How Well are You Executing Corporate Strategy
In a study of 125,000 people representing more
than 1,000 companies, government agencies, and not-for-profits in over
50 countries, researchers found that three out of five companies rated
their organizations as weak at strategic execution.
If your company is already strong in strategic execution, you do not
need our training. If it is weak at strategic execution, you may need
it.
In the article in Harvard Business Review exploring this research, the
researches came to the conclusion that:
"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."
At every level, we have do make decisions that are both good
for our organization and good for our own position in the
organization. The contrast between companies that we able to
execute versus those who were not, the different was dramatic.
In companies strong on execution, 71% of individuals
understood that they needed to make decisions. Only 32% of
those in organizations
weak on execution had the same understanding. Sun Tzu's system
is invaluable because it quickly teaches people the basis of good
strategic decisions.
Moving Decisions to the Front Lines
In most companies, the basic thinking was that information had
to get to headquarters for certain strategic decision to be made. Though
there is a difference between how quickly information gets to headquarters
in good and bad companies ( 77% to 45%) the research found that the role of
headquarters was in identifying patterns and spreading best practices. This
was a coordinating role, not one of decision-making. The well-know
equipment maker, Caterpillar, for example found that the hierarchy no longer
made sense in terms of making business decisions. As one field executive
expressed it:
“It just took a long time to get decisions going up and
down the functional silos, and they really weren’t good
business decisions; they were more functional decisions.”
Caterpillar's CEO, Jim Owens, noted that by the time information
got to the top, it had been “whitewashed and varnished several times over
along the way.”
The research found that the higher decision were made in
the hierarchy, the poorer the quality of the decision was.
Pricing issues were a great example. Only the people on the
front lines can make pricing decisions based upon local
market condition, which different from moment to moment in
every market. When pricing decision were made further up in
the hierarchy, it had to be made on the basis of cost rather
than market.
Researches found that the more decision-making was moved
down in the organization, the better the information passed
to headquarters became. They came to the conclusion
that:
"Ironically, the way to ensure that the right information
flowed to headquarters was to make sure the right
decisions were made much further down the organization.
By delegating operational responsibility to the people
closer to the action, top executives were free to focus
on more global strategic issues.:
The Flow of Information
There is no question about where the best information
for making decision resides: at the front-lines of the
competitive battle.
The research found that
61% of individuals
in strong-execution organizations agreed that field and line
employees have the information they need to understand the
bottom-line impact of their decisions. This figure plummets to
28% in weak-execution organizations.
However, there is a question about where this
information goes.
As the pace of information increases, one key to the
success of the enterprise is to move information across
internal boundaries. Organization cannot afford to
second-guess their front-line decision makers or the
flow of information will stop. In companies the poorly
executed strategy, 71% of people asked were worried abut
their decision being second guessed. The predictable
result is that information about decision was kept
secret and almost 80% of those in the survey verified
that information did not flow in these companies.
However, even in the best companies, there is a problem
with information flow. Almost half (45%) of those in
companies that were good at execution felt that
information flowed freely between the various parts of
the organization. At the Institute, we see this as
symptomatic of the fact that most organization lack a
vocabulary for discussing competitive situations on the
front line. One of the benefits of our training is that
it gives the entire organization a standard vocabulary
and framework for communicating competitive and
strategic issues.
If the key to success is moving more and more responsibility
for competitive decisions to the front-lines, organization must
rethink training. They must give their front-line people the
perspective and tools they require to make those decision. This is
why another separate research project came to the
fascinating conclusion that the best
corporate strategy is really
being created at the front-line not at corporate headquarters
at all.