A particular challenge with the Socratic method is that some people are not good at thinking “on their feet,” and so they might not be able to articulate their thoughts in real time. Thus, this method must not be used alone for discussing complex issues; those who need to think “offline” must be allowed to do so and then share their thoughts in a follow-up meeting.
Also, some people will not speak up in a group, and so a Socratic leader must watch for those who stay silent and proactively ask them for their opinion.
The Socratic method is time-consuming but leads to a deep understanding of the issue by all team members and a strong feeling of investment in the final consensus if everyone feels their contributions were fairly considered. Those who do not agree with the consensus will usually be willing to go along with it because the resolution was reached through a fair and logical process.
Sometimes a team is unable to reach a consensus. When that happens, if a resolution is needed, a leader might be required to arbitrate and make the final decision.
Voting is not recommended for important issues, because a vote indicates popularity of an idea, rather than determining whether the idea is best. If an arbitration is needed, the leader will need to decide and bear accountability for the outcome.
Servant Leadership
The term servant leader was coined by Robert Greenleaf in an essay in 1970.16 He describes a servant leader as someone who becomes a leader by showing that they have the interests of the team at heart instead of their own and also by demonstrating competence.
Something that is often misunderstood about servant leadership is the idea that a servant leader is really just someone who facilitates or assists a team. In fact, Greenleaf clearly says in his essay that a servant leader leads and that the team follows but follows by choice.
A servant leader sometimes makes decisions that are not the choice of the team, but the team trusts the leader. In the book The Servant, James Hunter writes, “The leader should never settle for mediocrity or second best—people have a need to be pushed to be the best they can be. It may not be what they want, but the leader should always be more concerned with needs than with wants.”17
There is a dilemma with servant leadership, in that the interests of the team might not be aligned with the interests of the organization; and so if the leader's authority rests upon the support of the team, then the leader might not be able to make choices that favor the organization at the expense of the team—at least, not too often.
An example is when it is time for pay raises to be considered. If one's leadership is based on popularity, then one will be incentivized to give everyone the maximum possible pay increase to maintain their support. Servant leadership therefore has an implicit assumption that the team is composed of rational, fair-minded people who are able to see and appreciate the big picture of the organization as a whole.
Theory X, Theory Y, and Mission Command
Management theory has a long history. The 1900s saw the emergence of scientific management through the writing of Frederick Taylor, Henri Fayol, and Max Weber. The 1930s saw the human relations wave through the pen of Elton Mayo, Fritz Rothlisberger, and W. J. Dickson. The 1950s produced “behavioral science,” with authors such as Herbert Simon, Douglas McGregor, and Rensis Likert. So-called systems thinking included writing by Ludwig von Bertalanffy, Kenneth Boudling, Jacob Getzels, and Egon Guba. The 1970s saw authors such as James March, Karl Weick, and Johan Olsen.
Scientific management treated people as machines: so-called Taylorism sought to optimize each step of a workflow, so that each person was performing as much as they could, and thereby optimize the entire flow. It was presumed that a global optimum could be reached by optimizing each step of each task and assumed that all the tasks were predefined by a “scientific” designer of an optimal work process.
Taylorism did not actually seek to dehumanize people. In fact, Taylor believed that as each worker became expert in a task, they would be respected as an expert. However, that element of his theory is often forgotten.
Also, Taylorism did not consider the mental health of the workers or their personal motivations; it saw them only as mercenaries who needed to be pushed as far as they could bear, not too unlike the slaves of a galley ship, except that the shackle was replaced by the desperate need of a job in those times.
Max Weber wrote extensively about the need for a bureaucracy to bring order to management. Ironically, he viewed a hierarchical structure with rules of behavior as a solution to the favoritism and subjective judgment that was common within less formally structured organizations. Those times were characterized by what we, today, would call more Agile arrangements, and hierarchy and bureaucracy were seen as a remedy for the unfairness that was common in those setups.18
Systems theory as first described by Ludwig von Bertalanffy, Niklas Luhmann, and others pertaining to social systems viewed an organization much like a biological organism. In a systems view, an organization seeks a steady state, which authors of the time referred to as homeostasis, and there are feedback loops that maintain that state.19 Understanding the organization means identifying and understanding the feedback loops. (It should be noted that today systems are viewed in a broader way, not necessarily requiring a steady state.)
Thus in original systems theory we had the beginnings of the notion that is so prevalent yet problematic today, that an organization exists in a steady state and that a “project” must be conceived to change the organization to a new (steady) state, with the return on investment of that change proven up front. Today's reality is that most organizations cannot be seen as being in a steady state, because the world around them is so rapidly changing.
Behaviorists such as McGregor and Likert rejected the idea that management was all about authority and control. McGregor labeled control-oriented management as Theory X and defined an alternative form, Theory Y, in which people prefer to act responsibly and so do not need to be tightly controlled, and they often apply creativity in their work, which benefits from looser control. McGregor and Likert's writing on this emerged during the 1950s—well in advance of the Agile movement.
Some in the Agile community think that before Agile, all organizations were run in an autocratic manner. That is not true. In fact, the debate over whether autocratic or empowering methods work best is very old. An empowering style of leadership that is still widely recognized as a model today is known as mission command leadership, which dates to the early 1800s and the Prussian army.
In the mission command model, decision-making is pushed down to the lowest level so that those in the field can act immediately, using their own judgment, without having to wait for orders. Mission command relies on training those in the field so that they have sufficient knowledge and leadership skills so that they can make competent decisions autonomously. The ideal field commander is an experienced leader and is knowledgeable of the “big picture” so that field decisions can take the overall strategy objective into account. Individual soldiers are expected to be able to make judgments too, so that if they are separated from their commander, they can act without delay.
Applying this in a business context, the mission command model informs team members of the big picture and goals and empowers team members to decide how to get the job done. Thus the Agile Manifesto principle that reads, “Build projects around motivated individuals. Give them the environment and support they need, and trust them to get the job done,” is well aligned with mission command, from the early 19th century.
Unfortunately, this line of the Agile Manifesto