Booz&Co:Today's Execs Must Lead Beyond the Org Chart

Mobilizing the "Informal" Organization Is a Strategic Imperative That Cannot Wait, but Few Corporate Leaders Make It a Priority, or Even Know How to Address It Energizing the "Soft" Side of a Company Can Deliver Hard Results, Once Leaders Learn Disciplined, Bottom-Up Approaches, According to LEADING OUTSIDE THE LINES, New Book From Booz & Company by Jon Katzenbach and Zia Khan
NEW YORK, NY--(Marketwire - April 26, 2010) - Businesses need to work harder and be smarter about engaging and mobilizing their organizations. Increasingly, top-down imperatives need help from the bottom and cross-organizationally as well. To compete effectively, especially in a slow-growth economy, no company can afford to leave key resources idle -- especially the creativity, problem solving skills, speed, and adaptability that reside in the human side of the enterprise.
According to the just-published Leading Outside the Lines: How to Mobilize the (in)Formal Organization, Energize Your Team, and Get Better Results (Jossey-Bass, April 2010, www.leadingoutsidethelines.com) by Booz & Company Senior Partner Jon Katzenbach and Rockefeller Foundation Vice President of Strategy and Evaluation Zia Khan, smart companies have discovered that the best way to create lasting value for their businesses is to nurture informal and non-hierarchical initiatives, rather than mainly relying on formal top-down "rules of engagement."
What is the informal organization? It is NOT merely the opposite of the formal -- nor is it some mysterious force to be ignored, feared, or quashed. It is a living network of connections, interactions, beliefs, and influences at work in the organization at all times, the authors say.
The balance point between the formal and informal will be different for each organization, depending on size, strategy, developmental phase, and other factors, according to Katzenbach and Khan. But the core of today's most critical challenge is the same for every company: leveraging informal motivators, values and communities to get behaviors aligned with formal financial and operational objectives.
"There are, in fact, ways to influence the informal elements of an institution's organization and culture to achieve concrete, quantitative objectives. The informal approaches do not need to be fuzzy and unsystematic. They can be practical and teachable," says Katzenbach.
Balancing the Formal and Informal Is the Goal: And It Can Take an Organization to New Heights
"The most successful organizations are ahead of the curve in the way they balance the formal and informal," said Khan. "They don't just ensure that they have well-defined and effective formal approaches to compensation and reward, including pay, benefits, bonuses, and recognition. They also make sure that employees have emotional sources of motivation that commit them to specific results -- in ways that the formal mechanisms cannot."
Leading Outside the Lines in Action
The outcomes of effectively balancing the formal and informal -- i.e., "leading outside the lines" -- can include:
The book describes informally "boosted" behavior changes at a range of companies -- changes that led to dramatically improved performance results. For instance:
These organizations succeeded through the integration of informal and formal leadership behaviors, which linked personal values and emotional motivations. These successes stand in contrast to the formally driven shortfalls that preceded the integrated initiatives within the companies.
A Guide to Managing Culture
Organizations must learn how to develop their workforces so people are motivated outside the formal reward system, collaborate across organizational boundaries, and make the right decisions quickly with little guidance from formal sources, according to the authors. "This requires a level of insight, risk-taking, and trial-and-error responsiveness," says Katzenbach.
That's why effective leaders understand...
Key Imperative: Marshal "Fast Zebras," Master Motivators, and Pride Builders
Effective organizations translate vision, targets, and strategies into personal purpose, accomplishments and choices that employees can understand and feel good about. They accomplish this by deploying their "fast zebras," "master motivators," and "pride builders."
Focus on the Real World, Focus on Measurement, Focus on Results
Harnessing the power of the informal must be focused on measurable results, according to Katzenbach and Khan. Tracking the performance of the formal organization is commonplace because changes in strategies, structures, and processes are readily measurable. But measuring changes to the informal organization is equally important and requires equal discipline, they said.
However, too many executives abdicate management of the informal organization, choosing to believe that, if left alone, it will fall in line with the formal. But, in reality, simply formalizing a new set of rules, programs, and structures will not pull the company's culture along. The book reminds readers that...
Says Katzenbach, "Because executives don't know how to influence negative cultural elements by informal means, they push harder on formal levers. But the informal organization is impervious to such approaches."
No Time to Wait: Your Culture Is Working For You or Against You... Right Now
Two of the greatest challenges now facing U.S. companies are speed and adaptability, according to Katzenbach and Khan. But these are not strengths of the "formal" organization. In fact, the authors believe that formal structures often get in the way of speed and adaptability. The skills most vital to recovery are embedded in the informal organization.
"Leading the informal organization out of the woods has to start right now," says Katzenbach. "It cannot wait on strategic planning, or corporate restructuring, or some other formal initiative."
"Informal elements of corporate culture are always at work, and they are either working for you, or against you," adds Khan. "By not engaging the informal organization, executives risk that negative cultural influences will slow the company down, or even impeded, its recovery."
For more information or to schedule an interview, contact Frank Lentini of Sommerfield Communications at (212) 255-8386 or lentini[at]sommerfield.com. Please visit www.leadingoutsidethelines.com for more information on Leading Outside the Lines.
About Booz & Company
Booz & Company is a leading global management consulting firm, helping the world's top businesses, governments, and organizations.
Our founder, Edwin Booz, defined the profession when he established the first management consulting firm in 1914.
Today, with more than 3,300 people in 60 offices around the world, we bring foresight and knowledge, deep functional expertise, and a practical approach to building capabilities and delivering real impact. We work closely with our clients to create and deliver essential advantage.
For our management magazine strategy+business, visit www.strategy-business.com.
For information on the Katzenbach Center visit www.booz.com/katzenbach_center.
Visit www.booz.com to learn more about Booz & Company.
About the Authors
Jon Katzenbach is a senior partner at Booz & Company and leads The Katzenbach Center, where promising new approaches in leadership, culture and organization performance are developed for client application. His consulting career has been largely focused in these areas, and spans several decades across three different professional books, including Wisdom of Teams, Peak Performance and Why Pride Matters More Than Money. He received his MBA from Harvard, where he was a Baker Scholar. Jon is a founding partner of Katzenbach Partners.
Zia Khan is vice president for strategy and evaluation at the Rockefeller Foundation, which supports innovations that help people share globalization's benefits more equitably and strengthens their resilience to social, economic, health and environmental challenges. Zia also advises leaders on the integration of strategy and organization as a senior fellow of the Katzenbach Center, which he co-founded with Jon Katzenbach, and as an individual consultant. Prior to joining the Rockefeller Foundation, Zia established and led Katzenbach Partners' San Francisco office and West Coast Practice and pioneered the firm's work on the informal organization. Zia holds a B.S. from Cornell University and an M.S. and Ph.D. from Stanford University. He currently lives in Brooklyn, NY.
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