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The global business leader

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Leadership has nothing to do with titles. J. Frank Brown, the Dean of INSEAD, has met a lot of CEOs in his two-and-a-half decades in business and many of them are little more than LINOs – Leaders In Name Only. 

“A lot of people talk about leadership and not that many actually do it,” Brown said in an interview with INSEAD Knowledge.

INSEAD Dean Frank BrownBrown believes there are seven hallmarks of a great leader. “I think the most important one is how you communicate and how you listen because if you’re going to be a successful leader you’ve got to be a really aggressive learner,” he said.


In his book, The Global Business Leader: Practical Advice for Success in a Transcultural Marketplace, Brown lists the hallmarks of leadership: openness, integrity, humility, a view of the present and the future, an optimistic outlook, the proper use of authority, and an understanding of personal and organisational objectives.


‘Transcultural’ leaders at the helm of international companies also need to be sensitive to other cultures and national differences. That means leaders today need to be willing to explore and travel. They need to be curious about other people and customs.


“This awareness and willingness to engage and be intellectually curious about what’s going on in the rest of the world is an absolutely critical component to being effective in a transcultural environment, and effectiveness gives you the opportunity to potentially lead,” Brown says.


Global Business Leader book cover LINOs aren’t very curious and they tend to surround themselves with people who look and think like them. They don’t really want to engage, learn and listen.

“In my view LINOs don’t really want your opinion, they don’t really want your input, they don’t really want you on their team. They’d like you to go away and do your job,” he says.



But this is a recipe for failure for an organisation.


“There is a failing of CEOs that surround themselves with people who aren’t as smart as they are and therefore they think they’re ensuring they’re going to stay in the top spot, but in reality they’re setting themselves and their teams up for failure.”


This is especially true for global and regional businesses. Brown tells the story of a deal between a Japanese and American company that went hopelessly wrong because the two parties simply didn’t understand each other’s culture. 

 

Diversity is 'a must'

Success requires diverse teams and Brown says real leaders hire teams with differing skills and backgrounds, give them clear responsibilities, and stay in close touch with the team at all levels.

 

On diversity: “Diversity is an absolute necessity for a team, and when I say diversity, I mean it in every sense of the word: gender, race, religion, nationality, sexual orientation, culture, personality type (and) area of expertise.” Read more »

“You’ve got to surround yourself with people that are diverse, have very, very broad perspectives in terms of educational background, in terms of their cultural background, in terms of the languages they speak,” he said.

He points to Europe and says the male-dominated and age-hierarchical nature of management doesn’t foster the effective mentoring that brings out the best managers. For transcultural companies to succeed, managers have to be very focused on finding the best person for the job regardless or age or gender, he adds.


When executives say that building a diverse team is much more difficult, he tells them that a homogeneous team of white, Anglo-Saxon males won’t be as successful as a diverse team. They share values, resist challenging conventional thinking and are more political.


He writes: “In the international marketplace, a diverse team is a must.”


For younger managers, Brown says team building, effective mentoring and networking are crucial. And he says today executives need to think beyond traditional borders.


On mentoring: “If I think about what have been the most important business and personal relationships to me, it’s been from people that have mentored me and people I have mentored.” Read more »

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“I do think that anybody who aspires to be a leader in this generation, or in the generations to come, needs to focus beyond their own backyard. Anyone who says my aspirations are local is setting themselves up to fail,” he said.


He encourages the people he mentors to seek out different types of work experiences to expand their knowledge and understanding.

“I also feel very strongly that a lot of leadership is learned and a lot of leadership comes through being in a position to get the right experience and being willing to take advantage of the right experience,” he says.

 

On succession: “Real leaders don’t worry about legacies. Instead, Brown says leaders care about the long-term viability of their companies. Read more »

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Aspiring executives also should learn to behave like leaders, dressing and acting appropriately, showing humility, and learning to interact with peers and other team members in a way that builds rapport.


He says young managers who spend too much time gaining the perks of power often lose sight of the organisation’s goals and how to achieve them.

On work-life balance: “If you don’t communicate what your particular needs or out-of-work situation is, you’re doing yourself a disservice.” Read more »

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Brown devotes a chapter of his book to communications and urges leaders to listen better to their staff, other managers, competitors and customers, especially in a transcultural setting. LINOs, he says, often act as though listening to customers and rank and file employees is a burden.

“By investing the time to listen and learn you’ve created a much higher probability that the actions you undertake together are going to be successful and are going to be accepted.”

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Your Comments
I certainly agree with Mr. Brown's perspective on leadership and I hold high regard for him and his perspective.

If I were to put my perspective on what leadership is all about, then, to me, it is a high level ability which is the outcome of several strong personality dimensions. These strong personality dimensions go into the making of a charismatic leader.

Explicitly these strong personality dimensions could just be strong fundamental business acumen, high and insightful intellectual accomplishment, brilliant communication skills, enduring pursuit of persistence and commitment, and the ability to give a hierarchy of goals to the organisation and to galvanize the entire workforce toward the accomplishment of these goals.

To my mind every leader has his or her own leadership philosophy which just has the right adherance to centralisation, decentralisation, democratic culture, participative culture and authoritative culture. It is important that the leader drives the organisation by virtue of his or her own value system, which being so powerful in nature, shall be able to inspire a whole-hearted participation of the entire work force.

A leader to me has to be so charismatic that he or she is truly admired within the organisation as a role model.

Manish Parsuramka
Business Management Professional
India
posted on : 02-Oct-2008
I agree with the perception. This is what is my experience as a non executive Director of a spinning mill with 100,000 spindles in gujarat. The view of Mr.Frank Brown is out of his own experience. The problem is every one tends to think in the way that they want to think and hence there is no learning experience. No doubt it is a very difficult process and that is seen time immemorial. Education pattern- right from the primary level- should orient a child in how to learn and instead of being made to think in his or her own way and perhaps that might write a new chapter in the life of people of the world. After all we need a change in thinking process. Thanks.

Dr G Balakrishnan, PhD(Law),
Professor Emeritus, Bombay University
Senior Advocate and Supreme Court counsel.
posted on : 11-Jul-2008
LINO's are in abundance..they cause, at best, much frustration and, at worst, catastrophic loss to organisation and employees. Maybe they lose sight of why they are appointed... if in fact they ever had that vision or skill. But lets not forget those who make these appointments....did they just make an error? Were they badly advised? Did they fail to nurture what could have been?

LINO's achieve a level of power and opportunity but, without those appropriate skills and values, what can they do but continue to frustrate!

N.B. Let's not forget that there is great talent out there..the kind of people who are a real joy to work with and who bring the hope of renewal and opportunity to be taken.
posted on : 10-Jul-2008
The article by Brown on leadership is apt in today's ever evolving and fast changing business environments. Leaders of today's businesses have to lead the 'change', and to be able to do that, they need to learn to change and adapt themselves to the changes in their business environments. To lead change, leaders need to be fast learners, as rightfully pointed out by Brown in the article. An eye for detail, feet firmly on the ground, self-confidence but with humility and respect for other's opinions, values and cultures - these traits ensure that leaders are true leaders and not in name only. It is important to note that each of these traits can be acquired, and managers of today can definitely aspire to be leaders of tomorrow should they acquire the right skills and develop the right attitude.

An interesting and informative article indeed.

Harsh Vivek
India
posted on : 10-Jul-2008
Within C-suites and particularly for the Global Executive Officer the complexity inevitable with working across countries, cultures and markets presents new contexts at every cross-point. Yes, diversity in its broadest sense is “a must” for a business to innovate and collaborate in the international marketplace.

The reality, however, is that organisational culture is about assimilation. Assimilation integrates and absorbs members of one group into an established, larger community. Difference needs to be experienced and acknowledged for it to be truly understood.

Leadership enacts persona. Majority groups normalise their power to the point they no longer see their advantage and privilege. They are often unaware of the barriers to change this mindset creates. The challenge is to encourage those of the majority to understand the overt and covert consequences of their ‘modus operandi’. Their presence and determination in executing change – engaging jointly with those in the minority - is fundamental for the diversity agenda to shift to the next level.

Dianne Jacobs
The Talent Advisors
Melbourne, Australia
posted on : 10-Jul-2008
I like Brown's book and agree with some ideas.

Jason Xia
Futian Dist. Shenzhen City, China
posted on : 21-Jun-2008
Unfortunately for Mr. Brown and all of us who realize how true his philosophy is, those that need to comprehend it the most are the ones who are willing to accept it the least.

Incompetence begets incompetence and it goes on from there - as does arrogance, as does ignorance.

MLC
posted on : 24-Apr-2008
This idea of pushing multiculturalism is a hoax.
If the best leaders are selected, there will be
automatic diversity.
posted on : 24-Apr-2008
Mr. Brown's interview is good and interesting. What makes a leader good or bad is the amount of responsibility that he takes on his shoulders. It is not how many people or departments are reporting to you, but the sheer guts to carry on the big responsibility, the stupendous challenges that you take on and execute. That is what makes them leaders. I read a book on India's Late Dhirubhai Ambani's leadership style. It is really mind boggling- a man who from scratch really made trillions.

Debashish Bramha
posted on : 04-Apr-2008

Your Comments

Mr. Brown's article on multicultural leadership hit home. I read a synopsis on The Economist and entered INSEAD's site to find out more about this topic of which I am very much aware.

I was born in Mexico, raised and educated in the U.S. (accepted to Harvard and MIT in 1990) and have been working in Brazil for 10 years. I have been frustrated at the lack of interest in multicultural administrators of which I am one. I am looking for opportunities to challenge my intellect and take full advantage of my multicultural abilities including culture and language. I speak English, Spanish, Portuguese, a little French and a dab of German. I have traveled throughout North America, South America and Europe and have business contacts throughout the world.

At present I am working well under my potential and am searching for opportunities to put my skills to good use and feel valued for my differences rather than belittled because I do not fit into a specific cultural mould.

(No name given)



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