Composite image by Katie Bracy

When you imagine your best leadership moments, do you picture yourself casting a compelling vision or checking items off a carefully organized plan? Stanford professor Huggy Rao uses the metaphors of poetry and plumbing to describe two essential dynamics in leadership.

Poetry is about the “big picture” and the vision. Poetry inspires and energizes people to stretch beyond the status quo. Plumbing is more mundane. Plumbing is about the day-to-day tasks involved in executing the vision. Plumbing-focused leaders think about meetings and metrics, planning and follow-up.

It turns out that poetry and plumbing are both necessary to leadership. We’ve all heard great ideas that never get off the ground. It’s also true that efficient systems can lack inspiring purpose. Poetry and plumbing work in tandem to produce faithful results.

The book of Nehemiah is a good example of poetry and plumbing. When Nehemiah returned to Jerusalem to rebuild the wall around the city, he did not find much in the way of raw materials or enthusiasm. He started with plumbing. He conducted a secret, late-night inspection. Then he moved to poetry, but his poetry was grounded in concrete realities he discovered during the inspection.

Nehemiah made an inspiring speech (2:17-20). He pointed out the current state of the wall and challenged the people to rise above their disgrace. Nehemiah assured the people that God’s hand was on the mission, and they had the support of King Artaxerxes. With faith in the vision, the people began to work. They worked on different sections of the wall to complete the reconstruction in an orderly way. Everyone worked toward a shared goal. In 52 days, they rebuilt the wall.

Leaders typically lean toward poetry or plumbing. The key is to identify your natural tendency — and then develop strategies to help you recognize what’s needed and when.

Resources

Listening with our bodies for God’s voice

In a culture that often views decisions made with the head as most reliable, what insights might our bodies provide in the process of discerning God’s will?

By Katie Bracy

Why is a business model important for a ministry?

The new executive director of any ministry needs to understand the organization’s finances. That includes how money is raised and spent as well as the economics of the people involved, writes the executive director of Leadership Education at Duke Divinity.

By David L. Odom

The visionary and the implementer: Partners combine strengths to launch a housing development for formerly homeless older adults

When San Antonio’s Catholic Worker house grew from offering a feeding ministry to building affordable housing, its leader got help from a surprising source: a former administrator in the city department that had tried to shut it down.

By Robyn Ross

An underserved neighborhood needed a community center, not another church

After a satellite campus of a large church struggled, a pastor decided to reformat his church into a community center to address needs in his hometown of Blue Island, Illinois.

By Laura Rodríguez

Ambivert leaders are more effective

Instead of simply claiming to be introverted or extroverted, leaders must recognize when it’s time to step outside their social comfort zones and when it’s time to recharge.

Q&A with Karl Moore


Before you go

Rao’s metaphors resonate with me. I’ve had to learn to balance poetry with plumbing. So often, in vision or strategy meetings, someone with a plumbing focus will push back against the poetry because they need to know how the vision will be executed. Rao suggests that we don’t try to do both activities at the same time. If you’re going to have a brainstorming and visioning meeting, focus on brainstorming and visioning. Do the plumbing work in a meeting set aside for plumbing. You may even need to mix up the people in the room so you can accomplish what needs to be done.

How would you describe yourself? Your team? Who are the poets and who are the plumbers?

You can always reach me and the Alban Weekly team at alban@duke.edu. Until next week, keep leading!

Prince R. Rivers

Editor, Alban at Duke Divinity

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