Leadership Styles Must Change In The New Era Of "Always On" Transformation

BOSTON, MA--(Marketwired - Jan 4, 2017) - In the face of disruptive technologies, globalization, and a volatile marketplace, leading companies are committing to a new kind of transformation.

Instead of pursuing it as a onetime, crisis-driven initiative and instead of focusing primarily on cutting costs, they are committing to "always on" transformation -- profoundly changing their strategy, business model, operating model, people, and organization on an ongoing basis in order to stay ahead.

The new approach demands a new kind of leadership -- leadership that is not just directive but also inclusive and that has an appetite for risk, says a new e-book published by The Boston Consulting Group (BCG). Transformation: Delivering and Sustaining Breakthrough Performance draws on the firm's work in more than 400 transformations that generated a median annual impact exceeding $340 million through cost cuts, revenue increases, the application of capital efficiency levers, and improvements in organizational performance.

"CEOs, boards, and leadership teams need to incorporate transformation as a way of working," says Jim Hemerling, a senior partner at BCG and one of the editors of the e-book. "That means shifting from treating people as a means to an end -- or, worse, as collateral damage -- and instead putting people first. The behaviors that leaders need include listening, empathizing, inspiring, empowering teams, and building long-term capabilities to sustain change over time."

Transformation Missteps That Smart Leaders Avoid

Constant change translates into relentless pressure for CEOs and boards. Those that commit to undertaking a transformation risk several potential missteps, ones that the most effective leaders avoid. Among them:

  • Trying to Compel Employees. Leaders frequently use a "forced conscription" approach to staffing transformation teams and then seek to motivate people with carrots and sticks. But when change is constant, this approach fails to trigger the intrinsic motivation that is needed to deliver and sustain performance. Instead, leaders need to invest in and create an organizational context that allows people to thrive, including cultivating a deep sense of purpose, allowing a degree of autonomy, embedding opportunities for personal growth, and orchestrating personal affiliation among the members of project teams.

  • Failing to Build Capabilities. In many cases, companies focus too much on specific "finish line" goals and not enough on the capabilities they must build and strengthen in order to transform sustainably, such as skills, knowledge, systems, and analytics and resources. Leaders who effectively drive transformation instead define the capabilities that the company will need in order to sustain the transformation, and they ensure that these capabilities are developed.

  • Failing to Be Bold Enough. A joint BCG/Spencer Stuart study of 400 new S&P 500 CEOs over the past ten years shows that many CEOs struggle during their first few years. Perhaps the most important finding was that thriving CEOs were quicker than ousted CEOs to have made bold moves during their first year. They were also more inclined to "go for it" -- to launch ambitious and innovative initiatives.