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4.1: Characteristics of Strategic Leadership

  • Page ID
    292264
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    Very few people use strategic leadership naturally. It takes a lot to apply the kinds of thinking you use when you play a strategy based game like chess, go, or poker, to the work you are doing. And yet most successful campaigns have had some piece of serious strategy behind what they did. A campaign without strategy can generate a lot of action. A campaign with a good strategy can generate real outcomes.

    A strategic leader is always asking the question of how a group is going to achieve its goals. They think about all of the steps along the way to achieving those goals. They help others to understand all of the parts of an action plan and to keep focus on doing things that help build toward those goals.

    Power analysis, sometimes called power mapping, is a core tool for strategic leadership. A power analysis involves 1- being very clear what your goal is; 2- analyzing who it is who can give you what you want, 3- figuring out how to move that power holder or target, 4- figuring out who, or what, supports them, and what can be done to undermine that support, 5- doing an inventory of what power and resources you have on your side and how you can use them, 6- Figuring out who are people, organizations, or institutions that might end up on either side, and how you can move them to your side, or get them to remain neutral. 

    Here are some resources for power analysis tools.

    Many of the pieces of work done in a power analysis require research. That research can help you figure out who actually holds what power in the situation you are trying to change and who different stakeholders are accountable to. Research can also help you find ways that your target is vulnerable to legal challenges. Good research is an important part of strategic leadership.

    Sometimes strategic leaders can be so focused on their goals that they can forget about the importance of relationships and good inclusive processes. A good strategic leader is able to work with others to develop a good strategy that has some chance of winning, and they are able to get others to see their strategic goals and to focus their work on doing the things that help move the strategy that the organization decides on forward. A good strategy is only good if an organization has the capacity and the focused attention to organize to win it. 

    Activity \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    Reading Response Questions: Please reflect on this reading by writing a short response to these questions. Your answer can include personal experience, and the writing does not need to be formal or polished. You are welcome to write as little as a sentence and as much as a paragraph. Think of it like journaling. 

    1. What are some ways you use strategy in your everyday life?
    2. What are some ways you would benefit from using strategy more often?
    3. How have you seen people be strategic in ways you didn’t like?
    4. What gets in the way of you being better at strategic leadership?
    5. Evaluate an organization you work with, or some group you are associated with, for how well it uses strategic leadership.

    4.1: Characteristics of Strategic Leadership is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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