10 Characteristics Business Leaders Will Need In The Age Of AI

Maureen Metcalf, CEO of the Innovative Leadership Institute, provided this article as a companion to her podcast with James Ritchie-Dunham, David Dinwoodie, and Suzie Lewis, Back to the Future…of Work.

Podcast intro from “Faux Mo:” and ILI AI experiment with digital twins.

 

Link to the entire interview:

Listen to the companion interview and past episodes of Innovating Leadership: Co-Creating Our Future via Apple PodcastsTuneInStitcherSpotify, Amazon Music, AudibleiHeartRADIO, and NPR One.

10 Characteristics Business Leaders Will Need In The Age Of AI

Most of us interact with AI in some way during our daily tasks. With all the discussions about artificial intelligence, one of the biggest questions is what leaders must do to prepare. To answer this question, I used my personal experience experimenting with ChatGPT-4; read the World Economic Forum Future of Jobs 2023 report; read the Harvard Business Review article draft “Navigating Complexity and Learning with Agility: Keys for the Future of Work” by David Dinwoodie, Suzie Lewis, and Jim Ritchie-Dunham (currently only available in Spanish); and interviewed Neil Sahoto, AI advisor to the U.N., on my company podcast (read his accompanying article here).

Here is my top ten list of items leaders will need to do well in the AI-powered future. Most are skills leaders already need to have mastered. From that vantage point, part of the question becomes: what should we stop doing so that we can delegate tasks to AI while refining the skills that require human wisdom and contact?

1. Communication

Leaders must continue to focus on basic leadership skills involving relating to others—communication, collaboration, negotiation, facilitation, social influence, and active listening.

2. Growth Mindset

During the massive opportunities created by change, we must continue cultivating our growth mindset, curiosity, lifelong learning, and ability to unlearn and stop doing things that no longer serve our mission.

3. Adaptiveness

Using what we learn through our learning and growth mindset, we need to enhance our ability to anticipate change and proactively initiate aligned change initiatives. To do this, we need to build our adaptiveness, resilience, and business agility.

4. Emotional Intelligence

Because we will ask our teams to make changes that often feel unfamiliar and uncomfortable, we need to amplify our emotional intelligence, including self-awareness, self-management, relationship awareness, empathy, building trust and psychological safety, and other skills that help us relate to and inspire others.

5. Abundance Mindset

It is easy for each of us to struggle with uncertainty and fall into fear during uncertain times. Developing an abundance mindset instead of a scarcity mindset allows us to reframe uncomfortable situations into opportunities. Collectively, we have the knowledge, wisdom, resources, skills, and attitude to meet the challenges ahead.

6. Domain Expertise

We continue to need to excel in our areas of domain expertise and understand the latest technological developments in those areas. We must remain current in our domains, whether that is finance, HR, or medicine.

7. AI Skills

As we move from focusing solely on human skills to requiring the ability to leverage AI successfully, we need to know what questions to ask AI to get the results we want. Leaders will need to know (and have teams who know) how to leverage AI to get useful information and get work done. The better we are at asking the right questions, the better our AI assistants will be at providing useful information.

8. Analytical Skills

We will need to leverage what we learn in partnership with AI-generated information. To do this, we will need strong analytical and problem-solving skills, as well as systems thinking ability and the associated mindset, 360-degree thinking.

9. Creativity

Take a creative perspective to identify areas AI will not consider or to create solutions AI would not come up with. Know where to experiment with possible solutions.

10. Risk Awareness

Understand the risks AI presents and continually evolve governance processes to address these risks.

Final Thoughts: Unlearn And Delegate

In addition to these skills, we will need to develop the ability to unlearn and delegate. AI can now do many analytical tasks people have been doing. We are currently in the early stages of AI usage, and I like to frame AI digital workers as interns. We are responsible for the actions of our interns. Likewise, with AI, we are responsible for the accuracy of our work.

AI can process data much faster than humans. When prompted properly, AI programs produce reliable information much more quickly and efficiently than humans. The results are reliable for specific applications when the AI has been programmed with specific tasks and tested.

With that in mind, ChatGPT-4 can “hallucinate” (state false facts and cite false sources). It is crucial to set parameters around assigning and checking the AI’s work. I conducted several experiments, specifically with ChatGPT-4. It provided a strong starting point for writing. But in every instance, I asked it to cite and verify sources. In other words, I treated it like an intern; I knew I needed to verify its work until it had proven itself.

My company is currently experimenting with an AI “digital twin” that our team uses for teaching videos and social media. I encourage other leaders to look into ways they can use AI to increase their productivity and enhance their impact. At the same time, there are inherent risks with any new technology. Leaders who understand the strengths and weaknesses of AI and prepare themselves and their workforces have the greatest opportunity to smartly mitigate risks while still experimenting and learning in the process.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Maureen Metcalf is the founder and CEO of the Innovative Leadership Institute. She is an expert in anticipating and leveraging future business trends. Ms. Metcalf helps leaders elevate their leadership quality and transform their organizations to create sustainable impact and results. She captures 30 years of experience and success in an award-winning series of books used by public, private, and academic organizations to align company-wide strategy, systems, and culture using Innovative Leadership techniques. Ms. Metcalf is a Fellow of the International Leadership Association. She also serves on the advisory boards of the School of Strategic Leadership at James Madison University and the Mason Leadership Center at Franklin University. Ms. Metcalf earned an MBA from Virginia Tech. She can be reached at mmetcalf@innovativeleadership.com.

 

ABOUT THE GUESTS:

James L. Ritchie-Dunham, Ph.D. is president of the Institute for Strategic Clarity, affiliated with Boston College, Harvard, and author/co-author of Leadership for Flourishing (forthcoming), Agreements (2023), Ecosynomics (2014), Managing from Clarity (2001), and many chapters and articles. He blogs regularly at Jlrd.me. His global research, surveying over 132,000 groups in 126 countries, shows (1) that you prefer abundance-based agreements to scarcity-based ones, (2) lots of people have figured out how to live this way, for decades, with far better results and experiences, and (3) you can choose to shift your agreements, experiences, and outcomes to abundance-based.

David Dinwoodie has collaborated with the Center for Creative Leadership (CCL) for over 15 years as a researcher, author, educator, and coach. As Vice-President of Global Leadership Solutions, managed CCL’s global portfolio of Open Enrolment Programs, Corporate Learning Solutions, Coaching, and Assessment Services across 12 campuses worldwide, servicing 3,000 client organizations and over 30,000 individuals each year. David is co-author of the book Becoming a Strategic Leader: Your Role in Your Organization’s Enduring Success. He is an Advisory Board member for the Penn State School of Graduate Education (SMEAL) and Developing Leaders Quarterly.

Suzie Lewis is the founder and managing director of Transform for Value, and an executive fellow at the Centre for the Future of Organisation, an independent think tank at the Drucker School of Management. Suzie is a global business leader, speaker, podcast host, and executive coach with extensive experience in driving international transformation projects, preparing business leaders and employees for change, and bridging the gap between human and digital ecosystems. Her quest is to build more inclusive & collaborative environments, placing the onus on how to drive value through people as well as data and processes to drive sustainable change.

 

Thank you for reading the Innovative Leadership Insights by the Innovative Leadership Institute, where we bring you thought leaders and innovative ideas on leadership topics each week.

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES:

Ready to measure your leadership skills? Complete your complimentary assessment through the Innovative Leadership Institute. Learn the 7 leadership skills required to succeed during disruption and innovation.

Check out the companion interview and past episodes of Innovating Leadership, Co-Creating Our Future via Apple PodcastsTuneInStitcherSpotify, Amazon Music, AudibleiHeartRADIO, and NPR One.

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