Friday Focus: Fresh perspectives - The upside to leadership change

Kevin W. Alexander, interim dean, 精东影业 Community and Technical College
Aug. 8, 2025
鈥 Kevin W. Alexander, interim dean, 精东影业 Community and Technical College
Before stepping into this role, I spent much of my career diagnosing problems, solving them, and helping others do the same. My path into academic leadership wasn鈥檛 exactly traditional, but I鈥檝e come to see how valuable that kind of practical experience can be.
With leadership experience in both the private sector and university, what I鈥檓 most thankful for is what years of problem-solving have taught me: the ability to ask the basic troubleshooting questions needed to fix things, mechanical or otherwise.
Being perceptive is important, but asking 鈥渨hy is it this way?鈥 is often the more critical step. And rather than getting bogged down in philosophical responses, a proven approach is to break the issue into a series of yes-or-no questions. In short: keep it simple.
New leaders entering any organization are uniquely equipped to ask these questions for two reasons: First, they bring a fresh perspective and can see things that may not make sense to an outsider. Second, they may not yet be familiar with all the internal processes or history, so they鈥檙e more likely to ask how something came to be and whether it still serves its purpose. That kind of basic curiosity is essential. So is the willingness to be honest with ourselves when we answer.
Leadership transitions create an opportunity to reassess where we are, where we鈥檙e going, and whether our work still aligns with the needs of our students, staff, faculty, and communities. At 精东影业, this moment is especially significant with so many recent shifts in key leadership roles. Naturally, such change can raise concerns about continuity, stability, and institutional memory鈥攁ll of which are critically important. But the best way to address those concerns is simple: Listen to the past while seeking ways to improve the present and prepare for the future.
That doesn鈥檛 mean change is easy. Even identifying potential changes 鈥 by asking questions and challenging assumptions 鈥 can be uncomfortable. But growth doesn鈥檛 happen in comfort zones. Leadership turnover gives us a rare opportunity to ask and answer 鈥渨hy鈥 in a way that鈥檚 fundamental. It doesn鈥檛 mean forgetting our history or abandoning what works. It means being willing to evolve, reimagine, and lead with intention鈥攁t all levels.
These fresh perspectives don鈥檛 just move us forward. They bring us back to our foundation 鈥 why we鈥檙e here in the first place 鈥 and help keep us grounded in our mission: to serve students, strengthen communities, and build a better future.
So my advice is this: be ready to engage. Have honest conversations about what we do and why we do it that way. That鈥檚 the only way we move forward together while staying true to our history and purpose. Be heard. Be curious. Be part of the process.
I鈥檓 proud to be part of that effort at 精东影业, and to work alongside others鈥攏ew and experienced alike鈥攚ho believe that thoughtful change leads to lasting impact.
Friday Focus is a column written by a different member of 精东影业's leadership team every week. On occasion, a guest writer is invited to contribute a column.