52 pages • 1 hour read
Roger Connors, Tom Smith, Craig HickmanA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
As a good leader, Glinda in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz intervened at the right time to help propel Dorothy and her friends to success. Good leaders dip Below The Line from time to time, but they don’t stay there for long. Leaders are increasingly required to demonstrate ethical concern for those around them. In this chapter, the authors show readers how to get others Above The Line.
Rupert Murdoch is an extremely successful media tycoon. Though he is sometimes viewed as unorthodox, in fact he has learned how to avoid victim stories and become adept at using the right strategy at the right time. When a conservative approach is called for, he is conservative, and when opportunities to take risks present themselves, he takes risks. Above The Line leaders are good at identifying why others aren’t achieving results.
Accountability can be taken to an extreme, such as blaming people for illness and their own accidental death. The authors advocate for recognizing that there are factors that are out of our control, but we can take control through our response.
Leaders can worry too much about things that are beyond their control. It is important to learn to distinguish between things one has no control over from those things one has some control over. The authors provide a worksheet for identifying “uncontrollables” (229). People cannot control most of the things they worry about, so accountability is about focusing on the things they can control.
Leaders must provide a good example of accountability. Those who blame others create a negative work environment. A biography about Jack Welch, who transformed GE, reveals that great leaders take control of their destiny. Despite his enormous success, Welch acknowledges that at times he could have moved faster if he had been less afraid. To stay Above The Line, it is important to ask oneself and others what else can be done, to give and solicit honest feedback, to seek out and provide coaching, and focus on what one can control.
Getting people to accept accountability takes patience and coaching to overcome ingrained habits. One of the authors’ friends felt betrayed by his superiors. After taking on a new job as a CFO, he quickly realized that the person he had replaced had been embezzling money. He brought the evidence to his new CEO, who instructed him not to tell anyone until they had a strong case. The CEO then went on to take credit for uncovering the misdeeds.
The friend’s story might seem familiar. When someone is in a leadership position it is important to nudge those under them toward Above The Line thinking. The authors recommend that people, listen, acknowledge, ask, coach, and commit. Through this process, they can gradually nudge others toward a more accountable version of their experience.
An important part of coaching is reviewing the past, which the authors refer to as “accounting for progress” (238). While leaders recognize the value of this, they often fail to do so proactively. They struggle with confrontation, focus on other duties, do not communicate expectations, and make such sessions unbearable for employees. The authors offer a checklist to help leaders model accounting for progress from Above The Line, which leaders should review regularly. It took Dorothy and her friends a while to realize that they could already achieve their goals. Glinda, as a wise leader, coached them toward that knowledge.
In The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, the Tin Woodsman returned to rule over the Wicked Witch’s creatures, opting to share his new knowledge. Here, the authors summarize five elements to maintaining accountability.
Continuous feedback is an important part of staying Above The Line. Consider the fictitious example of Bill, who speaks to many of the people the authors work with. After listening to a report from Stan, his peer, Bill debated speaking up about what he felt was a victim story. While he debated, another coworker, Julie, spoke up in a coaching tone, acknowledging Stan’s story while also asking how they could move beyond it. It turned out that everyone in the room had ideas—they just needed a chance to express solutions. The president praised Julie for taking the initiative and showing leadership in this moment.
The authors have stressed the value of asking how people can contribute to a solution. There are more questions that they can add to this list. Clint Lewis, a sales manager, was frustrated by his division’s inability to get good numbers, until he came across a copy of The Oz Principle. Through the book, he learned to take accountability and lead his team to turn the situation around. He and many of those on his team have since been promoted.
To make accountability sustainable, we must promote structures and cultures that embrace it. That means recognizing people who are accountable and rewarding and promoting them. Several people and organizations the authors have worked with adapted strategies to present stories of accountability at meetings. In a potentially risky move at one such meeting, Joan presented on her team’s struggles. Though some dipped Below The Line to try to find blame for the problems, the conversation quickly shifted to joint accountability and finding solutions.
To overcome the obstacles created from a victim culture, it is helpful to: use language related to Above The Line thinking; promote Above The Line stories to make the concepts more memorable and relatable; reward employees who demonstrate Above The Line thinking; use the framework in the book to develop plans to get Above The Line; be a role model and promote role models who exemplify accountability; and encourage people to identify problems and seek out solutions.
Honoring personal commitments can be the difference between admiration and disappointment. Organizations the authors work with often have an ever-ballooning list of projects that aren’t completed because personal commitments are not honored. Making the switch involves making people accountable without making accountability punitive.
The first guideline to this cultural transformation is clearly defining results so that people don’t confuse “work with results” (265). Second, it’s important that leaders agree times with teams for progress reports so they have some say in their deadlines. Third, it is important to offer praise when progress is made while also asking questions about what else can be done. A good leader resists the temptation to tell others what to do.
An admin at a hospital attended an Oz Principle training and provides a powerful example of the approach. She saw a real transformation in her approach and emailed her supervisor to discuss them. She recognized that she was now able to resist the pull Below The Line when interacting with negative employees and that she now takes accountability for things she would often push off to the next shift.
The authors encourage readers to identify an issue at their organization and to identify strategies to get the organization Above The Line. Just as in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, when Dorothy’s friends became accountable, they found others eager to learn from their example.
The Lion in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz represents courage tested by danger. Unfortunately, many companies accept situations as inevitable and fail to muster the courage to address problems. Common issues are explored in this chapter. All kinds of organizations suffer from these problems and make the mistake of regarding them as inconsequential.
The authors conclude with examples of clients that have benefited from the principles presented in the book. Fitness manufacturer Precor maintains its excellence by frequently reforming the culture and imbuing it with accountability. Eli-Lilly & Company took responsibility for the criticism that it didn’t support minority-owned businesses. AmerisourceBergen, a health care supplier, applied the “Solve It” mentality to replace lost clients before they lost them, inspiring everyone in the organization to be accountable for sales. Becoming accountable, like the characters in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, will allow you to “direct your own destiny” (304).
Recognizing some of the potential criticisms of their approach, the authors spend much of Chapter 8 qualifying their approach to accountability. They acknowledge that it can be taken to an extreme, for instance. For the first time in the book, they emphasize that things do happen that are out of people’s control, but good leaders learn to focus on things they can control. Their tone hence shifts from idealism to realism to leave readers with actionable advice.
Previously, the implicit audience has been people who tend to readily think Below The Line. In Part 3, there is a shift is talking to people to have bought into the strategies outlined in the book, which reflects a three-part rhetorical structure of providing a claim, then evidence, and then analysis. In this final part of analysis, the authors address those who might be inclined to take these methods and ideas to an extreme. The underlying message is that a tyrannical application of the Oz Principle—imposing it on others—is in itself a form of Below The Line thinking that is likely to steer subordinates into the victim cycle instead of toward ownership and accountability.
To temper their message, the authors point to Glinda the Good Witch from The Wonderous Wizard of Oz as an exemplary leader. She symbolizes Effective Leadership Through the Application of the Oz Principle. Here, the concept of leading by coaching becomes integral to their ideas of how effective leaders operate. According to the authors, she never imposes her message of accountability on Dorothy and her companions. Instead, she coaches them toward Staying “Above The Line” by Embracing Accountability. She gives them space to experience the problems of Below The Line thinking and the victim cycle for themselves while pointing them in the direction of accountability and ownership. Because of the freedom she allots them, they learn for themselves how to resist the false promise of the Wizard of Oz. Ultimately, wizards represent a catchall for the authors for management fads, leadership gurus, and quick fixes that distract from their approach. The authors do not assign a symbolic role to the Wicked Witch. She is the figure who most directly seeks to victimize Dorothy and her companions. She might be thought of as the forces that tend to drag people Below The Line. By not assigning the witch a symbolic role, the authors suggest that problems in business are inevitable and the real antagonists are those who focus too much on these problems.
The authors do ultimately end on a positive note, providing several examples of companies turning things around through the application of the Oz Principle. Elsewhere, they have used a variety of tools to invite the reader to critically assess their attitudes. Here they offer practical advice, encouraging readers to simply tackle one problem that beguiles their organization. They also present a list of problems that keep or drag organizations Below The Line. In that sense, the underlying message of the book is a warning of what the authors see as the threat of victim culture.
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