Visionary: An example of a good leader in the corporate world is Maria Ramos (above), who headed Absa, and in the public sector the former public protector, Thuli Madonsela, stood out. Photo: World Economic Forum
There is no shortage of literature on the qualities of a good leader. Yet, in the public and private sectors, they are scarce enough to wonder why there’s a deficit and whether we might be missing something.
The ideals of good leadership are encapsulated by the King IV Code on Corporate Governance’s “ICRAFT” principles — independence, competence, responsibility, accountability, fairness and transparency — but identifying and appointing people with these attributes is an altogether more complex business, and one that is loaded with the inescapable reality that even the best among us are only human after all.
One of the worst habits of South African boards, committees and councils is filling senior positions with “recycled underperformers”, according to Tuesday Consulting, an executive search and advisory firm.
“Driving this is a deep fear of change. Many institutions, especially those under pressure, make decisions based on familiarity. They tend to reach for individuals within their networks or people they’ve worked with before, not necessarily because they’re the best fit, but they feel like the safest choice, reputationally or relationally. And we’ve got to challenge that cycle,” Tsholofelo Nketane of Tuesday Consulting told Jeremy Maggs on Hot102.7fm radio earlier this month.
The consequence of this revolving-door phenomenon is poor governance, which includes recycling corrupt actors. This entrenches power, reduces independence, weakens accountability and shuts out diversity, making governance ineffective and ethically questionable, as the King IV Code notes.
Not only that, if you zoom out to the macro view, it serves to concentrate power among an elite few, who are prone to using a mix of wealth accumulation and political clout to serve their own interests, with no regard for the economic welfare of others. As economist Douglass North put it, political and business elites are prone to extract rents at as low a cost as possible to themselves, and then distribute them as required to prevent revolution, literally entrenching the elite bargain at the expense of the majority of citizens.
We have more than enough examples of how pernicious this can get. When Malusi Gigaba was the minister of public enterprises, he systematically placed Gupta-linked people into key positions in state-owned enterprises, including board appointments at Transnet, Eskom, Denel and SAA. These appointees often had dual allegiances, serving both government and private corporate interests, enabling him to funnel state contracts to Gupta-connected entities.
The fundamental governance risk here is that the minister gets to appoint the board. This needs to be urgently changed to ensure diverse interests select boards.
Beyond the fact that cronyism undermines accountability, morale is undermined when staff members see leaders appointed not for competence or alignment with corporate values, but for who they know. It fosters a sense that advancement is about connections, not merit, which in turn erodes productivity, employee loyalty and organisational integrity.
“Ultimately, appointing the right leader builds trust within the organisation and within the team being led. People want to know that they are not only getting a credible or competent leader, but one who’ll be able to make the right and tough decisions,” said Nketane.
Getting this right takes a considered decision at executive committee or board level, she said. “Appointing a leader is not a box-ticking HR process. It should actually be a top-level decision, one that aligns with your strategic objective in the long term. And of course, doing the checks is critical.”
By checks, Nketane means rigorous psychometric assessments, which look for cognitive agility, behavioural style, emotional intelligence, motivation and development potential. The goal is not just “Can you do this job now?” but “How will you think, behave, and grow in the organisation’s future context?”
In addition, a deep review of the person’s past and the skills they bring need to be done, she said. “You are not just sitting across the table and having a conversation, but verifying the information that the individual is giving you. It entails doing formal and independent, informal reference checks.”
Appointment criteria also need to consider the skills leaders need to steer the organisation into the future. Digital literacy, for one, has evolved into an essential skill at leadership level, and this increasingly includes demonstrative ability in the use of artificial intelligence. Here again, the slow uptake of future-fit leaders, particularly those with potentially industry-disruptive ideas, shows a problematic preference for the familiar.
“Innovative ideas often face resistance, manifesting in phrases such as ‘That’s not how we do things around here’ or ‘Now’s not the right time for that’,” said Dhatchani Naidoo, the managing director at strategic management consultancy Delta Victor Bravo, in an interview with BusinessLIVE.
“The courage to challenge the status quo is often stifled by risk aversion, which in a world changing faster than ever, may be the riskiest strategy of all,” she said.
Skill and enterprising vision aside, the ability to create and maintain a cohesive, loyal team will always lie at the essence of good leadership, not least because the psychological safety of employees is strongly correlated with performance, innovation, and resilience. As management theorist Harold Koontz said, “Leadership is the art of influencing people so that they can work willingly towards the goals.”
To this end, psychometric tests subtly look for interpersonal skills through layered questions based on the Big Five personality model, which research shows predicts workplace behaviour. These are openness (creativity, adaptability, intellectual curiosity), conscientiousness (organisation, responsibility, reliability), extraversion (sociability, energy, assertiveness), agreeableness (cooperation, empathy, trust) and emotional stability (resilience, calmness, stress management).
On extraversion, a book released last month, Quiet Power: Leadership for Introverts by Adella Pasos, speaks to how our loud, extrovert-centric world often overlooks the deep, insightful contributions of quieter thinkers, so the other four indicators are crucial balancers here.
Still, data-driven tests have their limitations, and this is where the judgment of seasoned employers and recruiters comes into play, because they are usually able to read intangibles such as authenticity, chemistry, gravitas and alignment with organisational values. Best practice is to use both: psychometrics as a foundation and informed instinct and judgment as a refinement tool.
“No single psychometric assessment should ever be used on a stand-alone basis for selection decisions. Assessment tools don’t ‘make decisions’, but rather provide information for human decision-makers,” according to the executive selection guideline published by the Association of Executive Search and Leadership Consultants.
Well-chosen leaders can be game changers. Two examples in public governance stand out: Thuli Madonsela, who was the public protector from 2009 to 2016, and Mogoeng Mogoeng, the chief justice from 2011 to 2021. Both these leaders were chosen outside of political patronage networks, and were effective because they courageously pushed for discipline and ethical leadership, often against significant pressure to do otherwise.
There are also examples in the corporate world: Maria Ramos, the former chief executive of Absa and Transnet, and Adrian Gore, the founder and long-time chief executive of Discovery. Both are transformational, visionary leaders who proved highly adaptable to evolving markets.
At their very core, good leaders are those who set high standards for themselves; the ones who lead by example. Ultimately, then, the quest for quality leadership circles back to an appreciation of those who make ethical, responsible choices in their own lives, beyond their professional personae. As Mahatma Gandhi observed, “You must be the change you wish to see in the world.” These are the leaders we need to find, groom and appoint.
Helen Grange is a writer and sub-editor at Good Governance Africa.