Showing posts with label CEO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CEO. Show all posts

Friday, April 14, 2023

two preferred senders of change messages


Based on Prosci's change management research report with 650 participants, employees prefer two primary senders of change messages. Not surprisingly, they also prefer specific message content from each of these senders. Immediate supervisors are the preferred senders of messages related to personal impact including:

  • How does this impact me? 
  • How does this impact our group?
  • How will this change my day-to-day responsibilities?
When it comes to personal issues, receivers want to hear from someone they know and work with regularly, namely their supervisor. 

CROs or executive leaders are the preferred senders of messages related to business issues and opportunities including: 
  • What are the business reasons for this change?
  • How does this change align with our vision and strategy? 
  • What are the risks if we do not change?

When it comes to business issues and why the change is needed, receivers want to hear from the person in charge. 



Wednesday, October 12, 2022

listening to learn


Leading companies today asks for a different level of self-awareness from CEOs. Previously they may often have succeeded by “listening to win” (focusing on comments that supported their view) or “listening to fix” (taking any opportunity to tell others how they would solve the problem). Sometimes such reflexes may be helpful, most obviously when the problem they need to solve is relatively straightforward. But more often than not, the problem before them is complex and asks that they develop a more curious stance, “listening to learn,” instead. 

This takes a different mindset. And it often goes against the grain of the way many CEOs and their reports were incentivized earlier in their careers, when they were rewarded for solving operational problems quickly and moving on. Now they may only succeed if they can hold the complexity for longer, and resist the quick answer, listening and discerning more carefully – and in a more inclusive way. 





Monday, September 26, 2022

overpaid CEO's


Now, when it comes to Wal-Mart, there's no two ways about it: I'm cheap. I think it's a real statement that Wal-Mart never bought a jet until after we were approaching $40 billion in sales and expanded as far away as California and Maine, and even then they had to practically tie me up and hold me down to do it. On the road, we sleep two to a room, although as I've gotten older I have finally started staying in my own room. We stay in Holiday Inns and Ramada Inns and Days Inns, and we eat a lot at family restaurants - when we have time to eat. A lot of what goes on these days with high-flying companies and these overpaid CEO's who're really just looting from the top and aren't watching out for anybody but themselves really upsets me. It's one of the main things wrong with American business today. 



Sam Walton

Sam Walton, Made in America by Sam Walton & John Huey. Bantam Books. 1992. p. 9

Sunday, September 18, 2022

chief editor of the company

 

Jack Dorsey is best known as the creator of Twitter and as the founder and CEO of Square, a mobile payments company. His Essentialist approach to management is a relatively rare one. At a dinner I attended recently where he spoke, he said he thinks of the role of CEO as being the chief editor of the company. At another event at Stanford, he explained further: "By editorial I mean there are a thousand things we could be doing. But there are only one or two that are important. And all of these ideas... and inputs from engineers, support people, designers are going to constantly flood what we should be doing... As an editor I am constantly taking these inputs and deciding the one, or intersection of a few, that make sense for what we are doing.



Greg McKeown

Essentialism: The Disciplined Pursuit of Less by Greg McKeown. Crown/Archetype. 2020. p.156, 157.

Sunday, August 28, 2022

under, over, through, or around


In terms of day-to-day, did I ‘do’ anything? Probably not. My role was to simply not let the organization back up. If anyone presented a roadblock, I told them to go under, over, through, or around … any way to make it happen.



Eric Pike, CEO, Pike Corporation

"How the CEO’s leadership in digital transformation can tip the scales toward success," by Benjamin FinziRich NandaAnh Nguyen PhillipsTom Schoenwaelder & Dr. Gerald C. Kane. Deloitte Insights. June 28, 2022

Saturday, August 27, 2022

the CEO is a change agent


The CEO is a change agent, recognizing that the world in their sector can be very different in a few years. They need to state their vision for what the industry or world will look like and then articulate how the company needs to change in order to adapt to that world.



Daniel Saks, CEO, AppDirect

"How the CEO’s leadership in digital transformation can tip the scales toward success," by Benjamin FinziRich NandaAnh Nguyen Phillips, Tom Schoenwaelder & Dr. Gerald C. Kane. Deloitte Insights. June 28, 2022

Saturday, November 9, 2019

one in five corporate executives are psychopaths

An Australian study has found that about one in five corporate executives are psychopaths – roughly the same rate as among prisoners. 

The study of 261 senior professionals in the United States found that 21 percent had clinically significant levels of psychopathic traits. The rate of psychopathy in the general population is about one in a hundred.

Nathan Brooks, a forensic psychologist who conducted the study, said the findings suggested that businesses should improve their recruitment screening. 

He said recruiters tend to focus on skills rather than personality features and this has led to firms hiring “successful psychopaths” who may engage in unethical and illegal practices or have a toxic impact on colleagues.


"1 in 5 CEOs are psychopaths, study finds." The Telegraph. September 13, 2016

Thursday, May 23, 2019

lonely at the top

The loneliness that often comes with being a CEO may seem like a small price to pay for the rewards, recognition, and power that come with the job. As the old joke goes, “It might be lonely at the top, but the view is terrific.”

But being isolated at the top can compromise your decision making and leadership effectiveness, both of which require having as much firsthand information about a situation as possible. Senior executives tend to be shielded from organizational problems and data; they are given limited and filtered information about their operations, employees, and customers. While time constraints make some of this filtering necessary, having a layer of handlers who make their own decisions about what the leader should or shouldn’t see exacerbates the isolation.

...deference to authority is deeply ingrained in most societies. So it’s natural for employees, even at the highest levels, to occasionally hold back opinions and feelings that they fear might contradict or irritate the boss...

So what can you do to reduce executive isolation?

...get out of the bubble. All senior leaders are surrounded by physical or virtual trappings of office — the formal decor, the board dinners, the financial reports, the assistants that manage travel and scheduling, the intensive calendar that leaves little time for reflection. To break through the isolation, you need to periodically escape... For example, when Xerox was undergoing its turnaround under Anne Mulcahy, in the early 2000s, each member of the senior team took responsibility for a small portfolio of key customers. This forced them to go meet these customers and hear how they felt about the company. Fidelity used to require all senior people to spend time fielding calls on their customer service line, which gave them direct contact with customers.

Executives can institute skip-level meetings, where they talk with lower-level teams (without their bosses being present) about business conditions, customer reactions, and how to implement strategies. They also can conduct town halls, where employees ask questions and engage in conversations. Creating these listening posts gives executives unfiltered data to factor into their decision making.

Finally, tell your senior team to push back when they disagree and to challenge your thinking. Make sure that you have team members who have the courage to speak up and can be critics. This is easier for some people than for others, so you should actively recruit or promote at least two or three people who will serve as important counterpoints. You need to have the strength of ego to let them challenge you, both privately and during team meetings, and to really listen to their ideas. It won’t always be easy, and sometimes you may need a coach to help you with this process.


"How to Overcome Executive Isolation" Harvard Business Review. February 2, 2017

Saturday, December 1, 2018

my job is curation of our culture

Last March, Microsoft unveiled Tay.ai, a Twitter bot that promised to usher in a new era of human-to-artificial-intelligence conversation.

Within hours, hackers turned Tay into a venom-spewing racist, and the project was quickly shuttered with a public apology.

In the old days of Microsoft, heads surely would have rolled.

But Satya Nadella, 49, a one-time company engineer who took the reins of the $500 billion tech giant three years ago this month, instead sent the Tay team a note of encouragement.

“Keep pushing, and know that I am with you,” he wrote in an e-mail, urging staffers to take the criticism in the right spirit while exercising "deep empathy for anyone hurt by Tay. (The) key is to keep learning and improving.”

The group responded with Zo, a new AI chatbot that debuted in December. So far, no issues.

“It’s so critical for leaders not to freak people out, but to give them air cover to solve the real problem,” Nadella says in an interview with USA TODAY. “If people are doing things out of fear, it’s hard or impossible to actually drive any innovation...”

"What I realize more than ever now is that my job is curation of our culture," says Nadella, who will explore this topic and others in a book due out this fall called Hit Refresh. "If you don't focus on creating a culture that allows people to do their best work, then you’ve created nothing.”


Sunday, October 14, 2018

CEO disease

[Psychologist Tasha] Eurich uses the term "CEO disease" to describe the phenomenon in which the higher you ascend on the corporate ladder, the less self-aware you become. Eurich recommends that all leaders encourage their staff to share honest feedback with them, even pinpointing a single person who can do that really well.


Thursday, October 4, 2018

the transformational CEO

Four key functions collectively define a successful role for the CEO in a transformation:

  1. Making the transformation meaningful. People will go to extraordinary lengths for causes they believe in, and a powerful transformation story will create and reinforce their commitment. The ultimate impact of the story depends on the CEO’s willingness to make the transformation personal, to engage others openly, and to spotlight successes as they emerge.
  2. Role-modeling desired mind-sets and behavior. Successful CEOs typically embark on their own personal transformation journey. Their actions encourage employees to support and practice the new types of behavior.
  3. Building a strong and committed top team. To harness the transformative power of the top team, CEOs must make tough decisions about who has the ability and motivation to make the journey.
  4. Relentlessly pursuing impact. There is no substitute for CEOs rolling up their sleeves and getting personally involved when significant financial and symbolic value is at stake.

Everyone has a role to play in a performance transformation. The role of CEOs is unique in that they stand at the top of the pyramid and all the other members of the organization take cues from them. CEOs who give only lip service to a transformation will find everyone else doing the same. Those who fail to model the desired mind-sets and behavior or who opt out of vital initiatives risk seeing the transformation lose focus. Only the boss of all bosses can ensure that the right people spend the right amount of time driving the necessary changes.


"The CEO’s role in leading transformation". mckinsey.com. Feb. 2007

Wednesday, August 29, 2018

what my job as CEO is not

The most powerful learnings for me in my journey as a CEO have been about what my job is not –

It is not my job to be a judge. My job is to give people the tools and visibility to assess themselves. People are fully capable of self-assessment and although I often give feedback, this is just an input which may or may not be relevant in the problem they are solving.

My job is not to problem solve. I have a natural love of problem solving so my natural instinct is to jump in and try to solve the problem. My true job is to make sure success is clearly defined and then hard as it is—step aside. One person has very limited experiences to draw from and we can only achieve success if everyone is problem solving together.


Friday, August 18, 2017

clear about the company's DNA

When a leader displays transparency, team members know exactly how they're doing and where they stand with performance. The leader is also willing to solicit feedback and give employees a voice on decisions. [Chip] Bergh's top employees have benefited from this approach, as they have helped shape Levi's company culture. He tells The Times:

When I first got here, I interviewed the top 60 people in the company, and I sent them questions in advance, including, What are the three things you think we have to change? What are the three things that we have to keep? What do you most want me to do? What are you most afraid I might do?
I had an hour scheduled for each of them, and by the end, I was really clear about the company's DNA, and the values that were really important to everyone who works here.


Monday, March 21, 2016

revealing vulnerability

Revealing vulnerability is counterintuitive for a CEO. In such an exposed role, it can feel as though demonstrating anything other than strength is seen as flawed, maybe even broken. Hurt argues that this is not the case: “Certainly, human beings work at your company, none of them are perfect. They’ll respect you for actually admitting when you’ve made a mistake. They’ll model it. You won’t have an air of bullshit in your company.”


Drake Baer (presentation by Bazaarvoice CEO Brett Hurt)
"You Aren’t Born Knowing How to Be a CEO" First Round Review. 7/2/2013



Sunday, March 20, 2016

CEO - the synthesis point

The CEO is a unique functioning role. He or she is the “synthesis point” where all vectors of the organization come together. “The CEO has the ability to look across the company and reinforce the vision.” Illuminating this path time and time again can be done on a range of scales. From holding coffee hours and book clubs to understanding the right time to sell the company, vision and long-term goals should be part of the constant conversation.


Drake Baer (presentation by Bazaarvoice CEO Brett Hurt)
"You Aren’t Born Knowing How to Be a CEO" First Round Review. 7/2/2013

Friday, February 19, 2016

your brand: the people who report to you

Reflecting on his time as CEO, Hurt emphasizes that there is no better way to enforce culture and values than by the way you hire. “You’ll be most defined as the CEO by the people [who] report to you. That’s going to be your brand.” Moving quickly at startup speed brings out the true integrity of your hires — both the good and the awful. 100 mph work speed is where your top players step up, the people Hurt describes as “born to change the world.”

The individuals you choose to bring onto the team speak volumes. With each new hire, the CEO reinforces the values of the company, highlighting the traits perceived as most valuable for the organization. The same concept is applicable to firing. Hurt clarifies, “If you fire brilliant jerks, it says to everybody, ‘that’s not going to be condoned.’ If you hire people that have real passion, love your calling, it’s going to feed on itself.” The CEO sets the tone.


Drake Baer (presentation by Bazaarvoice CEO Brett Hurt)
"You Aren’t Born Knowing How to Be a CEO" First Round Review. 7/2/2013