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Chapter 7 : Overcoming Key Organizational Hurdles . Clete Donovan Andrew Merlino Rachel Harless Jessica Moore Priscella Cones Joel Hand Amanda Carey . Overcoming Key Organizational Hurdles. Four Hurdles Walking employees up to the need for a strategic shift. Limited resources
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Chapter7: Overcoming Key Organizational Hurdles Clete Donovan Andrew Merlino Rachel Harless Jessica Moore Priscella Cones Joel Hand Amanda Carey
Overcoming Key Organizational Hurdles • Four Hurdles • Walking employees up to the need for a strategic shift. • Limited resources • Motivation • Politics
Tipping Point Leadership In Action • NYPD • Bill Bratton (police commissioner) from 1994-1996 • Felony crime fell 39%, murder fell 50%, theft fell by 35% • Policemen respected Bratton greatly • Crime rates continue to fall after Bratton’s departure
Disproportionate Influence Factors • Tipping point leaders answer these questions • What factors/acts exercise a disproportionately positive influence on breaking the status quo? • How to get the most bang for your buck of resources? • How to motivate key players to aggressively move forward with change? • How to knock down political roadblocks that often trip up the best strategies?
Break Through the Cognitive Hurdle • In many turnarounds and corporate transformations… • The hardest battle: making people aware of the need for a strategic change. • “There are only two performance alternatives: to make the performance targets or to beat them.”
What NOT to do • Insist on improvement on numbers • Figures can be manipulated or misleading • Communicating through numbers • Doesn’t stick with people • Case for change feels abstract • Lack of communication on efforts
Tipping Point Leadership • Doesn’t rely on numbers to break through the organization’s cognitive hurdle • “Seeing is believing” • Making people see and experience harsh reality first hand • Builds on this insight to inspire a fast change in mindset that is internally driven of people’s own accord
Jump the Resource Hurdle After deciding a strategic shift will be made, leaders must ask: Do we have the money to spend on necessary changes?? Typical leaders do one of two things: -Cut ambitions, also cutting work force morale -Fight for more money, a long, politically focused process Tipping point leaders concentrate on increasing the value of current resources by focusing on three factors: -Hot spots -Cold spots -Horse trading
Redistribute Resources to Your Hot Spots • Hot spots are activities that have low resource input but high potential performance gains • NYPD ex: -Sharpest drop in subway crime with officers targeted at hot spots versus increasing police force size. -Major reallocation of staff and resources within the narcotics unit • By simultaneously assessing the NYPD’s cold spots, the resources were available to do this.
Redirect Resources from Your Cold Spots • Cold spots are activities that have high costs but low performance impact • NYPD subway ex: • Processing criminals in court was costing the department valuable time officer’s could be using to patrol the subway • Bratton’s creation of “Bust Buses” • Restored buses became mini police stations and brought processing centers to the criminals • Cut processing time from sixteen hours to only one
Engage in Horse Trading • Horse Trading involves trading excess resources for another unit’s excess to fill remaining resource gaps. • NYPD ex: Chief of NY Transit Police Dean Esserman played key horse trader along with Bratton • Transit unit needed office space and had an excess of unmarked cars, where as the NY Division of Parole was short of cars, but had excess office space. • Bratton refocused resources and broke out of the red ocean and executed its blue ocean strategy.
Jump the Motivational Hurdle • Executing Blue Ocean Strategy • Alert employees and let them know what can be done. • How to motivate the mass of employees fast and at a low cost?
1. Kingpins • The key influencers in an organization. (natural leaders, well respected, persuasive) • EX: Bratton, zoomed in on the 36,000 officers.
2. Kingpins in a Fishbowl • Fishbowl MGMT- putting them in the “spotlight” • For it to work it must be based on transparency, inclusion, and fair process. • EX: Bratton called a meeting for the ranked officers and “Kingpins” • Motivation
3. Atomize to get the organization to change itself • Atomization- framing of the strategic challenge. • To make NYC a safer place. • Bratton’s BOS shifted from him to each 36,000 officers.
Knock over the Political Hurdle • Youth and Skill will win out over age and treachery. FALSE • Even the best and brightest are regularly eaten alive by politics, intrigue, and plotting. • Even if an organization has reached the tipping point of execution, there are powerful interests that will resist the changes. • The more likely change becomes, the more fiercely and vocally these negative influencers will fight to protect their positions.
Overcome Political Forces • Leveraging Angels (those who have the most to gain) • Silencing Devils (those who have the most to lose) • Getting a consigliere on top management team (an insider who knows who will fight or support you)
Secure a Consigliere on your Top Management Team • Most leaders focus on building a management team that has functional skills such as: • Marketing • Operations • Finance • Tipping point leaders engage a role few other executives think to include: a consigliere
Leverage your Angels and Silence your Devils • To overcome political hurdles you should ask yourself: • Who are my devils? Will they fight me? Who will lose the most by the future blue ocean strategy? • Who are my angels? Who will naturally align with me? Who will gain the most buy the strategic shift? • Don’t fight alone. Identify detractors and supporters, and strive to create a win -win outcome for both • Isolate detractors by building a broader coalition with your angels before the battle begins
Leverage your Angels and Silence your Devils • The key to winning over your devils (detractors) is by knowing all their likely angles of attack and building up counterarguments with facts and reason
Challenging Conventional Wisdom • Tipping point leadership, by contrast, takes a reverse course. • By transforming the extremes, tipping point leaders are able to change the core fast and at low cost to execute their new strategy.
Leveraging Tipping Point Leadership • Execute a strategic shift through leveraging tipping point leadership. • By focusing on factors of disproportionate influence, you can actualize a strategic shift. • Focus on acts of disproportionate influence. • This is a critical conventional leadership component for making blue ocean strategy happen