Designing Leadership Audiolibro Por Bill Burnett arte de portada

Designing Leadership

How Great Leaders Get Out of the Way of Great Performance

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Designing Leadership

De: Bill Burnett
Narrado por: Virtual Voice
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Here we explore a shift from traditional command-and-control management to a system where colleagues build a deep sense of ownership. This transition moves the leader from being a central authority to acting as a Custodian of the work environment and a Curator of agency, identity, meaning, and kinship.
The Core Premise: From Control to Ownership
We argue that traditional leadership often relies on coercion—the quiet pressure of "do it or pay a price"—which may produce compliance but can never create true ownership. When leaders default to control, they become bottlenecks, and the work becomes slower and more fragile.
A central claim is that adults do not need to be "given" agency; they already have it. The leader's task is to design an environment that allows them to use it. In this model, the leader acts as a Custodian, ensuring "system stability" and maintaining the "mindset of learning" required to tackle complex, messy challenges.
The Four Foundations of Ownership
The text identifies four psychological drivers that, when supported by the environment, lead to a deep sense of ownership:
  • Agency: The felt sense that one's actions matter and can cause meaningful change. A Custodian supports agency by ensuring clear decision rights and replacing "permission marathons" with "intent-based" language, such as "I intend to...".
  • Identity: How people answer the question of what their work says about them. Here, the leader acts as a Curator, making good work visible and protecting colleagues from being "frozen" by outdated labels or titles.
  • Meaning: The internal sense that work is purposeful and tied to outcomes that matter in a human way.
  • Kinship: A foundation of trust and belonging where colleagues protect one another from blame and overload. A Custodian fosters kinship by ensuring that truth and context are shared fairly to maintain trust.
Practical Application: The Leader’s New Role
The book moves the leader's focus from "winning arguments" to making constraints visible and letting capable adults solve problems. This shift involves specific changes in behavior.

But, will it work with Gen Z employees?
This approach doesn’t just work with Gen Z. In many ways it fits them better than the leadership most have experienced. Agency, Identity, Meaning, and Kinship are not generational perks. They are human drivers. What changes by generation is tolerance for their absence.

Gen Z spots broken decision systems fast. If a company says “we trust you” but still requires permission for everything, they disengage early or leave. Give clear decision rights, real tools, and fast access to information and peers, and they step up quickly.

They also look for earned respect, not titles. Vague praise and status games don’t build identity. Specific, visible recognition of real contribution does.

They resist borrowed purpose. They engage when impact is concrete: the customer outcome, the quality tradeoff, the environmental cost, the teammate they are helping. Make the effects of the work visible and let people connect the dots for themselves.

Kinship matters too. They want respect without softness: direct feedback that is fair, teams that solve problems together, and a culture that protects people from blame and overload.

The real risk is half-implementation. If ownership is talked about but dissent is punished and decisions stay centralized, Gen Z notices and exits. Build the system so adults can think, decide, and act without waiting for permission, and Gen Z will raise the standard for everyone.
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