Friday, 2 November 2012

What Impact Does a Leader’s Mindfulness Have on Her People?


What Impact Does a Leader’s Mindfulness Have on Her People?

When I’m asked to run mindfulness courses or sessions with leaders and other managers I draw at times on the ideas that Richard Boyatzis and Annie McKee set out in their book Resonant Leadership (Harvard Business Review Press, 2005). In particular, I’m drawn to the distinction they make between resonant and dissonant leaders. Putting this really briefly, resonant leaders amplify the qualities of their people – drawing out the best in them. Dissonant leaders, on the other hand, inhibit their people and get in their way.

I often start my presentations on Mindful Leadership by asking the people I’m working with whether they’ve ever worked under a dissonant leader. So far, they all have. I then ask them to share in small groups what that was like. The energy in the room rises, as people let off steam. Gathering the group back together after a few minutes I ask a simple question: “When you worked under a dissonant leader, were you able to give of your best at work?” And the answer of course is “no”.

I guess we all have our own intuitive sense of why that might be. We know how it feels to be unsettled by a leader – how that narrows our capacity and restricts our field of vision. Another time I’d like to write something about the neurobiology of such experiences. For now, though, I want to talk about some work Jochen Reb and his colleagues have been doing, looking at how a leader or supervisor’s mindfulness impacts on their peoples’ performance and well-being[i].

Jochen has recently come to Cambridge, where I live, to work at the University’s Judge Business School and I’m enjoying getting to know him. He’s doing some great work on the theme of mindfulness at work, including intriguing studies around mindfulness in negotiation. But for now let’s stick with his research on the impact of a leader’s mindfulness on employee performance and well-being.

In two separate studies, Jochen and his colleagues recruited a number of leaders and supervisors to see how their levels of mindfulness appeared to affect their people. The first study looked at a sample of 96 leaders from a range of industries and spread across upper and middle management and first-line supervisors. Using the well-tried Mindful Attention Awareness Scale that was developed by Brown & Ryan in 2003, they measured their levels of mindfulness. As is usual in self-report measures, the leaders were asked to rate how they felt they were doing on a range of issues that were picked out by the items in a questionnaire. Examples of the items that the leaders are asked to rate in the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale are “It seems I am ‘running on automatic,’ without much awareness of what I’m doing” or “I find myself preoccupied with the future or the past”. The leaders rated themselves on a scale of 1 to 6 from “almost always” to “almost never” across a number of such items and the scores their answers gave provided a measure of their self-reported levels of mindfulness and awareness.

Jochen and his colleagues then went on to measure the well-being of those leaders’ people. To begin with, they looked at their self-reported levels of emotional exhaustion. Here, using another set of measures, the employees rated statements like “I feel emotionally drained from my work” or “I feel used up at the end of the workday” on a scale of 1 to 7. The researchers also looked at the employees’ work-life balance, asking them to rate items like “I feel successful in balancing my paid work and family life” or “I am satisfied with the balance I have achieved between my work and life” on a scale of 1 to 9.

Then they asked the supervisors to rate the same employee’s performance on a scale of 1 to 6 using statements like “This person exceeds/meets/does not meet standards for performance.” And finally they measured the employees’ levels of deviance – a kind of negative performance measure. Examples here are “this employee publicly embarrassed someone at work” and “this employee has taken property from work without permission”, rated on a scale of 1 to 5 where 1 is never and 5 is weekly.

What Jochen and his colleagues found was that when leaders or supervisors showed higher levels of mindfulness then their people showed greater well-being and higher performance – that is, they had less emotional exhaustion and a more contented sense of their own work-life balance; their supervisors rated their performance more highly and they were seen to be less deviant at work.

It is interesting to notice that it wasn’t just issues such as the tendency to emotional exhaustion that were affected by leaders’ mindfulness but even issues such as the employee’s work-life balance. That shows how potentially powerful the role of leaders’ mindfulness is in the workplace. It’s also interesting that the leaders’ mindfulness was particularly strongly associated with employee deviance.  This may suggest that employees appreciate a mindful leaders’ tendency to be fully with them when they are seeking their attention. Mindless leaders, by contrast, who are absentminded in their interactions with employees, may be seen as not being respectful and as incompetent.

In a second study, Jochen and his colleagues recruited 79 leaders or supervisors, again across a range of industries and at different levels. Again they rated them against the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale and they measured their people’s well-being and performance – this time using a different set of measures.

They looked at job satisfaction, rating statements like “all in all I am satisfied with my job” on a scale of 1 to 7. And they examined the extent to which their work met their psychological needs. Examples of the items included here are “I feel like I can make a lot of inputs to deciding how my job gets done,” “I really like the people I work with,” and “I do not feel very competent when I am at work.”

Again they measured the employees overall job performance, as in the previous study, but now they added a few other measures. The supervisors were asked also to rate them on a scale of 1 to 7 across items such as “arrives at work on time” and “completes work requested as soon as possible.” And they measured the employees’ organizational citizenship behaviour. On a scale of 1 to 7, supervisors were asked to rate items such as “shows genuine concern and courtesy toward co-workers, even under the most trying business or personal situations” and “for issues that may have serious consequences, expresses opinions honestly even when others may disagree.”

Again, where leaders or supervisors exhibited higher mindfulness, then their people exhibited higher well-being and greater performance across all of these measures.

It’s not entirely clear why mindful leadership has these beneficial effects and further research might extend these findings by examining in greater depth and breadth the mechanisms linking a leader’s mindfulness to employee well-being and performance.

It seems that leaders who are fully present when interacting with their subordinates get a better understanding of their employees’ needs. That increases their capacity of offer them the support they need. A leader’s mindfulness can also create a sense of interpersonal fairness in employees. Future research could examine how perceived supervisor support and interpersonal justice provide a link between mindfulness and important employee outcomes. It could be that improvements in the perception of justice at work and higher levels of supervisor support, amongst other factors, contribute to a generally favourable perception of the relation between the leader and the employee.

Mindful awareness also allows leaders to better regulate their emotions; and it increases their awareness of themselves, others and their environment. This leads to their being seen to be more authentic. Authentic leaders are those who have, and are perceived by others as having, awareness of themselves, of others, and of their context; as well as being optimistic, hopeful, trusting, and positive. Mindful leaders are more authentic – and seen to be so.

All of this points to really exciting opportunities for leadership development. More mindful leaders bring out the best in their people. And mindfulness can be trained. Just a short course of training will raise a leader’s level of mindfulness. As Jochen’s study shows, that can make a real difference.  I’d love to take a group of leaders, give them a mindfulness course, and measure their people’s levels of well-being and performance in subsequent months. I bet you it would rise.




[i] Reb, J., Narayanan, J., & Chaturvedi, S., (2012) “Leading Mindfully: Two Studies on the Influence of Supervisor
Trait Mindfulness on Employee Well-Being and Performance.” Mindfulness, 3:3.

Thursday, 4 October 2012

Mindfulness and Creativity


Mindfulness and Creativity

As I bring the benefits of mindfulness training into different organisational environments I’m often asked by people commissioning the training whether mindfulness can enhance creativity or innovation. We’re beginning to learn that it can and a variety of studies point in this direction – some directly, some indirectly.

In one direct study, conducted by Jonathan Greenberg and his colleagues at Ben-Gurion University[i], which experienced meditators as well as a control group of people interested in meditation, were given a set of eleven logic problems.

The first six problems required complicated solutions, with many steps. The following three problems could be solved with the same complicated solution or with a much simpler two-step solution. The last two problems could only be solved with the simple, two-step solution.

They hypothesized that the experienced meditators would spot the simple solution quickly, while the control group would continue using the complex method out of habit. They were right. The experienced meditators switched from the complex method more often, and solved the simple problems more quickly, than the control group.

But, this experiment wasn’t randomised and it was possible that, rather than mindfulness fostering creativity, it was the other way around. Perhaps creative people are drawn to meditation in the first place. So they conducted a second experiment that addressed this issue. This time they randomly assigned people with no meditation experience into two groups. One group received a six-week mindfulness meditation programme, the other was assigned to a waitlist and served as a control. The participants tried to solve the same set of problems and the mindfulness meditators spotted the simple solution more often, and more quickly, than the controls.

Even just six weeks of mindfulness training can improve people’s problem-solving skills – allowing them to approach each situation a-fresh.

Then there are two fascinating studies that cast light on this issue indirectly.

To understand these, you need to consider what neuroscientists now know about the prefrontal cortex and the way it is activated bilaterally. The prefrontal cortex is a part of the brain just above the eye-sockets. When the left prefrontal is active, you’re in “approach mode”. That is, you exhibit interest, curiosity, happiness, compassion and other desirable emotions. When the right prefrontal is active, you’re in “avoidance” mode – experiencing the family emotions that cluster around fear, disgust, anxiety and aversion. Left is approach, right is avoid – and the ratio of left to right prefrontal activation at which you tend to settle predicts your levels of happiness and overall well-being.

In a much cited article published in Psychosomatic Medicine in 2003,[ii] Richard Davidson and Jon Kabat-Zinn reported the effects that eight weeks of mindfulness training had on workers in a high-pressure biotech business in Madison, Wisconsin. One group undertook an eight-week course in mindfulness training. A comparison group of volunteers from the company received the training later, and, like the participants on the first course, were tested before and after training by Davidson and his colleagues. Before the course, the whole group – as with many who work in high-pressure environments – was tipped on average towards greater right than left prefrontal activiation. They tended to describe themselves as feeling stressed. The group who received the mindfulness training reported afterwards that their moods had improved. They felt more engaged in their work, more energized and less anxious. This was borne out by their brain-scan results. Their left-to-right prefrontal cortex activation ratio had shifted significantly leftwards. These results persisted at the four-month follow-up.

So we know that mindfulness training increases the extent of left prefrontal activation. And this seems to impact on creativity.

In a study published in 2001, Ronald Friedman and Jens Forster[iii] examined how the approach and avoidance systems I spoke of above affect creativity. They set two groups of college students a simple task. Both groups were given a sheet of paper which showed a cartoon mouse trapped inside the picture of a maze. The task was to help the mouse find a way out of the maze. But there was one slight difference in the pictures the groups received. The ‘approach’ version of the picture showed a piece of Swiss cheese lying outside the maze in front of a mouse hole. The ‘avoidance’ version showed an identical maze except that, instead of a satisfying meal of cheese at the end, an owl hovered over the maze – ready to swoop and catch the mouse at any moment.

The maze takes about two minutes to complete and all the students who took part solved it in about that time, irrespective of the picture they were working on. You might therefore think that there was no significant difference between the groups. But the difference in the after-effects of working on the puzzle was striking. When the participants took a test of creativity soon afterwards, those who had helped the mouse avoid the owl came out with scores 50% lower than those who had helped the mouse find the cheese. The state of mind that was brought about by attending to the owl had produced a lingering sense of caution, avoidance and vigilance for things going wrong. Those participants were comparatively more right prefrontal cortex activated. This weakened their creativity, closed down options for them and reduced their flexibility when it came to the creativity task.

So when I’m asked these days whether mindfulness training can affect creativity, I feel readily able to say “Yes, most likely it does.”



[i] Greenberg J., Reiner K., Meiran N. (2012) ‘‘Mind the Trap’’: Mindfulness Practice Reduces Cognitive Rigidity. PLoS ONE 7(5):

[ii] Davidson, R.J., Kabat-Zinn, J., Schumacher, J., et al. (2003) Alterations in brain and immune function produced by mindfulness meditation. Psychosomatic Medicine, 65, 564–570.

[iii] Friedman, R.S., and Forster, J. (2001) The effects of promotion and prevention cues on creativity. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 81 (6), 1001–1013.

Saturday, 15 September 2012

It just keeps getting better...

I last posted over a year ago. But I'm going to try to stay more current now.

 I'm just back from Ireland where I was privileged to deliver a keynote at the Annual Conference of  Mental Health Nurse Managers Ireland. I say privileged because I'm in awe of the work these folk do and the way they seem to do it. I met so many good people there. And how wonderful - the theme of the whole conference was Mindfulness. We had the delightful Tony Bates from Headstrong in Dublin, the richly informed Mary-Jo Keitzer from the University of Minnesota, myself and the wonderful Ruby Wax giving keynotes. We had a lot of fun on the panel discussions.

It's such good news that people who put themselves on the line they way these nurse managers do, struggling to deliver good services at a time of austerity (and that's acute in Ireland right now) have had the chance to learn stuff that might be valuable to their patients, their staff and - above all - themselves. When managers are more mindful the whole system gains.

Sunday, 29 March 2009

Who I am, what I do and a few thoughts about mindfulness and neuroscience research

I'm Michael Chaskalson. I live with my wife Annette in Cambridge in the UK and these days I teach mindfulness in a wide variety of contexts. I run mindfulness-based stress reduction courses for the general public in London (http://www.mbsr.co.uk/mbsrcourses.html) five times a year and I'm currently developing a level 2 course for the alumni of those courses. I teach mindfulness skills to business coaches to help them sharpen their coaching skills (http://www.mindfulness-works.com/offerings.php) and I offer courses and masterclasses to NHS clinicians, execs and their teams, and people from professional services firms.

There is so much good research around the effects of mindfulness training around these days. Especially about its impact on various aspects of brain function. Now that we know so much more about neuroplasticity and that the brain can be trained there's a real buzz around mindfulness in some neuroscience circles. More and more neuroscientists are coming on my London courses. They sometimes bring new insights to bear on what we're up to in the classes and I hope that what they learn there can sharpen and focus some of the new research that's being done. These are exciting times.