magazine/
11/ibm.html)
What are the characteristics of
influencers?
Characteristics of Influencers
• Vision of Future— focus on greater good
• Potent point of view
• Clarity of Purpose
• Integrity
• Track Record
• Relational Currency —friends/mentors/allies
• Access and control of agendas
• Centrality + Collaboration
• Visible measurements
• Accountability
Influencing Strategies
1. Reason
2. Friendliness/Liking
3. Coalition/Allies
4. Bargaining
5. Assertiveness
6. Higher Authority
7. Sanctions
8. Bridging
9. Reciprocity
10. Scarcity
11. Consensus
12. Consistency/Commitment
Influencing Techniques
Reason
A. If logic is irrefutable then your case will also be irrefutable.
D. If info or logic is suspect strategy is weakened.
Friendliness
A. Others enjoy supporting you
B. D. Overuse may lead people to suspect your motives and competence.
Coalition
A. May seem overwhelming to others.
D. May be interpreted as conspiracy.
A=Advantage D=Disadvantage
Influencing Techniques
Assertiveness
A. Very effective when immediate action is essential.
D. May create resentment with overuse.
Higher Authority
A. Effective when dealing with those who are reluctant to change.
D. May undermine relationships or be interpreted as a threat. The Higher Authority may view it as weakness.
Bargaining
A. May provide a quick result when you have something valuable/desirable to negotiate.
D. Creates obligations for the influencer.
Most-to-Least Popular Strategies
When Managers Influenced Superiors
– Reason
– Coalition
– Friendliness
– Bargaining
– Assertiveness
– Higher Authority
When Managers Influenced Subordinates
– Reason
– Assertiveness
– Friendliness
– Evaluation
– Bargaining
– High Authority
– Sanction
Source: David Kipnis et al., ―Patterns of Managerial Influence: Shotgun Managers, Tacticians, and Bystanders,‖ Organizational Dynamics 12, no. 3 (New York: American Management Association, 1984), 62.
Expand your Spheres of Influence
1. Increase your visibility
2. Model mastery
3. Focus on future
4. Lateral Power: Shift emphasis from transactional to
relational
5. Get input from stakeholders
6. Build networks
7. Language—appeal to heart as well as the mind
8. Ask compelling questions. Question assumptions.
9. Shift from being problem-spotter to problem-solver
10. Essence vs form
11. Sell Solutions
Selling Solutions
1. State the problem/challenge and its impact
2. Provide 3 alternative solutions with advantages and disadvantages of each
3. Present your recommendation and rationale
4. Get feedback and/or agreement for action
(Source Ken Blanchard)
Brand Power
What is a brand?
Tom Peters calls it “influence power… It's being known for making the most significant contribution in your particular area. It's „reputational‟ power.”
Your brand is your promise.
Tom Chappellf (Tom's of Maine): "You have to define yourself based on a point of view you care deeply about."
Leveraging your brand
• What are you known for?
• How are you increasing your
knowledge-base?
• What does your visibility program
consist of?
• How can you build your network?
• When you look at your brand's assets,
what can you add to boost your
reputation and influence?
Take Tom Peters‟ brand equity test: www.creativityatwork.com/Newsletters/Jan03Brand-
equity.html
“If you want to build a
boat, do not instruct the
men to saw wood, stitch
the sails, prepare the
tools and organize the
work, but make them
long for setting sail and
travel to distant lands.”Antoine De Saint-Exupéry
Source: cc Gesal