Too much busyness keeps us from becoming who we might have become, had we
given ourselves the space. This is a tricky reality for modern enterprises and
the people tasked with strategic thinking within them.
My area of specialty is collaborative business culture. I am a strategic advisor to
senior executives at some of the world's biggest companies, many of which are
in a state of transformation.
Culture is a complex issue. While every organization faces its own
challenges, I can share a few that are common to most senior executives within
enterprises in the midst of a modern transformation.
Strategists Need Time to Think
Chaos will always be easier than simplicity to achieve, and as a result, we
will often feel frazzled, with our backs against the wall. But if you are in
charge of strategy within your organization, you need to give yourself time to
concentrate. Period. If you aren't regularly scheduling blocks of time to focus
and allow your brain to play out various future scenarios, then you're just toggling back and forth and losing the
opportunity to live up to your full potential as a strategist.
The Corner Office Fantasy
Someone once told me that in the military, as soon as someone has a star on
his shoulder, he starts managing his career and loses sight of the
organization's goals. I don't have military experience, but I understand what
he meant. It's like the old corner office fantasy, and the steps once taken to
get there. In an enterprise, as budgets shift and shrink, those who can balance
their own short term perspectives, frustrations and ambitions against the long
term health of the organization are the most valuable leaders.
The path now has changed, and the ones who get ahead now are those who see
new opportunities in new dynamics. Advancement has shape-shifted. The new
leaders are energetic, visionary, and not afraid to take risks on their way to
the top.
Seeing the Big Picture
The complexity of some of the world's biggest companies is staggering, and
in the past, the sheer scope of so many moving parts required silos. That's
changing now, thanks in large part to creative thinkers and great algorithms.
This new dynamic has created the crushing need for a matching mindset shift on
the same scale. This isn't easy, and it requires trust.
Trust
Lots of teams claim to have it, few do. Trust is a hard concept to nail
down. What does it mean, really? That you believe someone will do what you'd
like them to do, and when they don't, they've violated your belief in them? No.
Trust means that you believe in someone else's ability and strength. With
things changing so quickly, no one person knows or understands everything. Many
large companies are now focused on learning to take risks, which is an unusual
leap for many big enterprises accustomed to moving at a slow pace. It's
important to cultivate a level of trust that gives team members at the most
senior level the sense that they have space to explore this new mindset, and to
rely on each other's strengths as they go.
I don't mean to suggest that putting these concepts into practice is
easy--but it is necessary. And when you're at your busiest, surprise yourself
by giving yourself space to think, to walk on the beach and find empty chairs
that seem as if they were put there just for you to stop, catch your breath and
let an idea arise. It just might be the thing that changes your team's focus
for the better, contributes to the big picture, and justifies all the trust
your colleagues have in your abilities.
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