четверг, 17 ноября 2016 г.

The Secrets to Successful Strategy Execution



  • Gary L. Neilson
  • Karla L. Martin and 
  • Elizabeth Powers



  • A brilliant strategy, blockbuster product, or breakthrough technology can put you on the competitive map, but only solid execution can keep you there. You have to be able to deliver on your intent. Unfortunately, the majority of companies aren’t very good at it, by their own admission. Over the past five years, we have invited many thousands of employees (about 25% of whom came from executive ranks) to complete an online assessment of their organizations’ capabilities, a process that’s generated a database of 125,000 profiles representing more than 1,000 companies, government agencies, and not-for-profits in over 50 countries. Employees at three out of every five companies rated their organization weak at execution—that is, when asked if they agreed with the statement “Important strategic and operational decisions are quickly translated into action,” the majority answered no.
    Execution is the result of thousands of decisions made every day by employees acting according to the information they have and their own self-interest. In our work helping more than 250 companies learn to execute more effectively, we’ve identified four fundamental building blocks executives can use to influence those actions—clarifying decision rights, designing information flows, aligning motivators, and making changes to structure. (For simplicity’s sake we refer to them as decision rights, information, motivators, and structure.)
    In efforts to improve performance, most organizations go right to structural measures because moving lines around the org chart seems the most obvious solution and the changes are visible and concrete. Such steps generally reap some short-term efficiencies quickly, but in so doing address only the symptoms of dysfunction, not its root causes. Several years later, companies usually end up in the same place they started. Structural change can and should be part of the path to improved execution, but it’s best to think of it as the capstone, not the cornerstone, of any organizational transformation. In fact, our research shows that actions having to do with decision rights and information are far more important—about twice as effective—as improvements made to the other two building blocks. (See the exhibit “What Matters Most to Strategy Execution.”)

    Why Strategy Execution Unravels—and What to Do About It




  • Donald Sull
  • Rebecca Homkes and 
  • Charles Sull



  • Since Michael Porter’s seminal work in the 1980s we have had a clear and widely accepted definition of what strategy is—but we know a lot less about translating a strategy into results. Books and articles on strategy outnumber those on execution by an order of magnitude. And what little has been written on execution tends to focus on tactics or generalize from a single case. So what do we know about strategy execution?
    We know that it matters. A recent survey of more than 400 global CEOs found that executional excellence was the number one challenge facing corporate leaders in Asia, Europe, and the United States, heading a list of some 80 issues, including innovation, geopolitical instability, and top-line growth. We also know that execution is difficult. Studies have found that two-thirds to three-quarters of large organizations struggle to implement their strategies.
    Nine years ago one of us (Don) began a large-scale project to understand how complex organizations can execute their strategies more effectively. The research includes more than 40 experiments in which we made changes in companies and measured the impact on execution, along with a survey administered to nearly 8,000 managers in more than 250 companies. The study is ongoing but has already produced valuable insights. The most important one is this: Several widely held beliefs about how to implement strategy are just plain wrong. In this article we debunk five of the most pernicious myths and replace them with a more accurate perspective that will help managers effectively execute strategy.


    Myth 3: Communication Equals Understanding

    Many executives believe that relentlessly communicating strategy is a key to success. The CEO of one London-based professional services firm met with her management team the first week of every month and began each meeting by reciting the firm’s strategy and its key priorities for the year. She was delighted when an employee engagement survey (not ours) revealed that 84% of all staff members agreed with the statement “I am clear on our organization’s top priorities.” Her efforts seemed to be paying off.
    Then her management team took our survey, which asks members to describe the firm’s strategy in their own words and to list the top five strategic priorities. Fewer than one-third could name even two. The CEO was dismayed—after all, she discussed those objectives in every management meeting. Unfortunately, she is not alone. Only 55% of the middle managers we have surveyed can name even one of their company’s top five priorities. In other words, when the leaders charged with explaining strategy to the troops are given five chances to list their company’s strategic objectives, nearly half fail to get even one right.
    Not only are strategic objectives poorly understood, but they often seem unrelated to one another and disconnected from the overall strategy. Just over half of all top team members say they have a clear sense of how major priorities and initiatives fit together. It’s pretty dire when half the C-suite cannot connect the dots between strategic priorities, but matters are even worse elsewhere. Fewer than one-third of senior executives’ direct reports clearly understand the connections between corporate priorities, and the share plummets to 16% for frontline supervisors and team leaders.
    It’s pretty dire when half the C-suite cannot connect the dots between strategic priorities.
    Senior executives are often shocked to see how poorly their company’s strategy is understood throughout the organization. In their view, they invest huge amounts of time communicating strategy, in an unending stream of e-mails, management meetings, and town hall discussions. But the amount of communication is not the issue: Nearly 90% of middle managers believe that top leaders communicate the strategy frequently enough. How can so much communication yield so little understanding?
    Part of the problem is that executives measure communication in terms of inputs (the number of e-mails sent or town halls hosted) rather than by the only metric that actually counts—how well key leaders understand what’s communicated. A related problem occurs when executives dilute their core messages with peripheral considerations. The executives at one tech company, for example, went to great pains to present their company’s strategy and objectives at the annual executive off-site. But they also introduced 11 corporate priorities (which were different from the strategic objectives), a list of core competencies (including one with nine templates), a set of corporate values, and a dictionary of 21 new strategic terms to be mastered. Not surprisingly, the assembled managers were baffled about what mattered most. When asked about obstacles to understanding the strategy, middle managers are four times more likely to cite a large number of corporate priorities and strategic initiatives than to mention a lack of clarity in communication. Top executives add to the confusion when they change their messages frequently—a problem flagged by nearly one-quarter of middle managers.

    Myth 4: A Performance Culture Drives Execution

    When their companies fail to translate strategy into results, many executives point to a weak performance culture as the root cause. The data tells a different story. It’s true that in most companies, the official culture—the core values posted on the company website, say—does not support execution. However, a company’s true values reveal themselves when managers make hard choices—and here we have found that a focus on performance does shape behavior on a day-to-day basis.
    Few choices are tougher than personnel decisions. When we ask about factors that influence who gets hired, praised, promoted, and fired, we see that most companies do a good job of recognizing and rewarding performance. Past performance is by far the most frequently named factor in promotion decisions, cited by two-thirds of all managers. Although harder to assess when bringing in new employees, it ranks among the top three influences on who gets hired. One-third of managers believe that performance is also recognized all or most of the time with nonfinancial rewards, such as private praise, public acknowledgment, and access to training opportunities. To be sure, there is room for improvement, particularly when it comes to dealing with underperformers: A majority of the companies we have studied delay action (33%), address underperformance inconsistently (34%), or tolerate poor performance (11%). Overall, though, the companies in our sample have robust performance cultures—and yet they struggle to execute strategy. Why?
    Past performance is two or three times more likely than a track record of collaboration to be rewarded with a promotion.
    The answer is that a culture that supports execution must recognize and reward other things as well, such as agility, teamwork, and ambition. Many companies fall short in this respect. When making hiring or promotion decisions, for example, they place much less value on a manager’s ability to adapt to changing circumstances—an indication of the agility needed to execute strategy—than on whether she has hit her numbers in the past. Agility requires a willingness to experiment, and many managers avoid experimentation because they fear the consequences of failure. Half the managers we have surveyed believe that their careers would suffer if they pursued but failed at novel opportunities or innovations. Trying new things inevitably entails setbacks, and honestly discussing the challenges involved increases the odds of long-term success. But corporate cultures rarely support the candid discussions necessary for agility. Fewer than one-third of managers say they can have open and honest discussions about the most difficult issues, while one-third say that many important issues are considered taboo.
    An excessive emphasis on performance can impair execution in another subtle but important way. If managers believe that hitting their numbers trumps all else, they tend to make conservative performance commitments. When asked what advice they would give to a new colleague, two-thirds say they would recommend making commitments that the colleague could be sure to meet; fewer than one-third would recommend stretching for ambitious goals. This tendency to play it safe may lead managers to favor surefire cost reductions over risky growth, for instance, or to milk an existing business rather than experiment with a new business model.
    The most pressing problem with many corporate cultures, however, is that they fail to foster the coordination that, as we’ve discussed, is essential to execution. Companies consistently get this wrong. When it comes to hires, promotions, and nonfinancial recognition, past performance is two or three times more likely than a track record of collaboration to be rewarded. Performance is critical, of course, but if it comes at the expense of coordination, it can undermine execution. We ask respondents what would happen to a manager in their organization who achieved his objectives but failed to collaborate with colleagues in other units. Only 20% believe the behavior would be addressed promptly; 60% believe it would be addressed inconsistently or after a delay, and 20% believe it would be tolerated.

    Myth 5: Execution Should Be Driven from the Top

    In his best-selling book Execution, Larry Bossidy describes how, as the CEO of AlliedSignal, he personally negotiated performance objectives with managers several levels below him and monitored their progress. Accounts like this reinforce the common image of a heroic CEO perched atop the org chart, driving execution. That approach can work—for a while. AlliedSignal’s stock outperformed the market under Bossidy’s leadership. However, as Bossidy writes, shortly after he retired “the discipline of execution…unraveled,” and the company gave up its gains relative to the S&P 500.
    Top-down execution has drawbacks in addition to the risk of unraveling after the departure of a strong CEO. To understand why, it helps to remember that effective execution in large, complex organizations emerges from countless decisions and actions at all levels. Many of those involve hard trade-offs: For example, synching up with colleagues in another unit can slow down a team that’s trying to seize a fleeting opportunity, and screening customer requests against strategy often means turning away lucrative business. The leaders who are closest to the situation and can respond most quickly are best positioned to make the tough calls.
    Concentrating power at the top may boost performance in the short term, but it degrades an organization’s capacity to execute over the long run. Frequent and direct intervention from on high encourages middle managers to escalate conflicts rather than resolve them, and over time they lose the ability to work things out with colleagues in other units. Moreover, if top executives insist on making the important calls themselves, they diminish middle managers’ decision-making skills, initiative, and ownership of results.
    In large, complex organizations, execution lives and dies with a group we call “distributed leaders,” which includes not only middle managers who run critical businesses and functions but also technical and domain experts who occupy key spots in the informal networks that get things done. The vast majority of these leaders try to do the right thing. Eight out of 10 in our sample say they are committed to doing their best to execute the strategy, even when they would like more clarity on what the strategy is.
    Distributed leaders, not senior executives, represent “management” to most employees, partners, and customers. Their day-to-day actions, particularly how they handle difficult decisions and what behaviors they tolerate, go a long way toward supporting or undermining the corporate culture. In this regard, most distributed leaders shine. As assessed by their direct reports, more than 90% of middle managers live up to the organization’s values all or most of the time. They do an especially good job of reinforcing performance, with nearly nine in 10 consistently holding team members accountable for results.
    But although execution should be driven from the middle, it needs to be guided from the top. And our data suggests that many top executive teams could provide much more support. Distributed leaders are hamstrung in their efforts to translate overall company strategy into terms meaningful for their teams or units when top executives fail to ensure that they clearly understand that strategy. And as we’ve seen, such failure is not the exception but the rule.
    Conflicts inevitably arise in any organization where different units pursue their own objectives. Distributed leaders are asked to shoulder much of the burden of working across silos, and many appear to be buckling under the load. A minority of middle managers consistently anticipate and avoid problems (15%) or resolve conflicts quickly and well (26%). Most resolve issues only after a significant delay (37%), try but fail to resolve them (10%), or don’t address them at all (12%). Top executives could help by adding structured processes to facilitate coordination. In many cases they could also do a better job of modeling teamwork. One-third of distributed leaders believe that factions exist within the C-suite and that executives there focus on their own agendas rather than on what is best for the company.
    Many executives try to solve the problem of execution by reducing it to a single dimension. They focus on tightening alignment up and down the chain of command—by improving existing processes, such as strategic planning and performance management, or adopting new tools, such as the balanced scorecard. These are useful measures, to be sure, but relying on them as the sole means of driving execution ignores the need for coordination and agility in volatile markets. If managers focus too narrowly on improving alignment, they risk developing ever more refined answers to the wrong question.
    If managers focus too narrowly on improving alignment, they risk developing ever more refined answers to the wrong question.
    In the worst cases, companies slip into a dynamic we call the alignment trap. When execution stalls, managers respond by tightening the screws on alignment—tracking more performance metrics, for example, or demanding more-frequent meetings to monitor progress and recommend what to do. This kind of top-down scrutiny often deteriorates into micromanagement, which stifles the experimentation required for agility and the peer-to-peer interactions that drive coordination. Seeing execution suffer but not knowing why, managers turn once more to the tool they know best and further tighten alignment. The end result: Companies are trapped in a downward spiral in which more alignment leads to worse results.
    If common beliefs about execution are incomplete at best and dangerous at worst, what should take their place? The starting point is a fundamental redefinition of execution as the ability to seize opportunities aligned with strategy while coordinating with other parts of the organization on an ongoing basis. Reframing execution in those terms can help managers pinpoint why it is stalling. Armed with a more comprehensive understanding, they can avoid pitfalls such as the alignment trap and focus on the factors that matter most for translating strategy into results.

    The World Just Got More Uncertain and Your Strategy Needs to Adjust




    Donald Trump’s unexpected win in the U.S. presidential election is unleashing an inevitable maelstrom of analysis: Why and how did it happen? As with the Brexit vote, almost all pollsters and pundits failed to foresee this result. But now that we have a clear outcome, it’s time to move forward and assess the implications for business and society.
    So what are those implications, exactly?
    Based on his campaign, Trump’s policies are directionally clear: Reduce personal and corporate taxation, invest in infrastructure, repeal the Affordable Care Act, tighten up on illegal immigration, strengthen law enforcement, and take a tougher stance on trade policy. It seems reasonable to use these intentions as a basis for forecasting the impact on taxes, trade, demand, employment, and mobility of labor. But even with these directions in mind, there’s a lot we just don’t know yet. What will be the administration’s take on science and technology? How will the Affordable Care Act be repealed? And what about the details of trade deals or infrastructure investment?
    One thing we can say with confidence is that uncertainty will remain high for some time in politics, macroeconomics, and business, at both global and national levels. We can also assume that precise point forecasts are likely to be wrong. Likewise, we know that whatever our historical assumptions have been, many are likely to change as technology advances. And the impacts of policies will be highly specific in nature, degree, and speed for each industry and company.
    To respond to this challenge, companies will need to become more sophisticated about strategy during uncertainty in five ways.

    Match Your Strategy to the Environment

    As we have described in Your Strategy Needs a Strategy, businesses will need to adopt the right approach to strategy and execution, depending on the predictability, malleability, and harshness of each environment they operate in. Consider whether your company is able to employ each of the following approaches:
    • Classical. This represents the traditional approach of analysis, planning, and execution against a one- or five-year plan. There will be fewer and fewer highly predictable environments in which businesses can rely on this.
    • Adaptive. In the growing number of unpredictable environments, businesses will have to iterate their way toward the future by using discipline experimentation.
    • Visionary. In malleable environments, such as in newly created or disrupted markets, they will need to envision and realize new possibilities.
    • Shaping. In environments that are both malleable and unpredictable, businesses will have to orchestrate the activities of entire ecosystems of companies using platform-based business models.
    • Renewal. When viability is threatened by demand, supply shocks, regulatory change or competitive developments, they need to decisively transform their business models.

    Reinforce Capabilities Required in Uncertain Environments

    The capabilities of adaptation, shaping the business environment, and ambidexterity (the ability to apply different and potentially conflicting approaches to strategy, as described above, in different parts of the business) are typically under-developed in large established companies and will likely become more important. This is necessarily so, since winning in uncertainty requires more than defensive moves, and every company will need to both run and reinvent the business.

    Improve Economic and Political IQ

    Companies need to detect, interpret, and translate patterns in politics and macroeconomics for business implications. We are living in an era where macro effects can easily swamp competitive and operational considerations. For example, the presence or absence of a trade deal or an interest rate cut can potentially have a bigger impact than reducing cost or increasing marketing.

    Invest in Resilience

    We should expect the unexpected and be prepared not only to survive it but to seize unexpected opportunities. Our work with Simon Levin at Princeton University shows that complex dynamic systems, like biological ecosystems, economies, and companies which are able to survive and thrive over the long term, exhibit six principles that may seem counter to conventional business thinking:
    • Redundancy. They buffer against unexpected events.
    • Diversity. They have multiple ways of thinking and doing things, which not only serve as a hedge against change but also form the substrate for experimentation and learning.
    • Modularity. They have firebreaks, which stop problems in one part of the company from affecting the whole. Modularity also facilitates innovation through recombination and promotes greater agility because of the reduced scale of each unit.
    • Adaptation. They learn and evolve by leveraging diversity in the face of change.
    • Prudence. They are open to serendipitous upsides, while designing decisions and actions be robust to plausible unfavorable scenarios. They ask, “What if X happened?”
    • Embeddedness. Companies are embedded in economic, social, and political systems. They need to preserve a harmonious relationship between these different layers by ensuring trust and reciprocity to avoid sanction and alienation.
    These principles can be hard to implement because they are often at odds with everyday managerial thinking. The familiar logic of short-term shareholder value maximization may be at odds with long-term survival and prosperity of the corporation, which instead requires a more biological, systemic mode of thought.

    Reevaluate Purpose

    Embeddedness, as described above, hints at this. The growing number of unexpected events like the Brexit vote and the U.S. election are rooted in the polarization of politics and economic inequality. Significant parts of the population now see business leaders as a part of the mistrusted elite that is responsible. This risks limiting leaders’ ability to shape the future agenda, both for their businesses and society. Now more than ever, leaders should intensify their efforts to maintain society’s trust and keep their social license to operate. How? They need to renew and clarify their firms’ deeper social purpose, the intersection of their identity and social needs. To help alleviate the deeper economic and social tensions in our societies, business leaders should then proceed to action in seven opportunity areas that we defined after the Brexit vote in the UK, from building entrepreneurial ecosystems to leveraging technology responsibly to reinvesting in human capital and labor productivity.
    As the next weeks and months unfold, managers accustomed to stabler times will have to improve their game for strategy in uncertainty. Those leaders who succeed will thrive in the long term, no matter what lies ahead tomorrow.

    Simple Ethics Rules for Better Risk Management




    For far too long, managing risk has been seen as an esoteric business function — designed to control losses and adhere to compliance standards. But as more organizations fall prey to complex intangible risks, from unwanted disclosure due to rampant cyber threats to breaches of conduct driven by skewed incentive systems, the aperture of risk management is expanding from protecting the balance sheet to promoting ethical leadership and values-based decision making.
    Consider Yahoo, with its record-breaking cyber breach estimated at more than 500 million records, or Wells Fargo, facing unwanted public excoriation after creating thousands of fake customer accounts, or the Volkswagen emissions scandal or the warning signs that could have prevented the Germanwings disaster. Many of these failures were either fueled by or lost in the byzantine maze that is the modern enterprise, which often breeds a combustible mix of indifference and short-termism. Complex systems fail in complex ways. But all start with human failings.
    Senior business leaders and their boards must therefore change the way they think about risk and how they respond to it. Rather than countering complex risk with an even more complex risk-management system, which comes with its own blind spots and brittle places, leaders have to equip the individuals in their charge with common levels of risk awareness, codes of conduct, and value systems.
    To do this, I’ve often relied on a handful of maxims. While it’s true that maxims can sometimes sound cliché – like a phrase on a motivational poster that employees walk past every day but never really look at — they can also be useful if leaders put real muscle into them. Here are a handful that I have found most useful in fostering a healthy sense of risk-awareness in organizations in which senior managers are themselves also demonstrating ethical leadership:
    Values matter most when they are least convenientIn an environment riddled with uncertainty and variability, value systems are meant to be the only constants.  However, all too often they are proven to be meaningless words in an annual report. For value statements to be more than empty slogans, they must withstand the trial by fire of tough calls guiding behavior and decision making when it is least convenient. The now famous Tylenol recall of the 1980s is an enduring example of how Johnson & Johnson’s credo guided decision making in a time of crisis. A small number of firms are counter-intuitively becoming activists about championing their value systems, even at the risk of short term shareholder returns. No one gets extra credit for doing the right thing when it is easy.
    Bad things happen in the dark. Ethical lapses arise when people take risks but do not bear the downside of their risky behavior. These hazards are most prevalent where they can be most easily hidden – such as in remote locations, less-supervised business units, or on understaffed teams. Misaligned incentives can also create organizational “blind spots.” Wells Fargo’s massive account-rounding scandal illustrates the insidious effects of incomplete employee incentives that turn a blind eye to unethical behavior.
    Combating issues like these begins with transparency and accountability. When information is shared quickly and openly across the organization, bad dealings can be rooted out before they spread. It’s leaders’ responsibility to shine a light into any dark organizational corners.
    Privacy is a luxuryIn the age of pervasive cyber-risk and unwanted disclosure, consistently aligned behavior is the best defense. All it takes is one employee clicking on one sketchy link in one email for an organization or institution to be infiltrated by anyone from a disgruntled employee, to WikiLeaks, to nation state actors. The recent large-scale denial of  service attack that affected internet stalwarts like Amazon, Twitter, and PayPal by exploiting connected devices underscores that the amount of money spent on cyber security is not a proxy for greater defense. The Clinton campaign spent months of time and effort atoning for statements made in emails sent through Hillary Clinton’s private server, and continues to respond to emails hacked by, allegedly, the Russian government and leaked through Wikileaks. Apparently, the hackers were able to get access to the emails when campaign chairman John Podesta clicked on a phishing link.
    Today, risk lies between the chair and the keyboard. Given that breaches are now seemingly inevitable, risk managers might need to spend less effort trying to prevent the next hack and more time reminding employees not to include embarrassing or sensitive information in easily-breached communications in the first place.
    Remoteness breeds indifference. Attitudes toward risk are deeply informed by the tone, tenor, and remoteness of the top. Leaders who practice what they preach, have conviction, and lead by example are better at managing risks than those that merely pay lip service to ethics, value systems, or codes of conduct. Simplicity is key in addressing this gap. When senior leaders encourage bounded risk-taking and show that they are open to hearing bad news, they can help hone an organization’s muscle memory –on how to respond to emerging threats. When those executives conversely dismiss details as too “in the weeds” for their attention, show that they don’t want to hear questions or bad news, or are simply impossible to ever track down in the hallways, moral lapses become more likely.
    Remember the example of Citibank from the 2008 housing crash – Kellogg professor Adam Waytz found that leaders in New York were both physically and psychologically distant from whistleblowers in Missouri and Texas. No significant actions were taken to curb the improper behavior, and the company had to pay a $158.3 million settlement in 2012.
    Just as David was able to slay Goliath with a simple sling, complex risks are best addressed with simple measures. Firms should not embrace ethical leadership or risk agility out of fear of failure or mere compliance. Risk agility is a source of lasting competitive advantage.  After all, when the competitive landscape is littered with the tombstones of firms that failed to understand and respond assertively to risk, the ethical and agile enterprises will inherit the spoils.