
China’s history and culture impacting Leadership - 2

China’s history and culture impacting Leadership - 1
In this
and the next two blogs I will try to shed some light on the topic of how one
should behave and what one should aim for to be a successful and superior
leader. Here I will take it from a non-Western perspective – from China ’s history
that is quite rich and could be the source of potentially broader viewpoint in
today’s (mostly western) leadership methodologies.
I begin
with a story Outlaws of the Marsh. The
main character Sòng Jiāng, the descendant of a landowner's family, nicknamed
Timely Rain, was a clerk of the county magistrate’s court in Yuncheng. He was
especially adherent to playing with weapons and adept at many forms of
fighting. At the same time he had a reputation for being extremely filial and
generous in helping those in needs. He helped anyone who sought his aid, high
or low, making things easy for people, solving their difficulties, settling
differences, saving lives, even providing his guest with food and lodging in
the family manor. And so he was famed through the province
of Shandong and Hebei . However, in silence he suffered in
the face of the arbitrariness and corruption of the imperial justice system.
Management practices and tools that just “don’t work”
From the management’s perspective managers
perform tasks, manage people and do business. Accordingly, there are numerous
methodologies and tools helping to manage business and people:

(1) In Japan at Toyota Motor Company, Taichii Ohno and Shigeo Shingo incorporated Ford’s type of production and some other techniques into an approach named the Toyota Production System or Just In Time Production (JIT). The inventory strategy strives to improve a business return on investment by simultaneously reducing in-process inventory and associated costs.
(2) The core idea of a Lean organization is to maximize customer value while minimizing waste. Simply, lean means creating more value for customers with less resource.
(3) Iwao Kobayashi’s 20 keys is a longer list that can be used in
manufacturing audits. It reads very much like a “who’s who” of manufacturing
innovations and hence makes a very useful checklist.
(4) Six
Sigma (6б) is a business management strategy originally developed by Motorola
in 1981. It was initially aimed at quantifying the defects that occurred during
manufacturing process first and then at reducing those defects to a very small
level.
(5) Business
Process Reengineering (BPR) is a top-down approach in which organizations
become more efficient and modernized. Reengineering is a fundamental rethinking
and radical redesign of business processes to achieve dramatic improvements in
cost, quality, speed and service.
(6) The
Self Directed Work Team (SDWT) is perhaps the most powerful organizational
concept that motivates, coordinates, solves problems and also makes better
decision than an individual could. But this performance comes at a price: decisions
are slow, work teams require extensive training and months to mature.
(7) Total
Quality Management (TQM) is a set of management practices throughout the
organization geared to continuously improve the business processes in order to
ensure that the organization consistently meets or exceeds in satisfying a
customer or a supplier.
(8) … others.
Wing Chun basics 4 Leadership
In the book Leadership
by Virtue I refer to martial arts philosophies and Wing Chun principles with
regard to a personal growth for those who strive to become an outstanding leader.
Here I’d like to share some Wing Chun basics to illustrate this relationship:
Efficiency and effectiveness are both the
hallmarks of Wing Chun. Out of these hallmarks spring three main principles:
central line, economy of movement, simultaneous attack and defense. And these
principles serve right only if you have cultured three roots: balance,
structure and stance.

Mission and vision

And a vision?
Is it an aspiration for a company? Does it focus on the potential essentials in
the company's mid-term or long-term future, or what company intends to be?
Most of mission
and vision statements are generic, therefore awfully deficient. A result of long-drawn
meetings where in the end everyone is so tired and approves any nonsense just
to bring it to the conclusion. They are full of phrases like ‘market-leader’, ‘best-in-region’, ‘most successful’, ‘best customer/owner
value’, ‘leading in this and that'. Fluffy words that mean nothing. They just
repulse a reader and make skip the text!
Martial arts philosophy
Better
sweat in practice than bleed in battle (Wǔ Shù wisdom)

Better spend three years looking for a good master than ten years training with a bad one (Wǔ Shù wisdom)
In China a
philosophy does not come only from the country’s rich culture but also from
martial arts. The keystone in Chinese philosophy is a strong humanism that became
a focus of numerous Chinese philosophers throughout the ages. This humanism
does not imply exclusion or indifference to a supreme powers and the nature.
Instead, the general conclusion goes towards the unity of human and ‘heaven.’
This spirit of synthesis has characterized the entire history of Chinese
philosophy.

Organizational change
Organizational change is, or should be,
just one of the processes within the strategy’s frame and company vision. Why
then companies have to “struggle” when introducing changes? Why do they need to
change? Ever changing environment, markets, products are just pushing the limits
of a current stability of the companies and provoke never ending chain of
changes.
In his blog
Bernard Marr says “a good mission statement articulates the purpose of the
company, basically why it exists, what it does and for whom. It should serve as
an ongoing guide that spells out what the company is all about. The mission
should focus on the here and now.” And where do we see a necessity for a change
that a company should follow? In “a vision statement where the goals and
aspirations for the future are outlined. It creates a mental picture of a
specific medium-term target and should serve as a source of inspiration.”

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