I believe it is a good thing when professional corporate planners
construct strategic plans. It is an even better thing when people in the
organization participate in the formulation of strategic priorities. But
the best thing about strategic leadership is frequently missed by scholars
and practitioners alike. The missing link is right under our nose. It is
so obvious that it seems embarrassing.
The real key to
strategic leadership lies with each member of the organization from
the top to the bottom. Everyone can and should become a champion of
strategy within their function or area of responsibility. If a company is
to truly become or remain competitive, it needs to get everyone into the
strategic leadership game, each person a strategic contributor. This means
the organization needs more than just one grand business strategy. It
needs an army of strategic thinkers not foot soldiers without direction or
a cause of their own to pursue in conjunction with the overall business
strategy.
To ensure future organizational success, people need to anticipate and
get ahead of the game by figuring out what they need to be doing now to
prepare for the future. This is a win-win deal: the organization gets an
entire workforce that is more proactive and innovative, and the individual
builds long term success, productivity, and eliminates the threat of
obsolesce and irrelevance.
It means that people have to do more than participate in formulating
organization strategy and business plans. They have to see themselves as
strategic entrepreneurs over their own job. If people feel inspired to
lead and execute their bottom-up strategic process, organizations can
unlock the minds and talents of everyone to be a step ahead. What we are
suggesting is that organizations need strategy to "filter down" from the
top and then "filter up" from the bottom.
There is no question that personal or team strategy should be linked to
and aligned with the grand corporate business strategy. But, personal
strategy should also contain independent goals and plans that will address
long term needs, opportunities, and threats that can only be perceived by
those embedded in the organization. In fact, exercising individual
strategic
leadership unleashes creativity, innovation, and motivation. What
better way to motivate people than encouraging them to pursue personalized
priorities that will help them add value to the business over the long
haul. It also helps them to achieve more of the elusive power that Abraham
Maslow coined as "self actualization." By promoting individual strategic
leadership, you will help your organization retain talent, motivate people
to achieve their daily work tasks, and empower them to work on longer term
strategic challenges and initiatives that challenge the status quo.
Fundamentally, it all boils down to having supervisors, managers, and
key contributors operating like small businesses. People have to be
entrepreneurially minded about the future. They need to read trends,
identify and target ambitious opportunities and unmet needs, and innovate
more. People will always have to accomplish their daily demands and
emergencies - that goes without saying. However, long term sustained
organizational success means we need everyone to engage in
strategic
leadership and continually tests ideas and channels energy and
resources into their future success.
When people understand how they fit and why they matter, they will
respond with commitment and give that extra discretionary performance that
managers want. If people are encouraged to challenge the status quo and to
formulate personal strategic initiatives, your organization can surge
beyond the competition and become an unstoppable force in the market
place.
About the Author
Steven J. Stowell, PhD has been assisting organization
around the world in the areas of
Strategic
Leadership, Strategic Thinking, Coaching Skills, and Leadership
Development.
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