5 Leadership Blind Spots That Limit Your Ability to Keep Up With Change
While the willingness and ability to change is recognized and espoused by every business owner or founder I am asked to advise, far too many of you seem to be stuck in a rut, or very slow to actually decide what changes are necessary to survive and thrive.
You may not be blind to the changing market and technology, but being blind to internal traps that can be just as devastating.
I saw this challenge of inertia described very well in a new book Transforming the Clunky Organization by
Samuel B. Bacharach. From his leadership consulting with a host of
companies, clunky and innovative, he explains why owners and executives
fall into traps of inertia and he details the critical pragmatic
leadership skills needed to regain the required momentum.
Here is our joint list of some common traps that you and your company leaders must avoid at all costs:
1. Too satisfied with how things are going, or status quo.
The
status quo trap is set when things have gone well for a while, and you
are too busy to look ahead to see what's around the corner, or commit
time and resources into developing the next generation of innovative
ideas.
Then when market demand slows, you are not able to react in time.
For
example, Blockbuster was so busy expanding its hugely profitable video
rental business, adding stores at a breakneck rate, that it failed to
really take notice of new entrants like Netflix with no late fees,
Redbox's automated kiosks, and video-on-demand.
The result was a major change in the industry, and Blockbuster disappeared.
2. Throw money into a sinking project, hoping to save it.
This
bailing-too-late trap is when you make a big investment in a venture
that doesn't take off, but you refuse to abandon it or pivot because of
sunk costs, with the hope of success just over the horizon.
The result is a business damaged past the point of recovery, instead of just dented.
I
see this often as an angel investor, approached by desperate
entrepreneurs who have spent all their resources over a period of years
on a failing solution, but are still convinced that one more cash
infusion will turn the curve from down to up.
At this stage, investors won't believe that more money for sales and marketing will turn the tide, so we all lose.
3. Tackle a new market or technology you don't know.
When
you propose to enter a new market or technology without the requisite
resources or skills to compete, you may be triggering the overreaching
trap.
Although paradigm shifts and disruptive
technologies imply huge new opportunities, they may require more time
and risk than you can tolerate.
The Pebble smart watch
is an example of overreaching, especially for a startup with limited
resources. Even though the original Pebble became the most-funded
Kickstarter product of all time, tech giants Apple and Samsung quickly
overran them, and they were forced to disappear into Fitbit.
4. Focus on short-term gains, ignoring long-term risks.
Short-term
wins are great, but if you pursue them at the expense of long-term
success, then it's a trap. Companies caught by the short-term trap often
miss new bigger opportunities.
Thinking short-term requires satisfying customer change with more already existing products, skills, and resources.
Kodak
is famous for falling prey to the short-term trap. At one time Kodak
was a leading innovative company centered around film photography. Their
short-term focus did not allow them to see the long-term benefits of
digital photography, cost them their leadership position, and ultimately
resulted in their filing for Chapter 11.
5. Let your company be a victim of analysis paralysis.
If
you lead your business on endless journeys of analyzing, discussing,
researching, and testing new ideas without getting anything off the
ground, you are a part of the overthinking trap.
You are guilty of wasting precious time and money, and throwing away the opportunity of real innovation.
The
result of any of these traps is an inertia that prevents recognition of
the need to change, and a sluggishness in implementing the necessary
change actions before it is too late.
If you sense
these symptoms in your domain, or hear them highlighted by your
advisors, the time to take action is now. I advise initiating a change
in your leadership style, before the market moves on without you.
SOURCE: www.inc.com
SOURCE: www.inc.com
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