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Opinion
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Are leaders left to fend for themselves?

Posted By Clore Social Leadership, 03 October 2017
Updated: 07 December 2020
This guest blog was written by Robert Laycock who supports the organisational, leadership and management development of not-for-profit organisations across the North East.

By not joining up development opportunities for leaders of social change are we leaving the majority of them to fend for themselves in increasingly challenging times?

Earlier this week I was leading a seminar at the North East Fundraising Conference targeting delegates considering becoming a trustee for the first time. My introduction outlined the scale of the task citing the number of charities and trustees nationally (165,000 and 850,000 respectively in England and Wales) and in the North East region (6,900 formally constituted not-for-profit organisations, further 7,500+ smaller ‘under the radar’ groups). These stats suggest we need somewhere in the region of 25,000+ trustees in the North East alone; double this number including committee positions within smaller unconstituted groups. We perhaps shouldn't be surprised, therefore, that attracting the right calibre and number of trustees is an issue for many organisations.

These stats also help us to understand the scale of the task for those of us who are passionate about leadership development within civil society.

I’m absolutely of the view that the challenges we face as we strive for outstanding governance across the North East, can only be addressed through collaborative action; identifying, sharing and spreading best practice. I believe we need a similarly joined-up approach to developing leaders.

Reflecting on my own development, I now recognise the gateways and interventions that made the difference, leading to big shifts in practice. Here’s my timeline:

  • 1993-1999: self-taught leadership and management (artist-led/community projects)
  • 1999: appointed Co-Director of established regional charity (1999-2011)
  • 2001/02: completed accredited leadership and management development programme (Northern Cultural Skills Partnership – this programme came to an end around 2008)
  • 2005/06: Common Purpose Matrix programme
  • 2007: first trusteeship
  • 2009/10, 2013/14: executive coaching
  • 2016/17: certificate in coaching and mentoring (self-organised)
  • Particularly, I feel fortunate to have worked for Helix Arts, a charity committed to developing their people while I was in a critical phase in my development as a leader.

So what are we doing, collectively, to make sure our leaders of social change, at all stages of development, have access to the right type of support at the right time?

The good news is we have a reasonable range and diversity of opportunities currently available in the North East including, on my radar:


My concern is how leaders navigate these opportunities to identify the support they need.

My call to action is to all of us working to develop leaders to find ways to align our programmes and initiatives, raise awareness and strengthen connections, in order to provide pathways of support - a mosaic of opportunities - for the many thousands of leaders who may struggle without it.

Who’s in?

Please share your comments below, or you can join the conversation on Twitter.

*With thanks to the Garfield Weston Foundation

Tags:  casestudy  challenges  change  culture  event  future 

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Leaders Now event with Toby Young

Posted By Clore Social Leadership, 12 April 2017
Updated: 07 December 2020
It’s not every morning you get to facilitate a conversation with someone who sparks a marmite reaction across the social sector, so when Shaks Ghosh, CEO of Clore Social Leadership asked me to facilitate a breakfast leadership conversation with Toby Young, I jumped at the chance.

The Leaders Now events series is run in partnership by Clore Social Leadership and the House of St Barnabas. It brings together great speakers and leaders from the social sector to inspire, encourage debate and new thinking, and to provide an opportunity to network and meet other leaders.

April’s session featured a conversation with Toby Young, the journalist activist and reluctant leader of the free schools movement. However, he is so much more than that; an accomplished social commentator, journalist at the Spectator, former CEO of the West London Free School Trust, Brexiteer, published author, food judge, cyclist, father of four, keen QPR supporter, and the man most likely to polarise debate about education, freedom of choice, self-determination and the class system.

The night before the conversation, Radio 4 broadcasted Toby’s most recent programme, The Rise and Fall of the Meritocracy, where Toby asked whether his father, Michael Young’s dark prophesy is correct, if your genes determine your future, and whether the Brexit and Trump votes signal the death knell for the popular political vision of a modern meritocracy.

Suffice to say, as a former Director at the Young Foundation, the programme sparked a heated debate (aka row) in my household and I confess I carried this apprehension into the House of St Barnabas. With 40 people in the room from a variety of sectors including education, local government, heritage and more, Toby led us through in what I might call his reluctant leadership journey; from the denizens of NYC to having 150 people standing in his living room wanting to set up a school.

Obviously what goes on on tour, stays on tour but I do have permission to share Toby’s 9 tips for leadership which I surmised from his talk:

  1. Admit when you are wrong
  2. Look confident while doing it
  3. Remain steadfast in purpose as it will steer your course
  4. Build a thick skin
  5. Having a strong moral purpose will help you get the best of people
  6. Being engaged in a common venture with like minded people gives meaning to life in a way money and status does not
  7. Co-opt the tools that work regardless of where the come from.
  8. Sometimes being belligerent in bunker needs to happen to get you through tough times but don’t stay there too long
  9. Collaborative decision making is miles better than individual decision making


When I read them back to him, Toby said, ‘when I hear them like that, it’s bleedin’ obvious really - I don’t know why it’s taken me so long to realise them.’

For me, Toby reflected a style of leadership I often see in movements - activists that have started with a passionate belief around fixing a perceived injustice who have realised that to go far, it helps to go with others. No one ever said that social change was a quick fix and Toby Young I think, would be the first to admit that.


Share your views below, or join the conversation on Twitter.

Esther Foreman is the CEO of the The Social Change Agency, connect with her on Twitter.

Tags:  casestudy  change  charitysector  event  future  publicspeaking  speech  tips 

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