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Successful leaders in architecture firms do just thatthey
lead. How do they lead? They lead by defining and communicating
values and direction (vision); enabling people to grow, advance,
and satisfy themselves professionally; setting, communicating, and
living up to high standards; communicating and achieving balance
among the firms professional, cultural, and business aspects;
and bringing clients and projects to the firmeither directly
or indirectly.
Although the two concepts must coexist, leadership and management
are not the same and it helps to understand the distinctions.
Management confers authority on individuals, whereas the influence
that comes from leadership can only be earned. Leaders earn their
influence because people want to go where the leader is headed, no
matter whom the organization designates as the
leader.
In design firms, the people who rise to positions of significant
leadership generally will demonstrate many, if not all, of the
following characteristics:
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The ability to establish and
communicate a clear vision for the firms future, including
the type of clients and projects sought, the role of design in
achieving client and firm satisfaction, technology choices,
financial goals, professional gratification, internal culture,
external image, and social, civic, and environmental
involvement.
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The energy, focus, and commitment to
inspire others to embrace a common vision and to work toward its
attainment. That inspiration is reflected in the work the firm
pursues, the talent the firm recruits, the creative and quality
goals the firm establishes, the technologies the firm adopts, and
the extent to which internal colleagues collaborate and pursue a
common objective.
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The capacity to overcome self doubt
and convey confidence to their followers. Such confidence is most
effective when grounded in an understanding of risks and
impediments, leading to mitigating strategies. Leaders thoughtfully
initiate actions to deal with variables such as shifting market
conditions, new competitors, quality concerns, organizational
culture, and financial performance.
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High performance standards for
themselves and others. The most effective leaders do more than
simply challenge others to achieve these standardsthey
actively support, nurture, and develop others so that success is
highly probable.
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The flexibility and the ability to
acknowledge failure, abandon unsuccessful approaches, and develop
new ones. Alone, or with input from others, firm leaders determine
when to shift marketing priorities, when to bring in new talent,
when to apply new technologies, and when to elevate others into
roles where their leadership potential can blossom.
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Decisiveness when addressing
nonperforming members of the firm, either through increasing
developmental attention or dismissal.
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Credibility arising from success
with clients and projects. Time in the trenches, usually with
project responsibility, increases the leaders connection with
individuals in the firm.
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Willingness to carry the torch in
the firm and in the community and, by so doing, to pave the way for
others to lead, to manage internally, and to bring in work from
past and new clients.
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Self-confidence and a willingness to
support the recognition of others in the firm as leaders, or
potential leaders. Firm leaders arent threatened by the
prospect that others also may be strong leaders; their
self-confidence allows them to foster the growth of others.
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Recognition of the distinctions
between leadership and management. Firm
leaders dont confuse the authority of the latter with the
energy of the former. Firm leaders know that both are necessary and
recognize that effective leadership reduces the need for formal
management. Except in firms where strong management is a goal
itself, effective leaders strive to direct more of the firms
effort toward serving clients and delivering projectsin
alignment with their vision and standards for the firmand
less into managing and administering the firm.
Successful firm leaders do
not all share the same profile with respect to these
characteristics. However, they do make sure that others in the firm
have a strong sense of where the firm is going and what each
individual can and should be doing to move it in that
direction.
There are effective leaders who seem to develop many of these
characteristics naturally, perhaps because leadership strengths are
embedded in their DNA or because circumstances required that they
rise to the occasion. No matter their genetic makeup, individuals
with the desire to lead typically can develop the necessary
characteristics through discipline and hard work. That being said,
what can an aspiring design firm leader do to enhance the
likelihood of success?
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Learn about the organization.
Investigate why, and how, it does what it does, its culture, its
strengths and shortcomings, its financial and business
underpinnings, its processes for project delivery, and its
reputation in the marketplace.
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Connect to people in many different
areas of the firm. Learn who does what, how workgroups are
organized, and the contribution that each person and group makes to
the firms overall success.
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Develop an external presence in the
community and in the marketplace. Get involved and become visible
in civic organizations, professional organizations, client
organizations, and general business organizations.
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Maintain and demonstrate high
personal and professional ethics.
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Speak out on relevant issues.
Initiate dialogue on various operational and strategic topics.
Its not always important to have the right answer. It is
important to become recognized as someone who cares about the firm,
as someone who thinks about topics important to the firms
future, and as someone who has the initiative, and courage, to step
forward and tackle challenging issues.
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Above all, recognize that, by
definition, leaders have followers. One measure of leadership
success is followship success, and effective leaders make sure the
people they lead are successful in their jobs.
In an architecture firm, the path to becoming an effective firm
leader means striking a reasonable balance among roles and
activities that sometimes conflict.
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Stay close enough to the work and
the studio culture to maintain credibility with people in the firm,
but be enough removed from day-to-day project work to think
strategically about important aspects of the practice.
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Radiate passion for creative,
technical, and service quality, but temper that passion with
concern for the financial success of the firm.
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Engage in activities outside the
firm to elevate the firms position in the marketplace, but be
operational enough to know where things stand in terms of
technology, work quality, client satisfaction, finance, staffing,
professional growth, and culture.
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Care deeply about the organization,
those it serves, and those who do the serving, but be concerned
about the learning and development needs of those who will rise to
higher responsibility.
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Stay focused on specific priorities,
but retain the capacity to juggle multiple and simultaneous
priorities.
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Develop a reputation for hard work
and dedication, but let the joy and passion of practice be evident
to others.
Hugh Hochberg has consulted in
practically all aspects of professional practice with over 700
design firms in his 32-year tenure as a partner in The Coxe Group,
after earning a BArch degree from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
and an MBA from Harvard. He has lectured and taught about practice
and leadership at institutions and organizations in the United
States, Asia, and Australia.
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