Three Leadership Lessons from Health Care Reform
As I wrote last week, the health care reform debate is, unfortunately, full of important lessons for leaders on how not to drive change. Admittedly, it's a lot easier to observe what seems to be going wrong when you're watching the process instead of being in the middle of it. Still, it seems like President Obama's reform process is running off the rails. The White House spent last week playing defense on the health care reform town halls and the latest example is this morning's confusion (as reported on Politico ) about whether or not a public insurance option is still on the table.
How did we get here? I think there are three lessons from how the President and his team have handled this that anyone who is responsible for leading dramatic change should pay attention to.
Define What's In and Out of Bounds: While good leaders stay open to input to stakeholders, they just don't throw everything open and essentially say, "What do you want to do?" Instead they set the parameters of the debate by stating some clear principles and defining, from their point of view, what's in bounds and out of bounds. From the outside looking in, it doesn't seem like the White House did that in framing the health care reform process. Instead, the design responsibilities were left to different committees in Congress. That's left the President with four different bills at this point and the inability to say what exactly is and isn't involved in reform. The White House took more or less the same approach with the $780 billion stimulus bill earlier this year and probably got less immediate impact and more pork out of that process than they hoped for. Leaders of change, especially when they have as much political capital as the President had earlier this year, need to set a clear purpose, picture and plan for the change.
Clear the Decks: There was a lot of commentary in the late Spring and early Summer (including on this blog ) that the President was cramming too much onto his agenda. It seems like the impact of focusing on too many things at once is playing out now. For something as defining for the country and his administration as health care reform will be, it doesn't feel like enough time and attention was given up front to the design, coalition building and communications strategies needed to lead something so complex. It seems like the decks weren't cleared up front and now the White House is reacting to events rather than shaping them. When you're changing something big and important, make plenty of time up front to do the prep work.
Tell Compelling Stories and Give Clear Answers: As Howard Gardner writes in his book, Leading Minds: An Anatomy Of Leadership, effective leaders have a core story that they shape so different groups can relate to it based on what they care most about. What most groups are going to care most about is "What's in it for me?" It's only been in the past few weeks that the President himself has invested a lot of time in communicating the story behind health care reform. From what I've seen, it's only been in the past few days that he's started telling the stories of real people and what health care reform would mean to them. Yesterday's guest Op-Ed by Obama in the New York Times is a decent example of telling a few illustrative stories and making a few key points about how what you're trying to do will help make those stories better. The biggest problem with the article though was that it ran in the New York Times instead of Parade magazine. When driving change, leaders need to tell stories that reach people where they live and then clearly state how what they're doing is going to lead to a better story.
What leadership lessons are you gleaning from the health care reform process?
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ABOUT THIS BLOG
Executive coach Scott Eblin’s goal is to help you succeed at the next level of leadership. Throughout the week, he’ll offer his take on the leadership lessons in the news and his advice on your most pressing leadership questions. A former government executive, Scott is a graduate of Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government and is the author of The Next Level: What Insiders Know About Executive Success.








In answer to your question: That he has no clue how to lead. But Hey, I already new that before he got elected!
annie Posted Tuesday, August 18, 2009 9:17 AMThe lesson I am learning from Obama's failures are that partisanship and blamecasting can only carry a political leader so far in pursuit of his goals. At some point he or she must draw upon his experience getting things done. If he hasn't any experience, that may turn out to be a leadership problem.
Ron Posted Tuesday, August 18, 2009 9:20 AMBig government is not the best leadership solution to the nation's problems. A decentralized government is the best approach. In business, the people who have the best answers to any problem are they ones who work closest to the problem, not the furthest away. Trust those who are below you to come up with the best answer to the company's problems. In the case of the medical reform, it could be the individual states who know what is best for their people. It could be the health care professionals of the country that come up with the best solution for medical reform. It certainly will not be the people at the highest levels of government who will fix the problem whether they are Democrat or Republican.
John Doe Posted Tuesday, August 18, 2009 9:23 AMTry, try, try again. The President is contending with huge, rich, evil corporations who own many members of congress. I hope he keeps fighting for the American people.
Wise Old Owl Posted Tuesday, August 18, 2009 1:50 PMWhat Americans want is for our government
Vern Posted Tuesday, August 18, 2009 2:08 PMto tell us the truth about what is in the
Health Care Bill. So far it looks like our
President will not level with us, he is not
man enough to stand up to Pelosi, & Reid
and demand any changes that will be made to
Health Care will not take advantage of the
majority of the citizens.
Fix the fraud, stop Hospitals from charging
such high prices for meds. & procedures,
stop lawyers from suing for such ungodly
amounts, and no coverage for illagals.
I don't think that the Insurance companies
are the biggest problems for high cost, they
have to charge more because of the cost to
cover their customers, and any lawsuits from
greedy lawyers.
I am worried about the Healthcare Plan. Can it create dehabilitating effects on my mothers budget? Will the advances overshadow the negative aspects?
Hazlitt Posted Wednesday, February 3, 2010 7:23 PM