Humans are obsessed with leadership. Ants don’t have any leaders. Humans build huge inefficient organizations. Ants are very efficient, but their organizations are thousands of times larger than those of humans. Humans learn management, performance, quality, and productivity. Ants don’t worry about it but perform better than humans. Maybe it’s time we learn from ants…
People spend a lot of time on building leaders. But leadership isn't natural to people. People perform at their best when they do something natural. So, why do we build leaders in the first place? Why can't we focus on what comes to us naturally?
The problem is that leadership is a mental block. When humans don't know how to do something, they come up with a poor working system and call it a "best practice." This best practice then becomes a standard and everyone follows it. But this standard is based on limitations of human intelligence (an oxymoron). Leadership is one example of such practice.
We obsess about leadership. But leadership is a tool allowing us to get something done. Isn't it time we find an alternative, more natural way to perform?
Ants can teach us a lot about leadership. They live in colonies consisting of millions of individuals. They don't have managers or leaders, but they perform well.
The first thing humans can do is focus on the natural approach. Humans are born with certain natural tendencies, but most tendencies are learned. These learned tendencies create variations for a number of reasons. These reasons include the source of knowledge, the delivery method, the learner’s experience, expectations, and motivation. As a result, learned tendencies are highly imperfect. Leadership is one of such tendencies. Removing the concept of leadership is the first step to a potentially more optimized organization.
Now let's think about ants...
The right ants in the right jobs. Everyone counts. Ants don’t distinguish between good and bad performers. They simply place the right ants in the right jobs. Strong ones become warriors. Little ones take care of the babies. Medium sized ones become workers. When guest ants wonder in from other colonies, they are immediately identified as “the wrong people in the wrong positions” and are removed. Humans can do the same. If a person doesn’t perform well, put him in the right job instead of criticizing him. If you can’t find the right job for the person, remove him. Don’t keep people for the sake of keeping them. But if you do decide to keep them, make sure what they do really counts and everyone in the organization recognizes that.
Socializing. Ants are highly social creatures. If one finds food, he will communicate that to others. If there’s danger, it’s communicated to warrior ants. If queen needs help taking care of the little ones, its loyal assistants will immediately arrive. This highly efficient machine works through constant, direct, candid communications. Humans can do so as well. Get people in the room, ask them to make a decision, remove dominant voices (no leaders!), communicate the fact that everyone’s opinion counts, facilitate productive discussions (eliminate group think), and watch magic at work.
Common intent. All ants have one intent on their minds – survival. Everything they do is linked to that intent. Humans can develop a common intent as well. However, the most common intent for people in most organizations is to have a job that pays bills. This is a very counterproductive intent. Humans should be communicated a vision and given a mission. They should all see the vision (intent) and agree with the mission and a strategy that will take them there. This right common intent can drive any organization in a needed direction. Just make sure the vision is right and the tools to execute are given.
Embrace change. Researchers found that change is the way of life for ants. In one experiment, a researcher placed poison on a tree that was a major source of food for ants. When ants brought poison into the colony and detected that it as something that negatively impacted them, they stopped going to that tree. In another experiment, a researcher removed ants’ access to food. Instead of going on strike like the human beings would, time aware food-hunting ants quickly switched to another task – taking care of the little ones. Ants are able to succeed because they embrace change. Humans can and should do so as well. Embedding change in the organization drives innovation and productivity.
Team work. Ants focus more on the needs of the colony than their own individual needs. They take care of their queen’s babies, help other ants build and bring food, and fight for survival of the team. Humans can and should adopt a similar approach. Working for a benefit of self can be detrimental to the overall performance of the team or the entire organization. Humans should focus on the team, rather them themselves. Most people believe they already do a lot for the team. However, research shows that most people are self-centric, even if they believe otherwise.
Process ownership and doing the right thing. Why would ants take care of someone else’s babies? Because it’s their job! Because it’s the right thing to do. Humans like to question what is and what is not their job. They like to point fingers and create excuses. They don’t like to own their jobs. Ants, on the other hand, are accountable for their actions. In fact, their performance is flawless. They don’t do what they like to do. They just simply do the right thing! By doing the right thing, humans can increase their own performance and the level of customer service they deliver. Why? Because they care about the deliverable, not themselves!
Peer review. Ants perform peer reviews all the time. They constantly smell each other to see if they belong to the colony. They teach each other to work and hold each other accountable. Of course they do it a little differently from humans. If you don’t work, you will probably end up with your head bitten off. But this concept represents an interesting approach to checks and balances. Providing peer review and holding team members accountable is what brings performance to the team. If you don’t comply, you are out! Humans use leaders to do the dirty job, but peers can be even nastier.
So, what is the bottom line? Humans can improve their organizations by focusing more on teams and less on leaders. Teams should form based on the right people in the right positions. They should establish and agree on strategic intent, create a system of peer based checks and balances, socialize for performance, and live constant change. Humans should approach their work and communications naturally, but they shouldn’t forget their team goals and always do the right thing. They should coach and motivate each other. They should help each other with getting tools needed to execute.
If humans were to build highly productive teams and program these teams to do the job a leader typically does, they wouldn't need leaders, or at least the leader's role will be diminished.
Another way to look at this solution is this: create a culture of people that lead themselves and create a team environment that reduces mistakes and ensures success.
We rely on leaders too much. No one is perfect. If a leader makes a mistake, his team may get affected. According to CareerBuilder, 75% of the people leave their bosses, not their companies. This means that the problem of poor leadership is huge.
By eliminating leaders and getting people to work in teams and lead themselves, we achieve the following:
1. Superior performance
2. Fewer mistakes
3. Better accountability
4. Reduced employee turnover
5. Cost efficiencies (fewer people to do the job)
1. Do NOT sell this idea to the management team. Get it to work first. This will look transparent to the more senior people. They will simply see it as investment in team work.
2. Focus on team work rather than your job. Build a perfect team.
3. Empower your team and have it work the "ant way."
4. Slowly step out. As a matter of fact, the job of a leader is to get out of his people's way.
I developed this hack, but I got an inspiration for it by reading Henry Mintzberg's "Managing" book, where he mentioned that leadership isn't natural.
The problem with this discussion is that it does not factor the political element realistically. It reads like Marx's Communist Manifesto. The question is how to get people to "care more for the deliverable than themselves" unquote. The reality is that [to quote Orwell] "we are all equal but some are more equal than others" and so we want to exploit others and the world's resources to our selfish ends. Hence the tragedy of the commons. Where your ideas do have traction is in modern day China. Here people are marshalled into jobs they are fit for. The issue is that it is all centrally planned. Your model assumes freedom and self-volition.
This I think is the true issue/solution: The organisational dynamic you envisage can work where people are developed to more or less the same degree of leadership given their temperaments and talent make-up. Only in this way is it possible to incentivise people to work together for the common good. Abuse of power is then also checked by peers. The question is how do you invert the leadership pyramid? How do you create an organisation where people see themselves as proactive leaders and believe that being a non-leader is the exception? Such a view would radically alter the human psyche and lead to dramatic organisational change in line with the ant analogy you describe.
- Log in to post comments
Internet is the most successful work made by human being in recent times.
Have you ever seen a Internet "leader"?
You are right. When men act like ants it works! Internet is a living proof !
- Log in to post comments
@Kimon:
I'd argue two points in response to your comments. First, I don't believe that ants act "together for the common good". The ants don't have any idea what the common good is. Rather, they recognize that, first and foremost, they must eat and they must protect themselves in order to survive. And second, that by collaborating with others (through their unique feedback systems, etc..), they can accomplish more and, thereby, better protect and provide for themselves. I'd say their drive is VERY individualistic.
The second, and related, point is that the model that Matt has described here is the model by which we manage our everyday lives. Ask yourself this question: when I leave my job, who is my "leader"? Is there a "leader" of your marriage? Is there a leader who tells you where to eat dinner, what kind of car to drive, what school to enroll your children in, what contractor to use to install the sprinkler system in your back yard, or what kind of ketchup to buy? Nope. But we are incredibly effective at forming the right teams, with the right people, and at collaborating effectively to get things done that are good for each of us individually--and for us collectively--without anyone directing our lives. Why do we insist that it has to be different when people come to work? Why can't we simply free people to organize themselves, to regulate themselves, and to get things done the most effective way possible--without external intervention?
- Log in to post comments
Hi,
Nice Hack you have there.
But I do have some thoughts of my own and please excuse my poor English and not understand some of the big words.
Firstly i agree to you that the way ant manage their colony is a wonder and they share a common interest - survival. Yes, they have wonderful teamwork and stuff, but that because of the common interest and they do not think for themselves.
Humans can only reach that stage when they do not care about promoting, pay rise, losing their job, claiming credit, their unhappiness, THEIR EGO and maybe many more.
Many business parnter/team fall out badly because of unhappiness in case like: "oh I'm doing more work than he his but we getting the same share of the profit pie."
When this happen a lot of things will change.
At this point, I am going to stop here unless this discussion is in interest, then we can talk more about it
Thank you
- Log in to post comments
Thanks for the hack. I do think think there's much to learn about organizations from observing ants.
Folks who study ants (and traffic jams, and internet behaviors, etc.) have a term called "emergent behavior". The idea is simple... you take a look at the behavior of the individual (or "agent"), like a single ant. The agent's "rules" about what to do "identify the outsider, reinforce tracks that lead to food, etc.) are very simple. What's of interest is the "emergent behavior" of the group that is typically not predictable form observing one agent. Sure, it might make sense to yo post-facto.
So, maybe the leaders' job is to set these rules in place. Better yet, instead of mandating rules, you encourage the right simple behaviors.
- Log in to post comments
Have you read the Wikipedia article about the 'Queen Bee', 'Worker Bees'? The way the entire team of bees organize to ensure that the Queen stays alive 'for ever' is amazing. Check out http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen_bee and then related links for further info.
- Log in to post comments
Great points. I'd recommend a fantastic book called "Ants at Work" by Stanford Professor, Deborah M. Gordon.
The one thing that I would point out that stands as the greatest differentiator between humans and ants is that the ants' actions are driven by a set of biologically hard-wired principles that they simply can't short-circuit. Humans, on the other hand, have free-will and can rationalize their way out of "doing the right thing" or "holding team members accountable" or even "effective teamwork". It seems to me that the ants' way of organizing (which, incidentally, I agree with wholeheartedly; it's how our companies are organized--and very effectively) applied in human organizations is only as strong as the individual commitment to the principles you outlined above. Perhaps my question is, how can we ensure our people don't avoid the more difficult aspects of self-organizing?
- Log in to post comments
Matt:
I appreciated this article on ants and leadership. We always run into metaphor difficulties when doing this type of writing yet I think it is very powerful as a lens. I bet we could teach ants a lot if they would listen to us just as we can learn much by watching and learning form them. No metaphor is ever a perfect fit.
I am currently creating sculptures with honey bees. They co-create the objects. It is artistic and interesting but I don't think the bees think they are doing a sculpture while I can learn much from them.
- Log in to post comments
You need to register in order to submit a comment.