Servant Leadership Basics
- VI
- EN
Tóm tắt (VI)
Servant leadership là phong cách lãnh đạo đặt câu hỏi này trước tiên:
Đội ngũ cần gì từ mình để thành công?
Trong Agile, leader không chỉ quản lý công việc. Leader giúp team phối hợp tốt hơn, tự chủ hơn, học nhanh hơn và tạo ra giá trị thật.
Servant leader hỗ trợ, huấn luyện, tạo điều kiện, gỡ vướng và giúp mọi người nhìn rõ mục tiêu. Họ xây dựng môi trường có niềm tin, an toàn tâm lý và minh bạch.
Nhưng servant leadership không có nghĩa là lãnh đạo yếu.
Servant leader vẫn là leader. Họ vẫn giúp team giữ tiêu chuẩn, tập trung vào value, làm rõ Definition of Done, xử lý mâu thuẫn và đưa ra quyết định khi cần.
Điểm khác biệt là họ không dẫn dắt bằng kiểm soát cứng nhắc. Họ dẫn dắt bằng phục vụ, hỗ trợ và tạo điều kiện để team làm tốt hơn.
Một servant leader thường:
- lắng nghe trước khi phản ứng
- coach team thay vì chỉ ra lệnh
- facilitate discussion để mọi người cùng hiểu vấn đề
- remove impediments để team có thể tiếp tục tiến lên
- empower self-managing teams
- xây dựng trust và psychological safety
- giúp team, Product Owner, customer và stakeholders align trên value, quality, acceptance criteria và Definition of Done
- hỗ trợ continuous improvement qua feedback và retrospective
Servant leadership không phải là:
- để mặc team muốn làm gì thì làm
- né tránh xung đột
- làm hài lòng tất cả mọi người
- bỏ qua tiêu chuẩn chất lượng
- không dám ra quyết định
- che chắn cho performance kém
Giúp team không có nghĩa là hạ thấp tiêu chuẩn.
Giúp team là giúp họ đạt được tiêu chuẩn đó.
Exam mindset
Khi làm bài PMI-ACP hoặc Agile exams, đáp án tốt thường nghiêng về:
- coaching
- facilitation
- collaboration
- empowerment
- removing impediments
- building trust and safety
- shared understanding
- customer value
- continuous improvement
Ngược lại, hãy cẩn thận với các đáp án kiểu command-and-control:
- assign mọi việc từ trên xuống
- micromanage
- blame hoặc punish sớm
- ép output mà không tìm root cause
- quyết định một chiều, không collaboration
- bỏ qua feedback của team hoặc customer
Một cách nhớ đơn giản:
Servant leader không kiểm soát trước.
Servant leader hiểu vấn đề trước.
Sau đó họ facilitate, coach, align, unblock, support và help the team improve.
Summary (EN)
In this topic, we are going to look at servant leadership.
What exactly is servant leadership?
Servant leadership is a style of leadership where the leader focuses first on helping the team succeed.
The leader is not there just to command people, push work onto them, or act like a dictator. The leader is there to support the team, guide the team, coach the team, and help the team become more effective.
That is the basic idea.
But I want you to understand something important.
A servant leader is still a leader.
This does not mean weak leadership. It does not mean the leader avoids decisions. And it does not mean the team can do whatever they want.
No.
A servant leader still gives direction. A servant leader still protects standards. A servant leader still helps the team stay focused on value.
The difference is how they lead.
A servant leader leads through service, support, coaching, and facilitation instead of control.
That is the heart of servant leadership.
Why servant leadership matters in Agile
Agile is not just about process.
It is not just about a sprint backlog, a product backlog, a daily standup, or a retrospective.
Agile is also about how people work together.
Managing an agile project is about more than dictating work and pushing people harder. A lot of traditional management behavior sounds like leadership, but it does not fit the Agile mindset very well.
For example:
- telling people exactly what to do
- checking on them every few minutes
- pressuring them without understanding the real problem
- blaming them when things go wrong
- making every decision for the team
That is not servant leadership.
Servant leadership asks a different question:
What does the team need from me in order to succeed?
Maybe they need clarity.
Maybe they need a decision.
Maybe they need a blocker removed.
Maybe they need protection from outside interference.
Maybe they need coaching.
Maybe they need trust.
That is where the servant leader comes in.
What a servant leader does
1. The servant leader listens
Before a servant leader reacts, the servant leader listens.
They listen to the team. They listen to customers. They listen to stakeholders. They listen to what is actually happening in the work.
Why?
Because if you do not understand the real problem, you are probably going to solve the wrong problem.
This matters on the exam too.
If a question describes conflict, confusion, low trust, or repeated problems, the Agile answer is usually not to jump straight into command mode. The better move is often to understand, facilitate, coach, and help the group inspect what is happening.
2. The servant leader removes impediments
This is one of the biggest ideas in Agile.
If the team is blocked, the leader helps remove the blocker.
The blocker might be:
- unclear requirements
- too many approvals
- conflict between stakeholders
- lack of tools
- outside interruptions
- dependency on another team
- unclear ownership
A servant leader does not just stand there and say, "Work harder."
No.
The servant leader says, "Let me help clear the path."
That does not mean the leader does all the work for the team. It means the leader helps remove the obstacles that prevent the team from doing valuable work.
3. The servant leader facilitates, not dominates
This is very important for PMI-ACP thinking.
In Agile, the leader is often a facilitator.
That means the servant leader helps people communicate. They help meetings stay effective. They help conflicts get resolved. They help the team and stakeholders align.
But the servant leader should not dominate every conversation.
They do not need to have all the answers.
Sometimes their job is to create the environment where the right conversation can happen.
That may mean asking better questions, inviting quieter voices into the discussion, keeping the group focused on value, or helping stakeholders see trade-offs clearly.
4. The servant leader builds self-managing teams
Agile teams are supposed to become more self-managing over time.
So what does the servant leader do?
They do not create dependence.
They do not make the team wait for permission on every little thing. They do not assign every task in a command-and-control way. They do not act like the smartest person in the room.
Instead, they help the team make decisions, solve problems, and own the work.
That is real leadership in Agile.
The goal is not to make the team dependent on the leader.
The goal is to help the team become capable, trusted, and responsible.
5. The servant leader creates trust and safety
If people are afraid, they hide problems.
If they hide problems, the project suffers.
That is why trust matters.
A servant leader creates an environment where people can say:
- I need help
- I made a mistake
- This approach is not working
- I do not understand this requirement
- We have a risk here
That honesty is healthy.
That honesty helps the team improve faster.
For Agile exams, this is a key mindset. The best answer usually does not punish the first person who raises a problem. It encourages transparency, learning, and collaborative problem solving.
6. The servant leader supports continuous improvement
Agile is not just about delivering work.
It is also about learning and improving.
That is why retrospectives matter.
A servant leader helps the team reflect:
- What went well?
- What went wrong?
- What should we do differently next time?
- What can we improve in our process?
The goal is not to blame people.
The goal is to help the team get better sprint after sprint.
Continuous improvement is not a side activity in Agile. It is part of how the team becomes more effective.
7. The servant leader protects value and clarity
Now let us tie this to PMI-ACP and Scrum a little more.
The team needs clarity on value.
They also need clarity on what "done" means.
If the team does not know what done means, they may think they finished something when they really did not.
A servant leader helps facilitate that clarity.
They help the team, Product Owner, customer, and stakeholders stay aligned on:
- what is needed
- why it matters
- what quality means
- what acceptance looks like
- what the Definition of Done requires
That reduces confusion.
That reduces rework.
That reduces frustration.
And it helps the team deliver value more reliably.
What servant leadership is not
I want to make this clear.
Servant leadership is not:
- being passive
- avoiding conflict
- pleasing everyone
- letting the team lower standards
- refusing to make decisions
- protecting poor performance
- allowing chaos in the name of empowerment
No.
Helping the team does not mean lowering the bar.
It means helping the team reach the bar.
That is a huge difference.
Servant leadership is supportive, but it is not careless. It is collaborative, but it is not leaderless. It empowers the team, but it still keeps the team connected to value, quality, and outcomes.
Servant leadership in PMI-ACP and Agile exams
If you are studying for PMI-ACP, this is where you want to pay attention.
On Agile exam questions, the best leadership answer is often the one that does things like:
- coach the team
- facilitate collaboration
- remove impediments
- empower the team
- support self-organization
- encourage communication
- foster trust
- help create shared understanding
- align people around customer value
- clarify acceptance criteria and Definition of Done
- encourage continuous improvement
The weaker answer is often the traditional manager answer:
- command the team
- assign all work top-down
- micromanage
- punish early mistakes
- make decisions without collaboration
- ignore feedback
- force output without understanding root causes
That is not Agile leadership.
Simple exam mindset to remember
If you see a PMI-ACP or Agile question and you are not sure what to choose, think like this:
The servant leader does not control first.
The servant leader understands first.
Then they:
- facilitate
- coach
- align
- unblock
- support
- improve
This mindset will help you a lot.
Servant leadership is a leadership style where the leader serves first by helping the team succeed.
The leader removes blockers. The leader builds trust. The leader facilitates collaboration. The leader helps define clarity. The leader supports continuous improvement. The leader empowers the team instead of controlling the team.
That is the heart of servant leadership.
And that is exactly why it matters so much in PMI-ACP and Agile.