Leadership in the human digital era: a new kind of leader
In the past, leaders have been identified and assessed largely based on their experience, tenure and business performance. They were expected to know what to do and bring judgment and experience to new business challenges. They “paid their dues,” climbed the corporate ladder and were developed and evaluated based on their behavior and style. While historically job postings focused on technical skills, more human-focused capabilities are now valued and noted as requirements for leadership.
As Michelle Johnston identified, “In the past, exercising direct power and giving commands may have defined leadership. That no longer works. The best leaders succeed by connecting with their teams, empathizing and honestly being themselves.”2
Leaders need to be adaptable. They need to react and coach teams to be able to work through challenges that do not have a set blueprint on how to move forward. As organizations react to the changing business environment, develop transformative capabilities and look to build resilience, a new kind of leader is needed.
Today, leaders need to think, act and react differently. The pace of change is forcing a new kind of leadership — one that emphasizes capabilities such as empathy, adaptability, resilience, collaboration, innovation and problem-solving. Leaders are expected to innovate to find new solutions. They’re assessed and developed based on their thinking patterns and problem-solving abilities — because the next challenge isn’t always clear, but likely just around the corner.
In the human digital age, empathy and agility are among the most highly desired leadership capabilities. While agility helps leaders react and change course as required, empathy underpins how they create connection and manage the emotional journey of any transformation.
In collaboration with Oxford Saïd Business School, EY teams conducted ground-breaking research into the human factors that drive transformation success and failure. This global, cross-sector research covered 23 countries, 934 C-suite executives and their direct reports, and almost 1,200 members of the workforce.
Based on this research, EY teams identified six key drivers that, when combined, help prepare for, manage and harness these emotional journeys, and are the formula for dramatically increased success rates for transformations. These traits are all anchored in the human experience.