Is your business struggling with its adolescence?

Much like an adolescent teenager, the adolescent company struggles for emancipation from its parent-founder, according to Ichak Adizes in his book ‘The Pursuit of Prime’. The stakes are high during this wrenching rite of passage: nothing less than rebirth as an adult. Brave, teary-eyed, scornful, scared, the teenager zigzags into a new sense of self. Although we can accept the teenage years as a normal transition from dependence to self-reliance, we need to remember nothing grows without a struggle.

As long as the company does well, expanding revenues and market share, the board regards the founder or COO as a genius with a golden touch. When, however, profits decline and uncontrolled activity brings about a succession of managerial disasters, the board starts to view the same leader as an unguided missile.

What is going on? How did the company survive the stages of Infancy and Go-Go only to arrive at Adolescence once again to do battle?

The answer lies in understanding the dynamics of systems development. Leaders of adolescent organisations want law and order, predictability, acceptance and ‘ownership’ of decisions. They want a constitution, but one they can stand above – free to break the rules by which others must abide – and this won’t continue to work.

So how to address this in terms of the 6 aspects of management? Read more of this post

12 things managers must do to create a great workplace 5 of 12

5. My Supervisor Cares About Me

Gallup’s research indicates that employees don’t leave companies, they leave managers and supervisors. The impact that a supervisor has in today’s workplace can be either very valuable or very costly to the organisation and the people who work there.

Making sure that every employee has a quality relationship with someone who can guide them is one of the 12 key discoveries from a multiyear research effort by The Gallup Organization.

[Our objective was to identify the consistent dimensions of workplaces with high levels of four critical outcomes: employee retention, customer satisfaction, productivity and profitability. The research identified 12 dimensions that consistently correlate with these four outcomes -- dimensions Gallup now uses to measure the health of a workplace. An associated research effort, in which Gallup studied more than 80,000 managers, focused on discovering what great managers do to create quality workplaces.

As employees, we have all had unpleasant experiences with bad supervisors or managers. Many of us have also experienced the benefits of a good one. Employees see an amazingly clear difference between good and bad supervisors, according to Gallup evaluations. Yet, when we ask employees, "Do you want to be managed?" everyone says "No." Why is this? Because we automatically think of our bad experiences. What if their best supervisors could manage those employees? Would they want to be managed in that case? Yes. So, the issue is really this: What makes a great manager?

Gallup finds that great managers and supervisors possess identifiable talents or recurring patterns of thought, feelings and behaviors. These managers find a true sense of satisfaction when their employees grow and succeed, even if the employee's success surpasses that of the manager. Great managers intrinsically know how to match the right person with the right roles to produce the best possible results. They set expectations by defining the desired outcome. They don't dissect every role down to exact steps. They help people grow within a role instead of grow out of it. And they always try to bring out what was left in versus trying to put in what was left out.

Great supervisors genuinely care about the people they work with. They treat people as individuals rather than treating everyone in the same way. Supervisors serve as filters between broad organizational changes and employees. They help employees make sense of new initiatives and thus gain true acceptance and understanding. One could speculate that people are not resistant to change; they just have no one to explain how modifications will impact them and their jobs.

For years, Gallup has learned from surveys that the credibility of senior management is critical to employee perceptions of the organization. This led us to encourage CEOs and leaders to increase their visibility and create clearer communications. Then, three years ago, we made a discovery: For employees, the credibility of senior management is largely driven by the quality of relationships employees have with their supervisors. Thus, rather than feeling the need for a town-hall meeting, the CEO should feel compelled to ensure that all employees have caring relationships with their managers or designates.]

Please leave a comment, or phone me on 0412 921 292 if you’d like some help in your business to implement any of what you’ve read here.

There services of www.TEC.com.au may be of particular interest to business owners, CEOs, Managing Directors and General Managers.

How to survive business growth and expansion

The big message for the Go-Go stage of the corporate lifecycle, according to the Adizes model, is to get the company to stand on its own. Caught up in the chaos and excitement of growth, founders think there’s no time to set up effective production and administration systems. They must make time or they will find themselves in such messes as failing to deliver, or selling bad products. If the founder is not capable of institutionalising independent leadership, he will be in the founder’s trap of the business depending inextricably on him to survive. A company that grows with too much abandon will be undone by a project that demands more than its ad hoc systems can handle.

As we have seen in previous posts in this series, what is an asset in one stage of business development turns into a liability in another. A founder’s superb ability to ‘spot a deal’ has a troublesome counter-side during this Go-Go stage. The first taste of success for a founder is like swallowing a tasty minnow for a seagull – it sends her off, scanning the seas for yet another morsel, making deals, foraging for more joint ventures. While some seagull behaviour is normal, and we expect it, seagulls can make a real mess. They fly off, and when they appear they drop undesirable things on deck. Then they take off again and again, only to return later, unannounced, with more to unload!

“All growth is a leap in the dark, a spontaneous unpremeditated act without the benefit of experience.” Henry Miller

So how to handle this growth in terms of the six dimensions of management? Read more of this post

How founders give birth to new businesses

In his book ‘The Pursuit of Prime’, Adizes describes the early stage of business development as ‘Courtship to Cradle’. Moving through this first stage of a business feels a lot like ‘new romance’. It is driven by passion, without which a would-be entrepreneur never gets beyond the anxiety and confusion of those early days of uncertainty. Realists adapt to their environment, but the people who dare to be founders of businesses try to change their environment. Founders, therefore are not quite realistic, not even reasonable.  So how to they handle things under the 6 management categories?

Style

The courtship stage is inherently limited; founders suddenly decide to stop their dreaming and bring their ideas into fruition. Having conceived a grand idea, they grab it by the scruff of the neck and drag it to the next stage of the corporate lifecycle, Infancy. In infancy, we need doers, realists, overachievers, risk-takers, people who drive to the heart of a problem. This is not always present in the founder themselves – it requires both prophet and doer; a person who dreams and then wakes up to take action. If these elements are not balanced, there are ideas being churned out without any action, or plenty of action, but lacking inspiration.

When examination of a business in courtship reveals a founder committed to the continuous excitement of creating, we can be sure it will be a disaster without some balance. Unless there is a second player willing to take it through the process of pain and politics required to raise a company, the enterprise will be short-lived. Infancy is the time to do, not to dream and talk but to do.

Before a founder can delegate tasks for what needs doing however, the style is a controlling one – and this is as it should be. Despite all the talk about centralization, founders must control everything during the growing stages – obligation precedes delegation. Before they can delegate tasks, they need systems that inform others about what, how, when, and where tasks should be done. At the early stages, even founders themselves are still learning about the job, experimenting with how to do it, and making improvements on the fly. Read more of this post

Key management levers and when to apply them

To solve problems and move a company to Prime, Adizes advocates looking at the contributions of six classic managerial responsibilities:

  1. Style
  2. Structure
  3. Strategy
  4. Staffing
  5. Rewards
  6. Planning and goals

The offerings that each of these areas bring to a business are variable and different at every stage of the business lifecycle, so they form a framework for each of the forthcoming posts in this series.

As changes happen, each of the variables will contribute differently over time as appropriate to the stage of development.

“I think of a hero as someone who understands the degree of responsibility that comes with his freedom.” Bob Dylan

In order to lead a business to Prime, you must first get it to the healthy part of its current stage in the lifecycle, and prepare to advance it. Company leaders are like parents who know how to treat their child one way when it is a baby, and modify their parental approach as the child grows to adolescence and beyond. Read more of this post

Are your business problems terminal or healthy?

Diagnosing your stage of business development

Adizes theory of being able to reach and stay at the stage he terms ‘prime’, is based on his belief that the future of businesses is predictable and manageable. The first action step is to plot your position on his lifecycle curve. There are certain signs and indicative symptoms to identify stages of organisational development or decay.

Age, Size and Self-Control

Neither chronological age nor size determines the stage an organisation occupies on the corporate lifecycle. There are 108 year old companies which demonstrate flexibility, adaptation, change, and growth, and five year old companies that show age, staleness, predictability, and disconnection from their market.

The two conditions, which can be correlated to age and size but not necessarily caused by them, are flexibility and self-control. These are the central factors in a company reaching prime. Until prime, the company has been flexible but uncontrollable, and after prime it is controllable, but it has grown rigid.

Changing at Different Rates

It is not automatic that a company develops all areas at the same rate. For instance, in a young company, marketing and sales usually change rapidly while accounting stays locked in tried and true formulas, and concern for human resources has yet to emerge. This position reflects disintegration rather than integration – and herein lays one of the essential issues. We are healthy when we are a unified whole, whether psychologically or physically. When solving business problems, you look at what steps will bring the pieces together, rather than cause more disintegration.

“If we don’t change direction soon, we’ll end up where we’re going.” Professor Irwin Corey

There is also another element to diagnosing a company’s problems: you must differentiate between external integration and internal integration. External integration is that energy expended on identifying and satisfying clients needs, and internal integration is what it takes to coordinate the efforts within a company to produce the desired results. A company in it’s prime has developed equilibrium between both internal and external integration.

However, be careful not to over-simplify; all companies develop unevenly, and this is to be expected because systems develop their subsystems in sequence. An observation from Adizes, and consistent with my experience with most clients, is that changes to whatever position is diagnosed need to be incremental. Companies change from one stage to the next, perhaps rapidly, but there is no leap-frogging. Although rapid change brings with it torrents of problems, managers must be careful to assess which of those are critical, and which can be delegated or passed over. Moving a company through these necessary transitions first requires a conscious awareness (at company level, not just individually) of the need for assistance. This calls for openness between members of the organisation and honesty in dealing with one another. The higher the company’s self-awareness, the more receptive it will be to change.

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This is the second in a series of posts summarising Adizes approach to achieving and sustaining business prosperity.  If you’ve only just joined the discussion, the first post entitled ‘Is your business in its prime?‘ will give you an overview. Other posts in this series can easily be found by clicking the ‘Adizes’ tag.

If there is anything you would like to comment on in this or any of the other articles, please click the ‘Leave a comment’ button at the top of the post.

If you’d like help to address any of the matters raised, just give me a call on 0412 921 292 for a confidential discussion. Even if I can’t help you myself, I’ll probably know someone who can! As a TEC Chair (www.TEC.com.au) I have access to a worldwide network of resources and consultants.

How to achieve Tipping Point Leadership

How many managers face obstacles that include:

  • people locked into a stagnant culture,
  • limited resources,
  • demotivated staff, and
  • opposition from powerful interests?

A now famous article in the Harvard Business Review, titled ‘Tipping Point Leadership’ (W Chan Kim and Renee Mauborgne, April 2003) offers a helpful example of how to constructively tackle these issues, which I summarise here together with practical steps to apply in your own or any situation. Read more of this post

Do you believe every australian counts?

What about the Australian recorded in the 6 minute video below:

He could be anyone.  He could be you or me in a few years from now.

If you’d like to do something about it, for him, or for you, or for others you may know, or for Australians in general, then now is the time to act, while there is a once-in-a-lifetime window of opportunity, and while it’s being made easy.  Just visit http://everyaustraliancounts.com.au/emailleaderaction/ for details.

Is your business owner holding the company back?

It could be that he or she is stuck in ‘The Founder’s Trap’.  Maybe that person is you!

Most entrepreneurs want to make a lot of money and run the show. But research shows that it’s tough to do both. And if you don’t figure out which matters more to you, you could end up being neither rich nor king.

The attached article entitled ‘The Founder’s Dilemma‘ by Noam Wasserman – which appeared in the Harvard Business Review in 2008 – includes research, findings and practical suggestions for dealing with the tradeoffs between financial gains and control that every entrepreneur faces as their business grows.

If you’d like to do something about navigating this dilemma, consider attending my upcoming information breakfast specifically for business owners, CEOs, Managing Directors and General Managers.

Hiring your next CEO from within or outside?

“It is the responsibility of the Board to make sure it has the most talent available when it needs to make the decision” according to a recent article in The Boardroom Report, Volume 9, Issue 16, published on 24 August 2011 by the Australian Institute of Company Directors.  But there are complications with family businesses. And small businesses do not always have the scope to develop suitable candidates from within.  Should you look for a successor who is similar or different to the current CEO? Read more of this post

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