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Your Company s Networks Might Matter More than Its Strategy

Greg Satell

June 10, 2015

In a classic Harvard Business Review article, Abraham Zaleznick contrasted two

very different styles of authority. Managers, he argued, take a rational

approach and seek order and control. Leaders, on the other hand, are more

emotionally driven and seek to drive change.

Every organization needs both. Managers provide the continuity needed to

execute efficiently and leaders drive the kinetic energy needed to respond

dynamically to the needs of the marketplace. The best CEOs, like Steve Jobs and

A.G. Lafley, are both great managers and great leaders.

Today, however, the most important capabilities and resources often lie outside

of an organization. So executives need to leverage platforms in order to access

ecosystems. Therefore, the ability to manage operations and the capacity to

inspire employees is no longer enough. Today, we must learn how to shape

networks around a shared purpose.

Consider the case of Blockbuster, whose CEO John Antioco had proven himself as

both a manager and a leader. Starting his career as a trainee at 7-11, he

worked his way quickly through the ranks, gaining a reputation for operational

excellence. Later, he pulled off impressive turnarounds at Circle K convenience

stores and Taco Bell before taking the top job at Blockbuster.

He was also innovative. By convincing the movie studios to share rental

revenues rather than paying them upfront, he effectively turned them into

partners and transformed the economics of the industry. Once again, he had

turned around a struggling company, transformed its business model and made its

operations hum.

When Netflix emerged as a disruptive threat, Antioco met it head on. He

eliminated the late fees that alienated customers and invested heavily in a

digital platform that could compete head on. Before long, Blockbuster was

gaining nearly half of all new subscribers in the online rental market.

He then launched Total Access, a service that allowed customers to use the Web

and retail stores interchangeably. It was something Netflix couldn t match and

Blockbuster s online membership doubled in six weeks. Now, Blockbuster had the

superior model but, as Antioco explained in an article in Harvard Business

Review, it was all for naught.

The problem wasn t that the Blockbuster couldn t compete, but rather that its

internal networks rejected the changes. Franchisees, fearful of the risk to

their livelihoods, and investors, disappointed by decreasing margins, balked.

Antioco was fired, late fees were reinstated, investment in the digital

platform was all but eliminated and the company went bankrupt in 2010, three

years later.

Around the same time that John Antioco was battling it out with Netflix,

General Stanley McChrystal was facing his own disruptive threat. Although, as

Commander of the US Special Forces, he led the world s most capable force, he

was losing the war to AQI (Al Qaeda in Iraq), a ragtag bunch of extremists.

The problem wasn t that AQI had capabilities that his organization lacked or

that they had a greater will to fight but that the battlefield had changed. It

was no longer enough to operate effectively, his forces now had to adapt in

real time to an enemy that seemed to be able to change form at will.

As McChrystal describes in Team of Teams, the challenge wasn t so much that he

needed to develop new resources, but that he had to access surveillance and

intelligence assets many of which were not under his direct control more

effectively. All too often, valuable information would sit for days, or even

weeks, before anyone even took a look at it.

Even worse, like his own teams, partner agencies had their own cultures,

procedures, objectives and esprit de corps. In isolation, these factors led to

operational excellence, but they also created barriers to collaboration. If he

was to succeed, McChrystal knew that he not only needed to change how his own

forces operated, but outside agencies as well.

To do that, he would need to integrate operations at a scale no one had thought

possible. As the General himself put it, It takes a network to defeat a

network.

The key to McChrystal s eventual success lay in a series of studies done by

Solomon Asch in the 1950 s. Faced with an overwhelmingly majority opinion,

subjects would conform their own views even if it was clear that the prevailing

view was wrong. Further, he found that this conformity effect broke down

quickly when exposed to a diversity of opinions.

Effective execution is not wholly dependent on capabilities and procedures, but

also a set of beliefs. Close-knit teams learn to see things in terms of their

own challenges. So McChrystal s teams, as well as those of his partners, were

optimized to perform against their own objectives, yet often failed to take

into account the broader mission.

In order to effectively integrate the disparate units into an effectively

integrated team of teams, each had to go beyond its own share of the task

see the system. McChrystal understood that no amount of planning or strategy

could achieve that; it had to come through personal contact.

So he designed a series of initiatives to do just that. The physical command

space was transformed to encourage interaction and collaboration. He began to

embed highly trained commandos with intelligence analysts and vice versa for

six-month stints. Liaison officer positions previously neglected were now only

given to top performers.

As in the Asch studies, when exposed to new relationships, long held beliefs

began to change and a new outlook began to emerge, this time based on the

overall mission rather than internal rivalries.

While formal structure and traditional lines of authority stayed very much in

place, operating principles changed markedly. The transformation wasn t

immediate, but soon personal relationships and shared purpose replaced rules,

procedures and internal rivalries. Even those resistant to change found

themselves outnumbered and began alter their views.

That allowed McChrystal to also change the way he led. While in traditional

organizations information is passed up through the chain of command and

decisions are made at the top, McChrystal saw that model could be flipped. Now,

he helped information get to the right place and decisions could be made lower

down. As a result, operating efficiency increased by a factor of seventeen.

Successful movements don t just convert, they connect and that s what drives

lasting change. It is never enough to gather together a small group of true

believers, because to achieve anything of any significance, larger networks

must be brought to bear.

And that, in the final analysis, is the difference between John Antioco and

Stanley McChrystal. Where Antioco had to overcome resistance to his plan for

change, McChrystal networked his organization so that it could adapt to change.

Because he forged a shared purpose among various constituencies, he didn t need

to drive transformation, merely facilitate it.

In the Blockbuster case, a successful CEO was faced with a disruptive threat

and came up with a successful market strategy. However, because the networks

within his organization (e.g. franchisees and investors as well as, to a lesser

extent, internal operations people), the plan failed.

McChrystal, on the other hand, focused on creating a shared purpose among his

internal networks and the strategy took care of itself. In effect the

structure, rather than the plan, was the strategy.

McChrystal writes that the role of the leader was no more that of controlling

puppet master, but of an empathetic crafter of culture, and there s more than

a little truth to that. But it was his ability to shape networks that allowed

that culture to spread and, in doing so, enhanced his ability to both manage

and lead.

Greg Satell is a U.S.-based business consultant. You can find his blog at

Digital Tonto and follow him on Twitter @DigitalTonto.