• Published November 16, 2020
  • 7 Minute Read
LEADING EFFECTIVELY ARTICLE

Focus: Healthcare in Leadership

Focus: Healthcare in Leadership

For decades, U.S. hospital administrators and medical professionals have operated within a challenging, rapidly changing, and fragmented healthcare system. Today, this environment is even more complex as healthcare reform and market forces transform the way healthcare is delivered and managed.

To help our healthcare clients better understand and focus the development of leaders, we analyzed leadership effectiveness data from nearly 35,000 people working in the field.

The goal of the study was to answer 2 important questions:

  1. What leadership competencies are most important for healthcare sector organizations?
  2. How well do healthcare sector leaders perform those competencies?

3 Key Findings of Our Study on Healthcare in Leadership

As outlined in our white paper, the key findings of this research were that:

1. The top priority for leadership development in the healthcare sector is to improve the ability to lead employees and work in teams. This finding speaks to the importance of creating an organizational culture of collaboration.

Leaders in healthcare organizations generally should develop a more participative management style, improve their ability to build relationships and lead teams, and learn to deal more effectively with problem employees.

2. Healthcare organizations also need to create strategies to provide current and future leaders with broad, cross-organizational experiences and learning. Healthcare leaders have gaps in several areas that are essential for learning and long-term success: having a broad functional orientation, self-awareness, and career management.

Organizational training, development, and succession planning, and individual feedback, coaching, and development efforts should address these gaps. This supports what we have been hearing from hospitals about the need for their employees to be able to work across boundaries and communicate more effectively.

3. Healthcare leaders have important strengths, too. The ability to adapt to change and to meet business objectives are strong points for healthcare leaders. They’re resourceful, straightforward and composed, fast learners, and willing to “do whatever it takes.”

These findings show that healthcare organizations have a pool of adaptable and committed leaders — a powerful asset in today’s complicated world.

Access Our Webinar!

Watch our webinar, Leadership in the Future of Healthcare: Befriending Polarity & Paradox, and learn the 6 leadership paradoxes related to leading effectively in the healthcare ecosystem’s “next normal.”

Healthcare in Leadership: Identifying the Gaps

Our research shows that leaders and managers in the healthcare sector are skilled in important areas such as adapting to change, meeting business objectives, and being resourceful. They’re reported to be straightforward, quick studies, comfortable to be around, and skilled at dealing with individual differences. However, healthcare managers and leaders fall short in several crucial areas.

The study showed that the skill ranked by respondents as most important for success in the healthcare sector — the ability to lead employees — rated lower than 14 other competencies in terms of leader performance. Healthcare leaders put a high value on the ability to lead others, yet there is notable room for improvement in how leaders perform in this competency.

Healthcare leaders were also rated lower in performance on related high-value abilities — confronting problem employees, building and mending relationships, and participative management.

Balancing Individual Development & Culture Change for More Successful Healthcare in Leadership

The most successful healthcare organizations create a leadership strategy that builds essential skills and behaviors of individual leaders and invests in its culture. Culture, in concert with the business strategy, drives outcomes. Through a culture of feedback and collaboration, people throughout the organization can develop a full spectrum of capabilities required to lead into the future.

In uncertain times, healthcare companies cannot afford to pour resources into generalized leadership development, hoping that somehow they will end up with the “right” outcomes. Yet, they know leadership talent and technical expertise are necessary to meet the population’s healthcare needs, manage operations, and find innovative and effective solutions to complex challenges.

Well-targeted leadership development initiatives, then, are essential for success. Using our research as a starting point, healthcare organizations have the opportunity to reassess their organizational leadership capabilities and begin focused efforts to develop leaders and create a culture of collaboration.

6 Collaborative Leadership Practices That Will Transform Healthcare Organizations

Keys to Success in Today’s Healthcare Industry

We have developed a model that focuses on 6 essential organizational capabilities — along with key leadership practices — that foster collaboration and are essential for success in this new world order of healthcare.

Organizations that develop a leadership strategy and culture that develop these 6 capabilities will gain a competitive advantage:

1. Collaborative Patient Care Teams.

While collaboration is important throughout the hospital, it is especially important at the patient interface. The ability to ensure patient care is determined not only by technical expertise but also by the leadership effectiveness of all those involved in solving the presenting medical issues.

2. Resource Stewardship.

In an age of increasing accountability, resource stewardship is both a big-picture, system-level obligation and a series of daily decisions. Hospitals need both patient-focused business professionals and business-minded clinicians.

3. Talent Transformation.

Leaders of healthcare systems need to hire and develop talented individuals who can see the next wave of plausible solutions and innovations and lead transformational change. As part of a well-articulated business strategy, healthcare organizations need comprehensive strategies for identifying, hiring, developing, and retaining leadership talent.

4. Boundary Spanning.

The most pressing challenges in hospitals and health systems cannot be solved by one person, one specialty, or one organization. They require expertise, ideas, and support from multiple perspectives and stakeholders. Healthcare leaders must collaborate across boundaries and develop the ability to bridge departmental, cultural, organizational, and industry divides.

5. Capacity for Complexity, Innovation, and Change.

Healthcare leaders must navigate continuous whitewater. While influencing, monitoring, and responding to unfolding change, they must also respond to demographic shifts in the workforce and among patients; technological advances; the tumultuous nature of employee relationships, insurance, and reimbursement processes; and current regulatory practices. Effective change leaders help move people from old established processes to new models of effectiveness.

6. Employee Engagement and Wellbeing.

Why are employee engagement and wellbeing leadership issues? Both impact the very mission of a healthcare organization. For example, research on healthcare effectiveness suggests that quality of care is positively influenced by nurses being satisfied with their jobs and feeling empowered in their roles. Without a proactive focus on employee engagement and wellbeing, the challenges of the next few years also have the potential to create new levels of burnout within the rank and file. Healthcare organizations cannot afford to let patient care suffer due to a lack of ideas, skills, time, and talent.

Read our white paper, Physician Leadership Development: The Foundation of Health System Transformation, and learn how physician leadership development can be a starting point to solve the challenges faced by the healthcare industry.

Delivering a Collaborative Leadership Strategy for Healthcare

We believe that collaborative leadership in healthcare is necessary for overcoming challenges that the system now faces. Collaborative leadership means the distribution and allocation of leadership power to wherever capability, expertise, and motivation sit. The responsibility of leadership is shared by each and every member of the organization.

A collaborative healthcare in leadership culture requires new mindsets, not just new skills. These take time to develop. Many healthcare organizations have focused their development efforts only on individual leader competencies. For sustainable change, they need to advance both individual and collaborative leadership mindsets. Making the shift to collaborative leadership in an organization requires strategic implementation.

Developing and implementing an effective collaborative leadership strategy comes in 3 phases: Discovery, Design, and Delivery.

  • The Discovery phase involves collecting data and intelligence about the strategy, vision, mission, future challenges, political context, and opportunities for the organization. This process enables organizations to identify the leadership capabilities required to face the future and the gap between current and required future capabilities.
  • The Design phase involves identifying required leadership capabilities for individual and collaborative leadership and the means to acquire, develop, and sustain those capabilities.
  • The Delivery phase involves elements from organizational and individual leadership development alike, targeting culture, systems, and processes, as well as leadership development in synchrony.

In a time when many healthcare leaders are overloaded and uncertain, they may find assurance in knowing that when organizations strengthen leadership, they begin to pry loose some of their most intractable, resistant problems and uncover new directions, solutions, and opportunities.

Collaborative leadership has the power to transform hospitals and healthcare organizations, improving the system today and for the future — to the benefit of patients, families, and caregivers.

Ready to Take the Next Step?

At CCL, we bring 50 years of experience partnering with top healthcare providers to achieve transformational change toward better leadership in healthcare organizations. The experts in our Healthcare Practice can partner with you to provide maximum learning and growth for your healthcare leaders at the individual, team, and system level.

  • Published November 16, 2020
  • 7 Minute Read

Based on Research by

Tracy Patterson
Tracy Patterson
Former Portfolio Director & Faculty

Tracy has extensive experience in leading programs and initiatives in the government, nonprofit, and health sectors. During her time at CCL, Tracy directed and expanded our global evaluation function and served as a facilitator for leadership development, program design, and capacity-building programs with nonprofit organizations.

Heather Champion
Heather Champion
Manager, Insights & Impact Services

Heather works with CCL staff, global clients, and external evaluators to design and conduct customized needs assessments (discovery) and evaluations for our programs, products, and services. This work includes identifying organizational and leadership needs, articulating program outcomes, selecting the most appropriate methods for evaluating initiatives for improvement and impact, and reporting the findings to and partnering with key stakeholders to discern actionable insights. She also serves as a subject matter expert for our Leadership Analytics services.

Joan Gurvis
Joan Gurvis
Former Leadership Solutions Partner

Joan is a seasoned facilitator and designer of innovative, relevant leadership solutions focused on business results. A Board-Certified Executive Coach, she has served as a trusted advisor to CEOs and senior teams. During her tenure at CCL, she also managed our Organizational Leadership solutions practice and was Managing Director for our Colorado campus.

John Fleenor
John Fleenor
Senior Research Scientist

John conducts research and development activities on new and innovative CCL products, including digital leadership tools and AI-driven leadership assessments. His focus is on the future of leadership assessment, and his research interests include strategic 360 feedback, rapid-response personality measures, and digital leadership assessments. He has published extensively in peer-reviewed journals and has taught courses in organizational psychology at North Carolina State University.

Michael Campbell
Michael Campbell
Former Faculty & Portfolio Manager

During his time at CCL, Michael engaged in both facilitation and research focused on talent management, succession management, high potential leaders, and senior executive leadership. He designed and trained workshops on coaching effectiveness, executive selection, and vision, and he co-designed experiential modules, tools, and activities for programs. Michael also co-authored our Talent Conversations guidebook.

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About CCL

The Center for Creative Leadership (CCL)® is a top-ranked, global, nonprofit provider of leadership development and a pioneer in the field of global leadership research. We know from experience how transformative remarkable leaders really can be.

Over the past 50 years, we’ve worked with organizations of all sizes from around the world, including more than 2/3 of the Fortune 1000. Our hands-on development solutions are evidence-based and steeped in our work with hundreds of thousands of leaders at all levels.