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Wendy K. SmithMarianne W. LewisMichael L. Tushman
From the May 2016 Issue
Jack Welch once claimed that great leaders are relentless and boring.
Management thinkers largely agree: Good leaders, so the narrative goes, are
consistent in their decision making, stick to their commitments, and remain
on-message. The trouble is, much as we may value consistency in our leaders, we
don t live in a world that rewards it at least not in the long term.
We all know that leaders face contradictory challenges. They may be under
pressure to improve their existing products incrementally at the same time that
they invent radically new products based on new business models. Or they may be
striving to reach a global network while also serving distinct local needs.
Some CEOs respond by prioritizing one challenge over the other; some seek an
integrative middle ground, negotiating acceptable trade-offs that all
stakeholders can abide by. What those approaches have in common is that they
aim to provide a stable resolution of the conflicting challenges the implicit
assumption being that stability is what organizations need in order to prosper.
We disagree profoundly with this image of leadership, because it is rooted in a
mischaracterization of the business environment. The challenges we focus on in
this article are not conflicting goals that invite a calculated choice or a
compromise. They are fundamental paradoxes that persist over time, as today s
long term becomes tomorrow s short term. Too much focus on one goal triggers
a demand for the other. And as the business environment and the actors in it
change, stability breaks down, often destroying a great deal of value and
eventually culminating in a crisis that prompts a leader to impose a different
order fueling the start of another cycle.
In the following pages we propose a new model one in which the goal of
leadership is to maintain a dynamic equilibrium in the organization. Executives
with this goal do not focus on being consistent; instead they purposefully and
confidently embrace the paradoxes they confront. Senior teams build dynamic
equilibrium by separating the imperatives that are in conflict with one another
in order to recognize and respect each one (creating a separate unit to develop
a new business model, for example), while at the same time actively managing
connections between them in order to leverage interdependencies and benefit
from their synergies.
The Paradoxes of Leadership
In our work with corporations over the past 20 years, we have seen that senior
leaders constantly grapple with the same sets of opposing goals, which often
polarize their organizations. These tensions or paradoxes fall into three
categories related to three questions that many leaders perceive as either/or
choices:
Are we managing for today or for tomorrow?
Tensions around time frame are especially salient, because a firm s long-term
survival depends on experimenting, taking risks, and learning from failure in
the pursuit of new products, services, and processes. However, firms also need
consistency, discipline, and steady attention to make the most of the products,
services, and processes they already have. These innovation paradoxes involve
tensions between today and tomorrow, existing offerings and new ones, stability
and change.
In the late 1990s, for example, senior leaders at IBM saw the internet wave
cresting and realized that the company s future depended on harnessing the new
technology. But IBM was also committed to sustaining its traditional strength
in client-server markets. The two strategies demanded different structures,
cultures, rewards, and metrics, which meant they could not be easily executed
in tandem. Pursuing both involved addressing conflict between executives, as
those committed to the old world and those championing the emerging world each
felt their identity threatened.
Do we adhere to boundaries or cross them?
Leaders are always making and unmaking decisions around boundaries geographic,
cultural, and functional. A geographically dispersed supply chain can be
wonderfully efficient, but it may lack flexibility. Dispersed innovation can
produce a diversity of ideas, but certain benefits get lost when your best and
brightest aren t together in one place. These globalization paradoxes surface
tensions between global interconnection and local needs, breadth and depth,
collaboration and competition.
In 2009 NASA s director of human health and performance, Jeff Davis, began
pushing to generate new knowledge through collaborative cross-firm and
cross-disciplinary work. Yet over the next 18 months, he faced stiff resistance
from scientists protecting their turf and their identities as independent
researchers. The more that technology enabled open, collaborative research, the
more concerned NASA s scientists became about recognition of their individual
achievements. Both collaboration and independent work were needed for the
creation of new ideas, but they were organizationally and culturally
incompatible.
Do we focus on creating value for our shareholders and investors or for a
broader set of stakeholders?
All firms exist to create value, but leaders may be torn between maximizing
profits for the firm and trying to generate wider benefits for investors,
employees, customers, and society. These tensions have mounted as public
concerns about poverty and climate change have grown, as technology has helped
enable and empower consumer activism, and as human capital has been
increasingly recognized as the major driver of value. But being socially
responsible can bring down share price, and prioritizing employees can conflict
with short-term shareholders or customers needs. Companies struggle to
address these obligation paradoxes.
For example, in 2010 Unilever CEO Paul Polman launched the Unilever Sustainable
Living Plan, aimed at doubling the size of the business by 2020 while improving
the health and well-being of more than a billion people and cutting the company
s environmental impact in half. Polman argues that over the long term, social
and environmental investments will lead to greater profits, whereas a singular
focus on short-term profits can fuel decisions that harm our society and the
environment. That is persuasive to many, but Polman faces ongoing challenges in
executing the plan. Its inherent uncertainty and ambiguity have caused senior
team leaders to feel a high level of anxiety and to fight about resource
allocation.
These either/or questions can never be definitively answered. In part, that s
because they don t really present black-and-white choices; they invite
consideration of alternative demands that are interdependent as much as they
are contradictory. For example, innovativeness may conflict with operational
efficiency, but you can t be efficient unless you are innovative at some point
and you won t be around to be innovative unless you know how to be efficient.
This interdependence is what makes the tensions strategic paradoxes, requiring
leaders to reframe the questions not as classic either/or trade-offs that can
be firmly resolved, but rather as ongoing both/and exercises ( How can we
simultaneously do both X and Y? ).
It is challenging, of course, to adopt a both/and approach. The relationship
between the sources of a tension will change over time and in response to
competitors moves or other external events. If a company focuses on short-term
performance, for instance, at the expense of innovation, the risk of not
investing in innovation and potentially missing opportunities to increase
future profits increases with time.
Paradoxes involve alternatives that are interdependent as well as
contradictory.
For Unilever, managing the competing demands of shareholders and broader
stakeholders led the company to explore a more interconnected world, asking
questions about how to balance global welfare and local needs. This in turn
opened up debate over enhancing current products or innovating for tomorrow.
Unilever s experience demonstrates that actions taken to manage any one
strategic paradox will affect and maybe trigger others, which means that a
piecemeal approach to managing interwoven tensions is doomed to fail.
Furthermore, the sources of a paradoxical tension are often nested in different
parts or levels of an organization, which makes strategic paradoxes a major
driver of internal conflict. Typically any large organization hosts many
different cultures, reflecting the professional identities, networks,
competencies, incentives, and geographies of the people in them. People in R&D
are often scientists with identities rooted in academic disciplines and
communities; they are rewarded for generating new ideas. People in marketing
and sales are often close to customers, especially large customers, and they
are rewarded for generating sales. In the long term, new ideas enable more
sales, and more sales generate the resources to support new ideas. Yet in the
short term, sales and innovation seem like competing priorities.
Because people in each business unit tend to associate with one side or another
of a paradox, real conflict can arise. CEOs and senior executives, for example,
are often motivated by holding stock options, which makes them vulnerable to
pressure from capital markets seeking immediate financial returns. If sales,
however, are largely driven through building and maintaining long-term
relationships, there is potential for a major rift: Investments that the sales
force might see as necessary for goodwill could be viewed by bosses as costs
ripe for cutting. Similarly, product designers at a car company might take
pride in being creative engineers who build great cars, and they might resent
management pressure to standardize in the pursuit of cost savings.
The inherent features of strategic paradoxes make managing in such an
environment very difficult. The leader s challenge is not to choose between
alternatives but to recognize that both imperatives must be addressed. Making
that change from either/or to both/and thinking requires leaders to shift focus
frequently in the short term in order to satisfy competing demands in the long
term. Rather than swinging wildly between opposing forces, leaders must execute
purposeful microshifts that enable growth and sustainability.
The Paradoxical Mindset
Paradoxical leadership begins with a reexamination of some implicit assumptions
about leadership which leads to movement in a new direction.
From well-intentioned consistency to consistent inconsistency.
Hostility to contradictions is deeply rooted, especially in the Western world.
Aristotelian logic treats contradictions and tensions as signals that we need
to seek a more accurate, unified truth. If one idea is right, its opposite
must be wrong; if that seems not to be the case, then we must redefine our idea
to eliminate the contradiction. We also struggle to make decisions and take
actions that we see as inconsistent with an accepted truth, feeling a
discomfort that psychologist Leon Festinger described as cognitive dissonance.
The same discomfort surfaces when values conflict. A recent study at Whole
Foods showed that employees understood the company s explicitly dual mission of
earning profits and making the world a better place. Yet most people working in
the stores identified with only one part of the mission either the organization
s profit focus or its social and environmental goals.
When two ideas seem contradictory, choosing and championing just one can
minimize cognitive dissonance. It s not surprising, then, that people often
deal with paradoxical tensions by picking a side and consistently supporting
it. But at the top of an organization, consistency is far from a necessary
virtue indeed, it s a vice, keeping leaders from successfully dealing with
strategic paradoxes. Senior executives must go into the job appreciating
multiple, often conflicting, truths. They need to be consistently inconsistent
and focus on managing that inconsistency. Tellingly, the Whole Foods research
found that the employees most likely to move up through the leadership ranks
were largely those who could effectively embrace both the financial imperatives
and the social mission of the company.
From scarce resources to abundant resources.
Traditional leadership approaches assume that resources time, money, people,
and so on are limited. This is not altogether surprising when you think of the
constraints that managers at lower levels of an organization face. Resources
are typically fixed by a higher authority a state of affairs that doesn t
change much until you are the higher authority, by which time the idea that
resources are limited has been baked into you. It becomes natural for
executives to look for sources of constraint and they often find them in
market expectations or competitor threats. But assuming that resources are
constrained necessarily results in zero-sum thinking: Allocating resources to
one goal means that they are no longer available for another. This fuels
conflict between managers with different agendas.
In contrast, leaders who embrace paradox realize that resources, viewed in a
different light, can be abundant and often generative. Rather than seeking to
slice the pie thinner, people with this value-creating mindset pursue
strategies to grow the pie, such as exploring collaborations with new partners,
using alternative technologies, or adopting more-flexible time frames for
shifting resources for better use.
Over time, committing to multiple strategies can enable more resources for
each. That was the case at Zensar Technologies, an India-based provider of IT
services, where leaders of the extant software franchise eventually realized
that their exploratory software product could increase sales of existing
products. Similarly, the coffee division of a large European food group
overcame its initial resistance to an innovative proportioned-serving brewing
system after seeing success in the new niche and using the new product design
to increase sales of its existing brands.
From stability and certainty to dynamism and change.
Leaders seek to reduce their followers discomfort with uncertainty by
asserting control making decisions that minimize complexity and emphasize
stability. This, too, is understandable: Traditional leadership and management
theory was heavily influenced by studies of the military, which prizes
regularity. Therefore, business managers have long been encouraged to build a
common culture, where everyone is headed in the same direction, speaks the same
language, and shares best practices.
Executives must be able to appreciate multiple, often conflicting, truths.
But when the strategic environment changes, this approach often results in
defensive and detrimental actions. As we ve discussed, NASA s leaders resisted
open innovation methods because scientists were invested in individual research
and felt threatened by the idea of collaboration. Polaroid famously lost the
battle for the digital-imaging market partly because company leaders committed
to applying their successful analog-camera strategy making money on the film,
not the camera to a market that no longer printed out pictures.
Rather than seeking stability and certainty, paradoxical leadership depends on
embracing dynamism and change. Leaders must be emotionally and cognitively open
to the new, developing a management strategy of coping with, rather than
controlling and minimizing, ambiguity. They must be humble, even vulnerable,
admitting that they might not know what the future holds. This approach
emphasizes the value of experimentation and failure, spurring critical feedback
to enable learning and ongoing adjustments.
For example, in the early 2000s Lego s middle managers faced tensions amid
ongoing organizational change. Subordinates felt anxious and raised concerns
about how their familiar practices, rules, and expectations would work in the
new world. Rather than respond to these specific concerns, middle managers
posed questions. They asked which parts of the current organizational
approaches they should keep. They explored ways of meshing the existing world
and the new one. Their questions opened up conversations that allowed both
managers and subordinates to move away from seeking permanent solutions and
instead develop temporary workable certainties that helped them move forward
but were understood to be subject to future modification.
Managing Dynamic Equilibrium
When leaders assume that there are multiple truths, that resources are
abundant, and that the role of management is to cope with change rather than
fight it, they can help their organizations reach a state of dynamic
equilibrium. This is at the center of paradoxical leadership. However, trying
to shift the hearts and minds of senior team members is challenging and
time-consuming. Moreover, their roles and responsibilities often lead senior
people to deeply identify with one goal or another, fostering conflict. To
unleash the power of paradox, therefore, leaders must build supporting
organizational competencies into their senior team. This requires managers to
both separate and connect opposing forces.
Separating.
Tapping the potential of paradox begins with respecting the distinct needs of
groups with different agendas. Doing so requires pulling apart the organization
s goals and valuing each of them individually. One way to accomplish this is
to create business units based on functions, geographies, or products, each
with its own leader, mission, metrics, and culture. A strong sales and
marketing department will focus on effectively serving its primary stakeholders
(customers), while a strong finance department keeps an eye on economic
efficiency and the company s image in the financial markets. Even within a
function there is scope for separation into subgroups for example, companies
increasingly keep their radical- innovation teams separate from the people
working on incremental improvements.
When an organization s critical tasks are intertwined, however, creating
distinct units for each imperative may not be possible. Often an organization s
global integration must be carried out by each of its local business units. In
these situations, separation involves carving out dedicated times and spaces
for exploring each goal, using different decision-making processes, or
developing communication practices that enable teams to pull strategies apart.
Paradoxical leadership requires both separating and connecting opposing forces.
Consider Digital Divide Data (DDD), an award-winning professional outsourcing
firm that employs disadvantaged people to provide data management, research,
content digitization, and other services to clients. DDD s social mission to
alleviate poverty by offering training and jobs to those in need is intricately
linked with its goal of running a sustainable business. Yet the firm s social
mission and its financial demands frequently conflict, as when the leadership
team considers strategic issues about whom to hire (people who are more
disadvantaged or those who are more skilled) and where to expand (into regions
of greater poverty or ones with more business resources). To disentangle and
respect the dual missions, executives created two sets of financial statements,
each with its own metrics. In board meetings CEO Jeremy Hockenstein routinely
asks, How does this decision impact our social mission? and then, How does
this decision impact our business? inviting managers to consider the different
needs of each strategy.
Connecting.
Connecting involves finding linkages and synergies across goals. One way to do
this is to build an overarching organizational identity and unite people in a
higher purpose which helps employees and executives alike to embrace the
interdependence of opposing strategies. At NASA, Jeff Davis was able to break
down his scientists resistance to collaborative innovation when he defined his
directorate s top goal this way: We aspire to keep astronauts safe in space.
In the service of safety, traditional scientists could understand the value of
engaging in open-source methods. Similarly, Lego has moved beyond tensions
between unabashed innovation and disciplined execution by reaffirming that it
is building the builders of tomorrow. DDD brings together its business
operations and its social mission by declaring its passionate commitment to
stop the cycle of poverty.
Leaders can also design roles and processes intended to integrate separate
strategic goals. For example, a leader might designate a manager to act as a
business integrator, with responsibility for linking innovation with existing
products. A senior manager given this assignment in a social enterprise
described it as follows: I was the bridge. I served in the role of bringing
together warring camps. In other organizations, leaders use integrated metrics
and reward systems to foster connections. They can also provoke conversations,
asking, How do these two goals support each other? At DDD, Hockenstein uses
this question as a key follow-up to having his top team members consider the
distinctions between the firm s social mission and its financial goals.
Toward a dynamic equilibrium.
Organizational success depends on both separating and connecting. In fact,
doing each alone can be detrimental. Although a separate division can avoid
tension in the short term, it impedes the creation of shared value in the long
run, because the conflicting groups fail to benefit from one another. For
example, Zensar s new software platform was initially so isolated from other
units that it was unable to leverage the firm s marketing and sales
capabilities. Only when the CEO encouraged his team to make structural linkages
between the established products and the innovation unit was the firm able to
bring its new technology to existing customers.
Connecting without separating is just as problematic. In the interest of
fostering synergies, senior leaders may promote an overarching identity, stress
a collective mission statement, and develop unified measurement systems. But
without encouraging deep respect for the distinct value and needs of each
stakeholder group, the result can be a bland compromise a false synergy. At
worst, one point of view dominates, leaving the other to wither. Social
enterprises and microfinance banks have experienced this problem. These hybrid
organizations seek to address social missions through business purposes. But
unless they clarify how much attention the social mission deserves, the
quantifiable, focused, and short-term financial metrics often take over and
drive the big decisions. Financial pressures have become so prevalent in
microfinance organizations that Muhammad Yunus, founder of the Grameen Bank,
has lamented that these organizations are sacrificing microcredit for
megaprofits.
To avoid these traps, smart leaders design metrics and rewards even build out
different financial statements (as at DDD) for each strategy, and complement
those with additional metrics and rewards that depend on the success of the
entire organization. They create team dynamics that encourage focus on the
unique needs of each strategy, while fostering respectful, trusting cultures
that enable collaboration and learning. They recognize that senior team members
play multiple roles advocating for their own priorities but also considering
the organization s overall needs. Most important, they demonstrate both the
confidence to embrace paradoxes and the humility to know that doing so will be
an ongoing challenge.
The Nobel Prize winning physicist Niels Bohr once said, How wonderful that we
have met with a paradox. Now we have some hope of making progress. Paradox has
long been at the heart of great accomplishments revealing profound truths and
spurring creativity. Advances such as Einstein s theory of relativity emerged
as individuals made sense of conflicting demands. As business organizations
face increasingly unpredictable, complex, and challenging environments, those
that have the greatest hope of surviving and contributing to the world will
have leaders who embrace strategic paradoxes.
A version of this article appeared in the May 2016 issue (pp.62 70) of Harvard
Business Review.
Wendy K. Smith is an associate professor at the University of Delaware s Alfred
Lerner College of Business and Economics. She has made paid presentations to
W.L. Gore & Associates.
Marianne W. Lewis is the dean of Cass Business School at City University
London.
Michael L. Tushman is the Paul R. Lawrence MBA Class of 1942 Professor of
Business Administration at Harvard Business School and director of Change
Logic, a Boston-based consulting firm specializing in innovation, leadership,
and change. He is the co-author, with Charles O Reilly, of of Lead and Disrupt,
(Stanford University Press, 2016). You can follow him on Twitter at
@MichaelTushman.