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7/5/2017 |
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Do Leaders Need To Be Transparent? |
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Do Leaders Need To Be Transparent? by Catherine Iste This is the second article of a three-part series examining key characteristics associated with leadership: Innovation | Transparency | Inspiration Does transparency equate to trustworthy? How transparent do leaders need to be to create a transparent culture? The adjectives describing the type of leader we are have become critical. This three-part series reviews some common but different leadership descriptors and whether to embrace or ignore them. This article considers different perspectives of transparent leadership. Get their trust Across industries, experts argue that organizations must strive for transparency. Via — and in part because of — social media, companies in a variety of sectors can stay ahead or on top of customer requests, comments or problems better than ever. Leadership and communication experts also agree that great things happen when leaders support transparency internally, too. In his article for Entrepreneur, Andre Lavoie explains that organizations embracing transparency have better relationships, alignment, solutions and engagement. Thus, transparency has a positive impact on corporate culture, but does creating a transparent environment require being a transparent leader? Not completely. TMI In his discussion of the risks of too much transparency, leadership expert David De Cremer writes for Harvard Business Review that a completely transparent culture can lead to an increase in blame, distrust, cheating and resistance. When there is too much emphasis on transparency, employees feel like they are under a microscope, trust deteriorates and their ability to be creative can be thwarted. John Coleman takes this one step further in his article for Fast Company, explaining that leaders need to be able to exercise discretion and enjoy time to consider the implications of their communication before disclosing anything or everything. He cautions that if a leader shares too much information with employees who do not have the ability to understand or control it, it can unnecessarily distract employees and increase their anxiety. In other words, it is one thing to be a transparent leader; it is another thing to be a trustworthy leader. Read full article on MultiBriefs.
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