null

ASAR MANAGMENT CONSULTING

Riyadh, KSA | Become a Partner | Contact
Harrison Talent Solutions Logo

Paradoxical Leadership Technology

Are strong traits really strengths? Or, are they potential derailers? Most assessments recognize that strong traits can be derailers but deal with it by simply acknowledging the person could sometimes exhibit the related derailing trait. Only Paradox Technology determines if a strong trait is actually a true strength, or a derailer.

How Harrison Paradox Works

How Paradox Works

Every trait can be a strength or a derailer depending if the trait is balanced by another seemingly opposite (paradoxical) trait. For example, if a person is strong in both Frankness and Diplomacy, both will be genuine balancing strengths when communicating. On the other hand, if a person has only one of the paradoxical traits, there will necessarily be a related counter-productive behavior, the strength of which depends on the extent of the imbalance. For example, a person with very strong Frankness and weak Diplomacy, will have a strong tendency to be disruptively blunt which leads to unnecessary upsets, mistrust, and employee turnover. Conversely, a person with very strong Diplomacy and weak Frankness, will have a strong tendency to be evasive when communicating, causing unclarity and unresolved issues. In some cases, the person is weak in both Frankness and Diplomacy indicating they will try to avoid communication. The key is to appreciate and strengthen both sides of the paradox.

Paradox Mastery

Paradox Mastery Guide

The Paradox Mastery Guide incorporates our job specific research which facilitates your access to the deep analysis that would typically only be provided by highly experienced coaches.

Simple color mapping identifies the importance of the paradox for that job and the development requirements for you to master the paradox.

Paradox Mastery can be incorporated into both development and recruitment processes to provide a more nuanced understanding of the individual.

  • Based on 30 years of Job Performance research
  • Unique for each job and uses your Job Success Formulas (JSA)
  • Identifies Paradox Importance and ranks Paradoxes by strength
  • Also available in our Organizational Analytics subscriptions

Why People Have Difficulty Changing

People who are imbalanced in a paradox tend to demonize the trait in which they are weak. For example, people who are strong in Frankness and weak in Diplomacy will see themselves as truthful and will consider Diplomacy to be untruthful. If they are challenged about being blunt, they may say "Do you want me to lie?" Or, "Do you want me to sugar coat what I am saying?". By understanding the balances related to paradox, they can begin to understand the negative consequences of their imbalance and start to develop a balanced approach to communication.

Paradox Technology analyses and determines a broad spectrum of potential counter-productive traits without having to ask negative questions on the questionnaire. This is vitally important since negative traits usually account for 60-75% of the factors that impact job success.

Harrison Paradoxes Are Core Values

Paradox Technology measures how employees manage 12 paradoxical pairs of behaviors, each of which relate to an important core value.

There are four interpersonal core values: Confident receptiveness (Truth Exploring), Self-Accepting Humility (Healthy Self Esteem), Forthright Diplomacy (Effective Communication), and Helpful Assertiveness (Mutual Benefit).

There are four Achievement core values: Logical Intuition (Decision Approach), Poised Achievement (Motivation), Creative Persistence (Innovation), and Flexible Organizing (Organization).

There are four Leadership core values: Mindful Courage (Strategic Risking), Compassionate Enforcing (Holding Others Accountable), Authoritative Collaboration (Participation & Delegation), and Realistic Optimism (Strategic Acumen).

Paradoxical Leadership

All of the Harrison Paradoxes relate to leadership and have a great impact on the organization which can either create a positive culture or a dysfunctional culture. For example, self-confidence can be a great strength for a leader but if it is not balanced with considering other ideas, self-confidence becomes dogmatism which stifles innovation and causes employee turnover. Conversely, leaders who are receptive to different ideas without having confidence in their own views will lack clarity and decisiveness which leads to confusion amongst the team.

Harrison Paradox Technology is embraced by organizations world-wide as the best means to determine leadership capability and job performance by providing a reliable map of the paradoxical balances that make or break leaders.

Questions? Call +00966-503448765
  • SOLUTIONS
  • ASSESSMENTS
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • RESOURCES
  • ABOUT
  • BLOG

Follow Us

Curious to know more?
Get in touch for a free demo.