Tuesday, 13 September 2016

Why introverts make better leaders

Why introverts make better leaders


As an extrovert who's been involved in leadership positions for most of my life, I've never really understood the power of the introverted leader. Until recently.


With six small pen strokes, leadership guru Sheryll Fisher provides more insight into introverts than most extroverts have learnt in a lifetime. Her drawing consists of two circles, representing aliens. One alien, the extrovert, has two antennae close together at the top of its head. The other has its two antennae wide apart.

Sheryll explains that extroverts have their “social receptors” set to receive only small amounts of information. They will often seek out noisy, crowded, environments and lots of interaction in order to be stimulated, because they only receive a small amount of information about what is going on. Introverts, on the other hand, have their receptors set to take in so much more during every interaction, so find large crowds and overstimulating environments exhausting. Research by German psychologist Hans Eysenck has even shown that introverts find the sour taste of lemon juice more stimulating than extroverts. “They’re taking in everything and the brain just starts to overload and then cortisol kicks in and they get the fright or flight response and their brain just starts shutting down,” Sheryll says. “In general, introversion is just the preference for environments that are not overstimulating.”
Sheryll is the Managing Director of Outback Initiativesan award-winning leadership training company based in Margaret River, WA, that is setting up leadership courses purely for introverts so that they can understand their own strengths, and some of the myths about introversion.
“Introverts tend to form very good deep relationships with people, and they can be very, very good leaders,” she says. “Very, very extroverted leaders are very good at talking and filling the space with their own thoughts and feelings, whereas an introvert is more likely to collaborate. Listening is a massive advantage in leadership.” Introverts are more likely to pick up on tiny social cues and, if given the time and the encouragement to do so, introverts are also more likely to give a more thoughtful and considered response to a problem.
Research by Adam Grant, professor of management and psychology at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School and the author of Originals: How Non-Conformists Move the World, published this year, shows that although extroverts make better leaders in disengaged, passive groups, introverts make markedly better leaders in engaged, proactive groups because they harness the group’s ideas and energy, rather than just imposing their own. His research shows introverted leaders are also less likely to elicit negative emotions in the team.
Internationally, much of the recent shift in thinking on the benefits of introverted leadership has stemmed from Susan Cain, graduate of Princeton and Harvard Law School, co-founder of Quiet Revolutionand the author of Quiet: The power of introverts in a world that can’t stop talking, which has sold more than 2 million copies. Her TED talk on the power of introverts has been viewed more than 14 million times, and was rated by introvert Bill Gates as one of his favourite talks ever.
Susan notes that 50% of the US workforce describe themselves as introverts, yet 96% of US leaders and managers self-identify as extroverts. She says it isn’t surprising, therefore, that 64% of workers believe their organisation does not fully harness the talents of introverted employees.
Her latest book, Quiet Power, was published earlier this year. In it, Susan quotes highly successful introverted leaders from Ghandi to Warren Buffet and even BeyoncĂ© as she deals with myths about introverts, exposes their secret strengths and offers encouragement to teenage introverts on how to make their presence felt and become better leaders at school, college or work. “Preparing your thoughts ahead of time can … help give you a push to be one of the first people to speak up, which is probably not your normal style,” she writes.  
Sheryll says it’s important to make the distinction between introversion and ‘shyness’, or an unwillingness to talk. “Shyness is just a fear of social humiliation, and both introverts and extroverts can be that,” she says. “Introverts can be the life of the party at their own little dinner party, because they know the people and they trust the people they’ve chosen to be with. But in terms of team-building in the work environment, they’re less likely to go out drinking with a big group. They’re not confident in that environment – they’d rather be in the corner one on one having a deep conversation with someone… Introverts are definitely misunderstood because they don’t perform to crowds.”
As an introvert, Sheryll says she is aware of that dynamic in her own organisation, because her colleague Colin Hendrie is an extreme extrovert. “He’s a very charismatic leader and after a program that we’ve run he’s happy to go off and have a drink and be the life and soul of the party, whereas I need to go away and get my energy back,” she says. “That really can affect my ‘likeability’ within the team. I wrestle with it, but I’m not going to be something I’m not.”
Sheryll is planning to run two leadership courses specifically for introverts next year in Canberra and Margaret River, but in the meantime she is just glad that the stigma of being an introvert is slowly being eroded. “Sometimes in the past, on our other leadership courses when I tell people they’re an introvert, they think I’ve told them they’re a serial killer,” she says. “But now people are slowly recognising that to identify as an introvert in the first place is not a bad thing.”
kensbigbackyard.com.au

Note: I occasionally work as a leadership facilitator with Outback Initiatives, and thoroughly recommend their outdoor experiential learning programs to discover more about yourself, your leadership style and ways to be more effective.



Wednesday, 24 February 2016

Three Capes Track Review

Three Capes Track Review

Tasman Island from The Blade, Cape Pillar

After becoming one of the first journos to walk the new $25.3 million Three Capes Track in Tasmania, I've been asked by quite a few people what it's like, and whether it would suit them. My full story and photographs will appear in an issue of OUTBACK magazine later this year, so I can't give everything away, but here's a few pointers (and what I really thought of it) if you're trying to decide whether to do it.


What is it?

Nine years ago the Tasmanian Parks and Wildlife Service started working on what would become their biggest development project ever. Looking for a new, iconic, multi-day walk to help fill the demand created by the Overland Track, they looked towards the Tasman Peninsula's incredible natural wonders: and not least among them, Australia's highest sea cliffs, the 300m high dolerite columns along Cape Pillar.
But, the vision was bigger than just natural wonders. They wanted an experience that could appeal to a new market of people who aren't usually bushwalkers, so they combined art, information and a comfy night's sleep, with a walk through the Tassie bush. As well as building three incredible public huts, with everything laid on (except food, which you bring yourself), they reworked a few existing rough tracks and developed the Three Capes Track. The full plan is that it will be 82km and visit five public huts, but for now it's 46km, and a cracking great 46km it is, done over four days.
View over Port Arthur, from near the first night's hut.

How much is it?

Controversially, it costs $500 to do the walk (staying in the public huts). But that includes an excellent boat tour at the beginning, an excellent handbook as a guide, all the huts and as much rainwater as you can drink, a two-year pass to the Port Arthur Historic Sites and a ride back from Fortescue Bay at the end.

Why should I do it?


  • Standing atop the highest sea cliffs in Australia looking out at Tasman Island is an extraordinary privilege.
  • The track is worth seeing on its own. Costing about $12 million alone, it is a work of art.
  • The huts truly are the best public huts in Australia. There are deck chairs to sit in, cooking facilities, board games and a library, as well as heating, lights and yes, comfy mattresses.
  • Distances are very manageable (longest day is 17km) and you don't have to carry a full pack. 
    The beautiful Fortescue Bay, where the walk finishes

Why shouldn't I do it?

  • It isn't the best walk in Tassie. If you are a keen bushwalker and haven't explored many of Tassie's other wonders yet, I'd suggest you do them first – the Overland Track, Walls of Jerusalem, Hartz Mountains, Freycinet, the South West.
  • While the walk has some amazing natural highlights, there are long stretches in thick banksia heath or relatively uninteresting forest.
  • It's halfway between a wilderness walk that you do on your own, and a luxury experience. You might be better to choose which of those options you really want, and go for that, rather than a middle of the road option.

Can I do the walk without paying the $500 and using the huts?


Yes. There are two ways I'd suggest doing this. One is to do Cape Pillar and Cape Huay (the main highlights) as day walks from Fortescue Bay. You won't have to carry a pack and you'll still get to visit these wonderful places. You are allowed to fill up water bottles at the public huts, but not use the facilities.
You can also choose to walk it, carrying a full pack (with tent, cooking stove etc), organising your own transport etc. Tas Parks and Wildlife make it clear that they want all such campers to camp at one official camp site, called Wughalee Falls, that has a pit toilet, tent platforms and tank water. They want you to camp there to preserve the rest of the area, but you're actually allowed to camp almost anywhere, except within about 500m of the huts (signs indicate this). I'd particularly recommend sites at Perdition Ponds and near the end of Cape Pillar, where you could wake up and see the first rays of the day striking The Blade. If you choose to camp somewhere other than Wughalee Falls, please practice minimal impact camping.

What's the verdict?

This is a beautiful new walk in a part of Tasmania that is definitely worth exploring. The walk, and the stay in the huts, definitely suits those who aren't hardened walkers but want an achievable, fun adventure. It is not the best walk in Tassie, but it does have some amazing highlights, and it is designed more as a whole experience in the bush, rather than just a bush walk. And because you're carrying a relatively light pack, you can bring extra goodies such as wine, steak, and several types of cheese (well, I did anyway).
Two things that may help you get the most out of it: the huts take a maximum of 48 people. If it was fully booked, all the 8-bedroom dorms and 4-bedroom dorms will be full, and that would give it a very different experience, particularly if you're not a people person. If you have a group of 4 or 8, of course you could have your own room, but if you are a pair or a single, you are likely to be asked to share. However, the walk is only going to be fully booked on some occasions. On our walk, in early February, we only had 14 walkers, and I actually got a four-bed room to myself. I would recommend holding off booking until you can determine how many have booked.
Similarly, we had beautiful blue-sky days averaging 27 degrees - most un-Tasmanian. To do the walk in driving rain would not be nearly as enjoyable, as there is nowhere sheltered on the track to stop and have lunch etc. None of the marked rest stops have any shelter. So again, if you can, I'd delay booking until you can get an idea of the weather.
www.kensbigbackyard.com.au