Good Morning!
JOBS WILL ALWAYS OUTGROW PEOPLE
- This may be the only guarantee in an
entrepreneurial business
It is a guarantee that over time jobs will
outgrow the people who do them, but you can
also be certain this will always be one of
the toughest issues a CEO has to deal with.
Unless the business model dictates no growth
(which of course has its own risks), as a
company gets larger and more complex, the
jobs evolve accordingly. Then over time, the
individual who was totally capable and
perhaps an "A" or "B" player is now a "C" -
and struggles to keep up with requirements.
This issue affects not only employees, but
managers and yes, even executives. And the
last group makes this probably the toughest
issue any CEO has to deal with, in order to
lead and grow a healthy organization.
LOYALTY: A GREAT TRAIT - BUT ALSO A HUGE DANGER
Who doesn't want loyal managers and
employees? It is part of building a stable,
experienced team that can help take a company
to the next level. The problem arises when
this sense of loyalty clouds pure objectivity
about an individual. As John Hamm said in his
outstanding Harvard Business Review article,
"Why Entrepreneurs Don't Scale" the single
largest reason why they don't is a false and
extended sense of loyalty towards people who
helped the owner start and grow the business.
John points out: "But when leaders fail to
see and respond to a team member's
weaknesses, they place the company at risk."
I was once on the Board of a service company,
where the CEO was the founder and his Father
was in charge of sales. The Father was
struggling with attracting, managing and
developing the sales organization and
accountability was a real problem. After much
Board discussion with the CEO, he fired his
Father about six weeks before Thanksgiving.
Can you imagine what that Thanksgiving dinner
was like for the family? But the CEO had
realized that putting the welfare of ANY
individual above that of the entire company
was irresponsible.
As the story above identifies, when jobs
outgrow executives, the challenge often
becomes even greater for three reasons:
- The executive was there at the beginning
of the company and helped the Founder/CEO
start and grow it, or
- The executive is a business partner who
owns part of the business, or
- The executive is a relative.
As Jim Collins often asks when CEOs express
reservations about an executive on their
team: "Knowing what you know today, would you
hire that executive tomorrow for the same
job?" If the CEO can't immediately and
without hesitation say "yes", then he
probably already knows the answer. And
admitting the answer means needing a plan to
deal with the situation. It doesn't mean
putting the company at risk, firing the
individual on the spot or being
disrespectful, because the executive usually
didn't do anything wrong. They are just a
victim of being mismatched with the current
requirements of the job. As Collins would
say, "They are in the wrong seat on the bus."
A key job of any CEO is making sure that when
a job has outgrown an executive, three things
happen:
- That executive is told that they will not
be successful in that job,
- That a career is too precious to waste
doing something where you cannot be
successful, and
- That you are so appreciative of their
contributions that you want to help them find
the right seat on the bus, even if it means
another company's bus.
CEOs need to always remember that jobs will
outgrow people, including executives, and
they must stay vigilant in watching for the
signs (failing to meet goals, not handling
multiple balls in the air, late and stressed
out on assignments, a change in behavior
toward employees and other executives, having
to make excuses, etc.) and continuously
challenging himself with the Collins question.
John Hamm's HBR article "Why Entrepreneurs Don't Scale"
IT ISN'T WHETHER A JOB WILL OUTGROW AN
EXECUTIVE; IT IS WHEN IT WILL OCCUR.
Best regards,
Jim Alampi
Alampi & Associates LLC
phone:
248.349.6045