среда, 15 ноября 2017 г.

21st Century Skills for organisations and individuals



CRITICAL THINKING AND PROBLEM SOLVING 
Reason Effectively 
• Use various types of reasoning (e.g., inductive, deductive, etc.) as appropriate to the situation
Use Systems Thinking 
• Analyze how parts of a whole interact with each other to produce overall outcomes in complex systems
Make Judgments and Decisions 
• Effectively analyze and evaluate evidence, arguments, claims and beliefs
• Analyze and evaluate major alternative points of view
• Synthesize and make connections between information and arguments
• Interpret information and draw conclusions based on the best analysis
• Reflect critically on learning experiences and processes
Solve Problems 
• Solve different kinds of non-familiar problems in both conventional and innovative ways
• Identify and ask significant questions that clarify various points of view and lead to better solutions
CREATIVITY AND INNOVATION 
Think Creatively 
• Use a wide range of idea creation techniques (such as brainstorming)
• Create new and worthwhile ideas (both incremental and radical concepts)
• Elaborate, refine, analyze, and evaluate ideas in order to improve and maximize creative efforts
• Demonstrate imagination and curiosity
Work Creatively with Others 
• Develop, implement, and communicate new ideas to others effectively
• Be open and responsive to new and diverse perspectives; incorporate group input and feedback into the work
• Demonstrate originality and inventiveness in work and understand the real world limits to adopting new ideas
• View failure as an opportunity to learn; understand that creativity and innovation is a long-term, cyclical process of small successes and frequent mistakes
Implement Innovations 
• Act on creative ideas to make a tangible and useful contribution to the field in which the innovation will occur
COMMUNICATION AND COLLABORATION 
Communicate Clearly 
• Articulate thoughts and ideas effectively using oral, written, and nonverbal communication skills in a variety of forms and contexts
• Listen effectively to decipher meaning, including knowledge, values, attitudes, and intentions
• Use communication for a range of purposes (e.g., to inform, instruct, motivate, and persuade) and in diverse environments (including multi-lingual)
• Utilize multiple media and technologies, and know how to judge their effectiveness a priori as well as assess their impact
Collaborate with Others 
• Demonstrate ability to work effectively and respectfully with diverse teams
• Exercise flexibility and willingness to be helpful in making necessary compromises to accomplish a common goal
• Assume shared responsibility for collaborative work, and value the individual contributions made by each team member

Only 8% of Leaders Are Good at Both Strategy and Execution


In a 2013  survey of nearly 700 executives across a variety of industries, our firm asked respondents to rate the effectiveness of the top leaders of their companies. How many excelled at strategy? How many excelled at execution? The results are shown in the chart below. These responses are sobering: Only 16% of top leaders were rated very effective at either strategy or execution. Only 8% were very effective at both, while 63% were rated neutral or worse on at least one dimension.

понедельник, 6 ноября 2017 г.

Advanced analytics: A model answer




More than half of companies that invested over £10m in analytics outperformed their peers – double the proportion of those who invested £4-£10m.


Big data analytics has unleashed a wave of change throughout the business world and is now on the tip of every CEO’s tongue. We often hear about how analytics has transformed outcomes for businesses across sectors; whether it’s delivering ultra-personalised customer services, predicting consumer behaviour, or boosting productivity through automation.
Everyone wants a piece of the action, and companies are investing heavily in the rush not to be left behind. British businesses plan to double their current spending on analytics from £12bn to £24bn by 2020, while in the US it’s a similar story, with investment expected to increase from £58bn to £112bn.
And there is good reason to spend big. Our research, laid out in ‘Putting Analytics to Work’, shows that 52 per cent of companies that invested over £10m in analytics outperformed their peers – double the proportion of those who invested £4-£10m.
But while there is a clear link between the value invested in analytics and overall performance, this doesn’t tell the full story. The reality is that many attempts to build analytics into a business fall flat, with only 20 per cent of companies reporting a significantly positive commercial impact from their efforts. This was the catalyst for our report – what actually are the conditions for a successful analytics capability to flourish?
It may be common knowledge that capitalising on big data has the potential to impart a competitive advantage, but what is less well known is how to actually make analytics successful in the long term. This not only requires significant investment, but also ensuring the right conditions are in place.

Building the foundations

At a foundational level, obtaining support from the top of the organisation is critical. The CEO must champion analytics and drive the various changes needed across the business to make it work. This is reflected in the research, which finds that over half of top performing companies believe their senior leaders support progress in analytics. The patience to remain committed to the transformation over the long term is also essential to prevent fledgling efforts from fizzling out.
And crucially, the development of the analytics capability must be aligned with the overall business goals from day one to ensure analytics is being deployed in the right place to make a commercial impact. One thing analytics should not be is a hammer looking for a nail.

Pillars of success

On top of this foundation sit five imperatives that all contribute to enabling successful analytics. The most critical of these is ensuring the analytics capability is substantial enough to make a tangible impact that can be sustained. Small-scale pilot projects and ‘proof of concepts’ will quickly wither and die without the oxygen of broad support and adoption. Almost 70 per cent of the best performing companies have a centralised analytics capability, which is better placed to address problems from across the business and inform more pivotal strategic decisions.
In addition to having a central hub, analytics is most successful when it’s embedded into the organisation’s entire eco-system. That means all departments must be willing to change their processes to maximise analytics input, which in turn helps to identify the key pivot points where analytics can make the biggest difference.
For many people, the most obvious enabler of analytics is perhaps technology, which is often also the main trigger for investment; for example, when a company digitalises customer services. Technological applications – such as automating manual processes - also help embed analytics into an organisation. But technology isn’t much use if you’re not using the right data, which is why data quality is another key pillar of analytics success.
Ultimately, the analytics capability must continuously evolve over time to reflect wider changes taking place across the business and operating environment. A regular feedback and review process therefore has a key role to play in making sure analytics continues to boost the bottom line.  

Empowering people in a data-friendly culture

All of these elements must be woven into a culture that is informed about the potential of data, that encourages discovery and trust, and that ultimately embraces analytics as an integral part of everyday work. Our research confirms this, with about 80 per cent of meetings in the best performing companies including analytics or data elements.
Furthermore, both the providers and consumers of analytics must be informed about the value of analytics and how to take advantage of it. This means training the analysts about what the business needs, and training the business about how to benefit from the analysis.
From a talent standpoint, the analysts themselves must have a deep understanding of the commercial challenges facing the business and the ability to structure a technical solution accordingly. Our research suggests this is the real talent-related challenge for businesses trying to leverage big data analytics, as opposed to a global ‘drought’ of data scientists, which is often thought to be the problem. 
These imperatives also align with a general preference among companies to employ a pool of specialised people who are focused on tackling key questions, rather than equipping everyone with self-service analytics tools.

Considerations for business leaders


Advanced analytics is clearly here to stay. It sharpens the competitive edge for the best performers across the value chain and boosts sales and profits for those who adopt it. And as investment in analytics grows across sectors, the gap between the top and poor performers will only widen.
But investing money in analytics without adhering to at least some of the key conditions for success, such as having senior backing and changing culture, is likely to yield poor results.
CEOs embarking on a mission to build or expand their organisation’s analytics capabilities should start by asking their teams some important questions, including:
·         How can we improve the analytics capability given what we have available?
·         Which of the 10 imperatives should we focus on and in what order?
·         Which aspects can we accelerate with external support?
Finding the answers to those questions and allocating the right level of investment will help pave the way for success with analytics and for the organisation as a whole. 

суббота, 21 октября 2017 г.

What drives a company’s success? Highlights of survey findings


by Paul Leinwand and Cesare Mainardi


Survey snapshot

A Strategy& survey shows that companies find it harder to understand their own strengths than to understand their customers. By knowing themselves well and leveraging their distinctive strengths to build a clear identity, companies can outperform their peers. But many companies aren’t basing their strategies on this insight, the study finds. In fact, companies have widely divergent views on how to develop strategy, despite evidence that a capabilities-driven approach delivers the best returns.
We find that a capabilities-driven approach to value creation leads to higher returns, on average, than other ways of doing strategy. Capabilities-driven companies owe their success to having a truly distinctive way of providing value, a powerful set of capabilities, and coherence between their strategy and their capabilities. By contrast, companies that compete on the basis of economies of scale, lucrative assets, or diversification fare less well.
We also see that companies with a clear identity — standing for something unique and consistent over time — tend to perform better than others. But how do they develop that identity? Again, a capabilities-driven approach is the answer.
Finally, the survey shows why many companies find pursuing this kind of success so hard. Their approach to strategy gets in the way: They do strategy at the margins — with a short-term perspective and too many initiatives — instead of pursuing a strategy that promotes long-term success. Contrary to common belief, most companies’ problem with strategy is not insufficient understanding of the market, but rather insufficient knowledge of and reliance on their own distinctive strengths.
Companies that embrace the challenge of building and leveraging this self-knowledge are on their way to creating greater value.
“Many companies focus too much on the outside when developing their strategy, and don’t combine that market-back perspective with a clear view of what their organization is great at doing. In this survey, as in all the research we’ve done on the topic of value creation, we see that essential advantage lies within. A few differentiating capabilities drive a company’s identity and success.”
—Cesare Mainardi, chief executive officer, Strategy&
The 10 companies with the clearest identity*
  • Apple
  • BMW
  • Caterpillar
  • Coca-Cola
  • Honda
  • LVMH
  • Royal Dutch Shell
  • Toyota
  • Volkswagen
  • Walmart
* Identified by survey participants from a list containing the 15 largest public companies (by market capitalization) across regions in each of seven industries.

Key findings of the survey

Our findings provide critical insights into what drives success, the importance of a clear identity, and the top issues in strategic development.
What drives success?
The survey found that there is no dominant strategy or school of strategy. We asked survey participants to rate the importance of seven drivers of success, and their responses were surprisingly mixed. Economies of scale were rated as the most important driver of success, followed closely by powerful capabilities and lucrative assets.
For the best-performing companies, success — measured in terms of three-year growth of total shareholder return (TSR) — is attributable to what we call a capabilities-driven approach to strategy. These companies’ drivers of success most often include three distinct elements: a truly distinctive way of providing value, powerful capabilities, and coherence between the two.
Companies that owe their success to more asset-driven factors (economies of scale, lucrative assets, or diversification) have measurably lower performance.
Does identity matter?
Companies considered to have a clear identity — standing for something unique and consistent over time — have superior three-year TSR growth compared with companies that lack a clear identity.
In addition to promoting overall success, the three elements of a capabilities-driven strategy also drive a company’s strong identity, according to respondents.
Building a strong identity is very hard to do. The most challenging aspect is defining the identity and determining precisely how the company is going to add value for its customers.
What’s wrong with strategy development?
We asked respondents to rank the most problematic issues companies face in developing strategy. “Having too many strategic initiatives” was ranked as the biggest problem by more respondents (29 percent) than any other issue.
That was closely followed by “focusing too much on short-term performance improvement and too little on what will create long-term success” (27 percent of respondents).
Contrary to common belief, insufficient market focus is not the biggest problem — only 7 percent of respondents consider “ignoring external market forces” to be the most problematic issue.
Overall, only about one out of three respondents (36 percent) indicated that the top leaders of their companies were effective at both strategy development and execution, although both dimensions strongly correlate with company performance.

Key finding: Companies have widely divergent views about how to chase success

Exhibit 1: The world’s largest companies have divergent views on what drives success



  • We asked survey participants to identify the most important drivers of success for the three companies they know best among the 15 largest in their industry. We found that no approach is clearly dominant.
  • Pursuing economies of scale was perceived to be the most important success driver (score of 2.0), followed by powerful capabilities (1.8) and lucrative assets (1.6).
“The application of strategy to the business context is new — just about 50 years old. But in those 50 years we’ve seen countless theories, frameworks, and books being developed. The challenge now is that many companies pursue multiple theories of value creation at the same time.”
—Paul Leinwand, partner, Strategy&
Survey respondents’ perceptions of Apple and Microsoft help to illustrate the differences in how companies approach strategy. Respondents draw a very clear — and very distinct — picture of each company’s strategy.

Exhibit 2: Comparing drivers of success for Apple and Microsoft


  • Apple’s success is perceived to be primarily based on its distinctive way of providing value and the coherence between its strategy and its capabilities.
  • Microsoft’s success is perceived to be primarily based on its scale and lucrative assets.

Exhibit 3: Apple and Microsoft are perceived to have different strategic approaches


  • Apple is seen as having a much more focused approach to strategy. Respondents regard it as using a clear value proposition to target a specific customer segment and focusing on a few capabilities in which it achieves excellence.
  • Microsoft, on the other hand, is seen as following a more balanced approach. Respondents regard it as tailoring value propositions to various customer segments and being good across many capabilities rather than focusing on excellence in a few.

Key finding: Companies competing with a capabilities-driven approach are more successful

Exhibit 4: Companies’ performance depends on their sources of success


  • Although each of the seven success drivers listed in Exhibit 1 is used by a significant percentage of companies, they have very different impacts on companies’ success.
  • The more a company’s success is perceived to be capabilities-driven — based on a clear way to play, powerful capabilities, and coherence — the more successful the company tends to be (as measured by TSR growth over three years). Companies that are seen as most consistently following such a capabilities-driven approach include Apple, Caterpillar, Honda, PetroChina, SAP, Standard Chartered, Toyota, and Volkswagen.
  • Companies that are seen as competing on the basis of assets, scale, and, diversification have significantly lower TSR growth, on average, than companies that follow a capabilities-driven approach.
“Our findings are very much in line with our beliefs about capabilities. Successful companies choose a differentiating way of creating value for customers, build a bespoke system of capabilities that supports this way to play, and focus their activities on those areas that benefit from their unique strengths.”
—Cesare Mainardi, chief executive officer, Strategy&

“We have ample evidence that differentiation through capabilities leads to sustainable advantage. In fact, given the competitive intensity in today’s business environment, companies need more than just one or two great products to win in the long term — differentiation through capabilities is quickly becoming the only path to sustainable value creation in most industries. Coherent companies, in every industry we’ve studied, outperform their less coherent competitors.”
—Paul Leinwand, partner, Strategy&

Key finding: Companies with clear identities enjoy stronger performance

Exhibit 5: Companies with clear identities enjoy stronger performance


  • We asked survey participants to tell us how clear an identity the various companies in their industry have — that is, how clearly those companies are perceived to stand for something unique and consistent over time.
  • Their responses helped to demonstrate that a clear identity correlates with performance — the stronger the identity, the higher the company’s three-year TSR growth. The effect is significant: Companies whose identity is perceived to be clearer than the average have a three-year TSR growth that is more than 3 percentage points higher than that of their peers.

Exhibit 6: The clarity of a company’s identity depends on its sources of success


  • Companies with a clear identity compete based on the same three capabilities-related factors that drive success in general: a truly distinctive way of providing value, powerful capabilities, and coherence.
  • Companies that base their success on assets, scale, and diversification are perceived to have a weaker identity.

Key finding: Strategists’ biggest problems are having too many disconnected initiatives and not focusing on what will create long-term success

Exhibit 7: Too many initiatives and a short-term focus are the biggest issues for strategy development


  • Two issues emerged as the most problematic when we asked survey respondents to rate the significance of strategic issues: having too many strategic initiatives that are disconnected and focusing too much on short-term performance. In other words, companies aren’t addressing the fundamental questions of strategy that will allow them to create long-term success.
  • Contrary to common belief, insufficient market focus does not appear to be the problem — only 7 percent of respondents consider “ignoring external market forces” to be the most significant issue.
  • Overall, only about one third of respondents (36 percent) indicated that their leaders were effective at both answering the fundamental questions about strategy and keeping their company on track in execution.
“Companies rarely fail simply because they don’t understand the market, but many struggle because they don’t understand and leverage what is great about themselves.”
—Paul Leinwand, partner, Strategy&

“Most companies do strategy at the margins — they look forward from their current messy and incoherent states and pursue the same trends as anyone else in the industry. This set of incremental steps ultimately leads nowhere, because many companies are all chasing after the same small set of opportunities. What companies need to do is real strategy — they need to think bigger and more long-term, working toward a differentiated position that fits their capabilities.”
—Cesare Mainardi, chief executive officer, Strategy&

About the survey

Strategy& developed this survey to better understand what drives the success of the world’s largest companies. The survey assessed the relationship between companies’ approach to value creation and their performance, and studied the role that a company’s identity plays in its success.
We conducted a Web-based survey between February and August 2013 and invited readers of HBR.org and recipients of strategy+business enews and Strategy& Foresight to participate; 720 executives (including 192 at the C-suite level) completed the survey. Participants were asked to select up to three public companies within their industry (from a list of the 15 largest in each of seven industries) and comment on what drives success for those companies as well as their own company; to identify the main challenges companies face in strategy development; and to assess the role that a strong identity plays in promoting a company’s success.
To determine a company’s score for each of seven predefined success drivers, we allocated three points to the driver selected as most important, two points to the second most important, and one point to the third most important. We then normalized the scores so that the sum for the seven drivers equals 10. To enable a comparison across companies, scores for each driver were averaged over all companies.
Based on the survey responses and the company’s performance (as measured by three-year TSR growth from January 2010 to January 2013), we established a link between companies’ success drivers and their actual success.
Learn more about Strategy&’s full body of work on how companies build their essential advantage through capabilities-driven strategy at strategyand.pwc.com/CDS.


пятница, 20 октября 2017 г.

10 Principles of Organization Design

These fundamental guidelines, drawn from experience, can help you reshape your organization to fit your business strategy.



A global electronics manufacturer seemed to live in a perpetual state of re-organization. Introducing a new line of communication devices for the Asian market required reorienting its sales, marketing, and support functions. Migrating to cloud-based business applications called for changes to the IT organization. Altogether, it had reorganized six times in 10 years.
Suddenly, however, the company found itself facing a different challenge. Because of the new technologies that had entered its category, and a sea change in customer expectations, the CEO decided to shift from a product-based business model to a customer-centric one. That meant yet another reorganization, but this one would be different. It had to go beyond shifting the lines and boxes in an org chart. It would have to change the company’s most fundamental building blocks: how people in the company made decisions, adopted new behaviors, rewarded performance, agreed on commitments, managed information, made sense of that information, allocated responsibility, and connected with one another. Not only did the leadership team lack a full-fledged blueprint — they didn’t know where to begin.
This situation is becoming more typical. In the 18th annual PwC survey of chief executive officers, conducted in 2014, many CEOs anticipated significant disruptions to their businesses during the next five years as a result of global trends. One such trend, cited by 61 percent of the respondents, was heightened competition. The same proportion of respondents foresaw changes in customer behavior creating disruption. Fifty percent said they expected changes in distribution channels. As CEOs look to stay ahead of these trends, they recognize the need to change their organization’s design. But for that redesign to succeed, a company must make its changes as effectively and painlessly as possible, in a way that aligns with its strategy, invigorates employees, builds distinctive capabilities, and makes it easier to attract customers.
Today, the average tenure for the CEO of a global company is about five years. Therefore, a major re-organization is likely to happen only once during that leader’s term. The chief executive has to get the reorg right the first time; he or she won’t get a second chance.
Although every company is different, and there is no set formula for determining the appropriate design for your organization, we have identified 10 guiding principles that apply to every company. These have been developed through years of research and practice at PwC and Strategy&, using changes in organization design to improve performance in more than 400 companies across industries and geographies. These fundamental principles point the way for leaders whose strategies require a different kind of organization than the one they have today.
1. Declare amnesty for the past. Organization design should start with corporate self-reflection: What is your sense of purpose? How will you make a difference for your clients, employees, and investors? What will set you apart from others, now and in the future? What differentiating capabilities will allow you to deliver your value proposition over the next two to five years?
For many business leaders, answering those questions means going beyond your comfort zone. You have to set a bold direction, marshal the organization toward that goal, and prioritize everything you do accordingly. Sustaining a forward-looking view is crucial.

We’ve seen a fair number of organization design initiatives fail to make a difference because senior executives got caught up in discussing the pros and cons of the old organization. Avoid this situation by declaring “amnesty for the past.” Collectively, explicitly decide that you will neither blame nor try to justify the design in place today or any organization designs of the past. It’s time to move on. This type of pronouncement may sound simple, but it’s surprisingly effective for keeping the focus on the new strategy.
2. Design with “DNA.” Organization design can seem unnecessarily complex; the right framework, however, can help you decode and prioritize the necessary elements. We have identified eight universal building blocks that are relevant to any company, regardless of industry, geography, or business model. These building blocks will be the elements you put together for your design (see Exhibit 1).

The blocks naturally fall into four complementary pairs, each made up of one tangible (or formal) and one intangible (or informal) element. Decisions are paired with norms (governing how people act), motivators with commitments (governing factors that affect people’s feelings about their work), information with mind-sets (governing how they process knowledge and meaning), and structure with networks (governing how they connect). By using these elements and considering changes needed across each complementary pair, you can create a design that will integrate your whole enterprise, instead of pulling it apart.
You may be tempted to make changes with all eight building blocks simultaneously. But too many interventions at once could interact in unexpected ways, leading to unfortunate side effects. Pick a small number of changes — five at most — that you believe will deliver the greatest initial impact. Even a few changes could involve many variations. For example, the design of motivators might need to vary from one function to the next. People in sales might be more heavily influenced by monetary rewards, whereas R&D staffers might favor a career model with opportunities for self-directed projects and external collaboration and education.
3. Fix the structure last, not first. Company leaders know that their current org chart doesn’t necessarily capture the way things get done — it’s at best a vague approximation. Yet they still may fall into a common trap: thinking that changing their organization’s structure will address their business’s problems.
We can’t blame them — after all, the org chart is seemingly the most powerful communications vehicle around. It also carries emotional weight, because it defines reporting relationships that people might love or hate. But a company hierarchy, particularly when changes in the org chart are made in isolation from other changes, tends to revert to its earlier equilibrium. You can significantly remove management layers and temporarily reduce costs, but all too soon, the layers creep back in and the short-term gains disappear.
In an org redesign, you’re not setting up a new form for the organization all at once. You’re laying out a sequence of interventions that will lead the company from the past to the future. Structure should be the last thing you change: the capstone, not the cornerstone, of that sequence. Otherwise, the change won’t sustain itself.
We saw the value of this approach recently with an industrial goods manufacturer. In the past, it had undertaken reorganizations that focused almost solely on structure, without ever achieving the execution improvement its leaders expected. Then the stakes grew higher: Fast-growing competitors emerged from Asia, technological advances compressed product cycles, and new business models appeared that bypassed distributors. This time, instead of redrawing the lines and boxes, the company sought to understand the organizational factors that had slowed down its responses in the past. There were problems in the way decisions were made and carried out, and in how information flowed. Therefore, the first changes in the sequence concerned these building blocks: eliminating non-productive meetings (information), clarifying accountabilities in the matrix structure (decisions and norms), and changing how people were rewarded (motivators). By the time the company was ready to adjust the org chart, most of the problem factors had been addressed.
4. Make the most of top talent. Talent is a critical but often overlooked factor when it comes to org design. You might assume that the personalities and capabilities of existing executive team members won’t affect the design much. But in reality, you need to design positions to make the most of the strengths of the people who will occupy them. In other words, consider the technical skills and managerial acumen of key people, and make sure those leaders are equipped to foster the collaboration and empowerment needed from people below them.
You must ensure that there is a connection between the capabilities you need and the leadership talent you have. For example, if you’re organizing the business on the basis of innovation and the ability to respond quickly to changes in the market, the person chosen as chief marketing officer will need a diverse background. Someone with a conventional marketing background whose core skills center on low-cost pricing and extensive distribution might not be comfortable in that role. You can sometimes compensate for a gap in proficiency through other team members. If the chief financial officer is an excellent technician but has little leadership charisma, you may balance him or her with a chief operating officer who excels at the public-facing aspects of the role, such as speaking with analysts.
As you assemble the leadership team for your strategy, look for an optimal span of control — the number of direct reports — for your senior executive positions. A Harvard Business School study conducted by associate professor Julie Wulf found that CEOs have doubled their span of control over the past two decades. Although many executives have seven direct reports, there’s no universal magic number. For CEOs, the optimal span of control depends on four factors: the CEO’s tenure thus far, the degree of cross-collaboration among business units, the level of CEO activity devoted to something other than working with direct reports, and whether the CEO is also chairman of the board. (We’ve created a C-level span-of-control diagnostic to help determine your target span.)
5. Focus on what you can control. Make a list of the things that hold your organization back: the scarcities (things you consistently find in short supply) and constraints (things that consistently slow you down). Taking stock of real-world limitations helps ensure that you can execute and sustain the new organization design.
For example, consider the impact you might face if 20 percent of the people who had the most knowledge and expertise in making and marketing your core products — your product launch talent — were drawn away for three years on a regulatory project. How would that talent shortage affect your product launch capability, especially if it involved identifying and acting on customer insights? How might you compensate for this scarcity? Doubling down on addressing typical scarcities, or what is “not good enough,” helps prioritize the changes to your organization model. For example, you may build a product launch center of excellence to address the typical scarcity of never having enough of the people who know how to execute effective launches.
Constraints on your business — such as regulations, supply shortages, and changes in customer demand — may be out of your control. But don’t get bogged down in trying to change something you can’t change; instead, focus on changing what you can. For example, if your company is a global consumer packaged goods manufacturer, you might first favor a single structure with clear decision rights on branding, policies, and usage guidelines because it is more efficient in global branding. But if consumer tastes for your product are different around the world, you might be better off with a structure that delegates decision rights to the local business leader.

6. Promote accountability. Design your organization so that it’s easy for people to be accountable for their part of the work without being micromanaged. Make sure that decision rights are clear and that information flows rapidly and clearly from the executive committee to business units, functions, and departments. Our research underscores the importance of this factor: We analyzed dozens of companies with strong execution and found that among the formal building blocks, information and decision rights had the strongest effect on improving the execution of strategy. They are about twice as powerful as an organization’s structure or its motivators (see Exhibit 2).
A global electronics manufacturer was struggling with slow execution and lack of accountability. To address these issues, it created a matrix that could identify those who had made important decisions in the past few years. It then used the matrix to establish clear decision rights and motivators more in tune with the company’s desired goals. Sales directors were made accountable for dealers in their region and were evaluated in terms of the sales performance of those dealers. This encouraged ownership and high performance on both sides, and drew in critically important but previously isolated groups, like the manufacturer’s warranty function. The company operationalized these new decision rights by establishing the necessary budget authorities, decision-making forums, and communications.
When decision rights and motivators are established, accountability can take hold. Gradually, people get in the habit of following through on commitments without experiencing formal enforcement. Even after it becomes part of the company’s culture, this new accountability must be continually nurtured and promoted. It won’t endure if, for example, new additions to the firm don’t honor commitments or incentives change in a way that undermines the desired behavior.
You can often hasten the flow of information and create greater accountability by reducing layers. But if the structure gets too flat, your leaders have to supervise an overwhelming number of people. You can free up management time by adding staff, but if the pyramid becomes too steep, it will be hard to get clear messages from the bottom to the top. So take the nature of your enterprise into account. Does the work at your company require close supervision? What role does technology play? How much collaboration is involved? How far-flung are people geographically, and what is their preferred management style?
In a call center, 15 or 20 people might report to a single manager because the work is routine and heavily automated. An enterprise software implementation team, made up of specialized knowledge workers, would require a narrower span of control, such as six to eight employees. If people regularly take on stretch assignments and broadly participate in decision making, you might have a narrower hierarchy — more managers directing only a few people each — instead of setting up managers with a large number of direct reports.
9. Accentuate the informal. Formal elements like structure and information are attractive to companies because they’re tangible. They can be easily defined and measured. But they’re only half the story. Many companies reassign decision rights, rework the org chart, or set up knowledge-sharing systems — yet don’t see the results they expect.
That’s because they’ve ignored the more informal, intangible building blocks. Norms, commitments, mind-sets, and networks are essential in getting things done. They represent (and influence) the ways people think, feel, communicate, and behave. When these intangibles are not in sync with one another or the more tangible building blocks, the organization falters.
At one technology company, it was common practice to have multiple “meetings before the meeting” and “meetings after the meeting.” In other words, the constructive debate and planning took place outside the formal presentations that were known as the “official meetings.” The company had long relied on its informal networks because people needed workarounds to many official rules. Now, as part of the redesign, the leaders of the company embraced its informal nature, adopting new decision rights and norms that allowed the company to move more fluidly, and abandoning official channels as much as possible.
10. Build on your strengths. Overhauling the organization is one of the hardest things for a chief executive or division leader to do, especially if he or she is charged with turning around a poorly performing company. But there are always strengths to build on in existing practices and in the culture. Suppose, for example, that your company has a norm of customer-oriented commitment. Employees are willing to go the extra mile for customers when called upon to do so. They deliver work out of scope or ahead of schedule, often because they empathize with the problems customers face. You can draw attention to that behavior by setting up groups to talk about it, and reinforce the behavior by rewarding it with more formal incentives. That will help spread it throughout the company.
Perhaps your company has well-defined decision rights, wherein each person has a good idea of the decisions and actions for which he or she is responsible. Yet in your current org design, they may not be focused on the right things. You can use this strong accountability and redirect people to the right decisions to support the new strategy.

Conclusion

2014 Strategy& survey found that 42 percent of executives felt that their organization was not aligned with the strategy, and that parts of the organization resisted it or didn’t understand it. If that’s a familiar problem in your company, the principles in this article can help you develop an organization design that supports your most distinctive capabilities and supports your strategy more effectively.
Remaking your organization to align with your strategy is a project that only the top executive of a company, division, or enterprise can lead. Although it’s not practical for a CEO to manage the day-to-day details, the top leader of a company must be consistently present to work through the major issues and alternatives, focus the design team on the future, and be accountable for the transition to the new organization. The chief executive will also set the tone for future updates: Changes in technology, customer preferences, and other disruptors will continually test your business model.
These 10 fundamental principles can serve as your guideposts for any reorganization, large or small. Armed with these collective lessons, you can avoid common missteps and home in on the right blueprint for your business.