By Stephanie Davies on Thursday, 15 September 2022
Category: Laughology blog

Lessons in leadership from Queen Elizabeth II

Organisations and experts (including Laughology) study leaders in intricate detail to glean lessons from them that can be applied elsewhere. It is no surprise then that we turn to one of the longest-serving leaders in modern history, Queen Elizabeth II, to try and understand what made her reign so successful, and to see whether there are leadership lessons we can learn from her.

Skilfully steering through good times and bad

Firstly, it must be stated that the leadership required of a British monarch is very different to the leadership required of the head of a blue-chip company, for example. The Monarchy is a ceremonial sovereign and while the role is intrinsically entwined in the mechanism of British governance, the Monarchy does not make logistical decisions or interventions in the way the nation is run. 

The Monarchy, however, is head of the Royal household and as such, for 70 years The Queen skilfully steered that unique institution through good times and bad. With Royal heritage spanning over 700 years with a lineage all the way back to Robert the Bruce, she had plenty of history to learn from, but what she did best was look forward and it’s this amongst other things that made her so popular and successful.

A diplomat who bridged cultures

The Queen was a consummate diplomat, preserving tradition while moving with the times, bridging cultures, and keeping what to some appears to be an anachronism, relevant. 

Arianne Chernock, professor of history at Boston University and an authority on British and European history recently told an NPR podcast that The Queen relied on traits or qualities that are stereotypically feminine, such as “the sense of being apolitical or almost passive, reticent to intervene. All of those feminine qualities served her well as monarch,” she said.

I disagree these are feminine-only qualities, and furthermore, Chernock misses the point. In her leadership, the Queen showed a steely determination, intelligence, nuance, people skills and devotion to duty. Above all else, the Queen was determined to get on with the job and uphold the values of her institution. 

Here are some of the lessons we can learn from her:

Being positive isn’t about ignoring reality either, it’s about understanding what’s in your control, looking to the future and giving people hope. The Queen did this well, as the public address she gave during the pandemic illustrates. 

“I am speaking to you at what I know is an increasingly challenging time. A time of disruption in the life of our country: a disruption that has brought grief to some, financial difficulties to many, and enormous changes to the daily lives of us all.

We should take comfort that while we may have more still to endure, better days will return: we will be with our friends again; we will be with our families again; we will meet again.”

We wish Queen Elizabeth II and her family peace going forward and thank her for her service.  Watching the service on bank Holiday Monday as she’s laid to rest at St Georges Chapel, Windsor, I know I’ll be in admiration of this remarkable woman who was a constant and stable leader for so long.

Thank you