5 Keys to Leading in the Great Acceleration

August 13, 2020 Jay Campbell

 

The business world has always moved fast. Now it’s in overdrive.

We’ve been talking internally about the “Great Acceleration” for a few months now, so it was fun to see McKinsey report on the concept in a recent piece. One quote dramatically summed up what is happening: “Compared with the Industrial Revolution, we estimate that this change is happening ten times faster and at 300 times the scale, or roughly 3,000 times the impact.”

The Great Acceleration is reshaping businesses and leadership.
The corporate model of centralized, hierarchical decision making is looking increasingly archaic in a world that is moving at blistering speed. A new model is emerging, one with more distributed decision making at the peripheries of the organization. It’s an approach that lets companies be agile instead of reactive.

Constant innovation is another requirement in the Great Acceleration. But sustained innovation is not a top-down approach driven from above. Breakthroughs occur because managers and individuals make incremental improvements with customers in mind.

Leaders Are the Key

An article by Jim Clifton from Gallup Research suggests that the quality of your organization’s managers and team leaders is the single biggest factor for long-term success. Further Gallup research finds that managers account for at least 70% of variance in employee engagement scores across business units.

Creating a culture that promotes collaboration and communication is essential if a company is to flourish in the Great Acceleration. Consider how much time is wasted in typical businesses because people have different agendas. Because they view the goals of others as unimportant. Because they are unclear on the overarching objective. Lack of candor, fear of pointing out a problem, and resistance to brainstorming dooms untold numbers of projects that could have transformed an organization.

Companies with dysfunctional cultures can’t compete over the long haul. Cultures where people support each other’s goals, trust each other, and communicate open-mindedly and candidly move much faster and win the race.

To thrive in the Great Acceleration, organizations must better leverage the contributions and creativity of every member of every team. But how do you help employees realize their potential—and, as Ken Blanchard says, “bring their brains to work”?

Five Disciplines of the Accelerated Leader

Blanchard research shows that leaders are the critical link between organizational vitality and employee work passion. A positive relationship creates many important benefits, including employee passion, customer devotion, and organizational vitality.

Here are five disciplines the leader of the future must demonstrate.

  1. Adapt leadership style to every situation. A one-size-fits-all leadership approach really never worked. And it’s utterly obsolete in the Great Acceleration. Leaders must give their people the support and direction they need by adapting to the demands of the moment. In short, they must lead situationally.
  2. Develop people so they reach peak productivity. Every employee can contribute and every employee deserves to be amazing. The Great Acceleration demands that companies help all employees unleash their potential. This means leaders must guide people to projects that build their skills, help them become successful and self-reliant in their roles, and have inspiring career development conversations.
  3. Set goals dynamically. When conditions are stable, goals don’t need to change that often. But when conditions are changing rapidly, leaders are better served by setting shorter-term goals and revisiting them frequently. This requires leaders who are more flexible, agile, and willing to change people’s goals regularly. If leaders aren’t changing goals and canceling projects, they are probably doing something wrong.
  4. Run experiments continuously. Many employees adopt a wait-and-see attitude towards innovation and change. To counteract this, leaders should role model risk taking and experimentation, and encourage others to do so as well. They should involve all their people in creative problem solving and change initiatives, and they should track experiments and celebrate both successes and failures as necessary parts of the process. When all leaders encourage incremental innovation, the organization sprints on a thousand feet.
  5. Develop relationships built on trust and candor. Moving at the speed of the Great Acceleration is impossible if trust is absent. It rests with leaders to create a culture where people know their ideas will be heard and respected. This happens when managers care about their people, encourage their development, and help them succeed. Only then can collaboration and creativity flourish.

The changes being brought about by the Great Acceleration have just begun. Despite all the uncertainty, the critical role strong leadership will remain a constant. Consider how these five disciplines can be built into your leadership and development efforts.

To learn more about developing leaders with the flexible skills to guide people in these change-filled times, be sure to check out the free resources available in The Ken Blanchard Companies’ Research & Insights section.
This is a pivotal and turbulent time. Blanchard is committed to helping you navigate it successfully.

 

About the Author

Jay Campbell

Dr. Jay Campbell is the Chief Product Officer for Blanchard, responsible for the development and management of the company’s portfolio of product offerings. He coordinates Blanchard’s research efforts on leadership topics, training effectiveness, and new content areas. Jay has degrees in Engineering and Economics from Vanderbilt University, an MBA from Boston College, and a Doctorate in Leadership and Organizational Change from the University of Southern California.

More Content by Jay Campbell
Previous Resource
Two Rival Functions in the Company Constantly Fighting? Ask Madeleine
Two Rival Functions in the Company Constantly Fighting? Ask Madeleine

Dear Madeleine, I run operations for a regional (UK/Europe) division of a real estate and relocation compan...

Next Resource
Lost Your Motivation? Ask Madeleine
Lost Your Motivation? Ask Madeleine

Dear Madeleine, I am a director in a global manufacturing company. I manage managers and I am responsible f...