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Main Page –› Self Management –› Leadership Qualities
 

Leading an Organization Strategically - Nu Leadership Series

 
Author: Daryl Green
 

A skilled Transition Team leader will set the general goals for a Transition, and then confer on the other team leaders working with him the power to implement those goals. Richard V. Allen

Many managers depend on their corporate experience to assist them in making organizational decision. However, in the rapid climate of economic changes, a leader can falter if solely depending on his or her past experiences. Therefore, it is important that todays leaders strategically think and not depend on past achievements. Why am I making this declaration? The past can both help and haunt an organizational leader.

The past provides a leader with an arsenal of proven solutions. This strategy works in a stable, predictable environment. Conversely, it also betrays a leader when this isnt the case. In times of rapid change and uncertainty, a leaders past knowledge becomes a liability because a leader can make the wrong assumptions. Obviously, this problem of shortsighted thinking can destroy an organization over the long run. If a leader makes organizational planning with faulty assumptions, any planning will ultimately produce inferior results.

For that reason, duality, as strategic tool, is hard for any organization to accomplish but is a necessary ingredient for effective 21st century organizations. Wacker, Taylor, and Means, authors of The Visionarys Handbook, argue that effective organizations must micromanage to stay close to emerging changes; they also admit that the future destabilizes the present. This problem leaves organizational strategists in a quagmire of constant environmental change. In market terminology, this problem is called a chasm. Therefore, all successful leaders must cross this chasm to stay within market parameters.

References:

Moore, G. (1991). Crossing the Chasm. New York: HarperBusiness.

Wacker, W., Taylor, J., & Means, H. (2000). The Visionarys Handbook. New York: HarperBusiness.

2006 by Daryl D. Green

 
 
 

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