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2012-12-06 09:08:41
Schumpeter
Outsiders can make the best leaders and also the worst
Dec 1st 2012 | from the print edition
IN MAY 1860 the Republican National Convention met in Chicago, in the teeth of
the worst crisis since the revolution, to choose a presidential candidate or,
rather, a president, since the Democratic Party had split asunder. The
candidates included two of the most experienced politicians in America William
Seward and Salmon Chase but the delegates bet instead on a one-term congressman
who had failed to win a Senate seat for his native state, Illinois, and who
suffered from debilitating depressions.
Abraham Lincoln now regularly tops historians lists of the greatest American
presidents. But he owes his greatness partly to the fact that he was an
outsider on whom no sensible man would have bet. He made a series of bold moves
such as sending ships to supply Fort Sumter, thereby forcing the South to fire
the first shot of the civil war that his more experienced rivals might not have
made. And he gave a series of nation-defining speeches that nobody else in the
country could have delivered.
It is no surprise that the leadership-cum-management industry has embraced the
outsized figure of Lincoln. Donald Phillips s study, Lincoln on Leadership ,
bears the subtitle Executive Strategies for Tough Times . Nor is it surprising
that Steven Spielberg s film, Lincoln , is boosting the lessons-from-Lincoln
trade. Executives are once again practising the Gettysburg address before their
mirrors and reading the book that gave Mr Spielberg his inspiration, Doris
Kearns Goodwin s Team of Rivals .
Most of this is nonsense. Mr Phillips uses Lincoln to illustrate well-worn
nostrums such as the virtues of managing by walking around (Lincoln spent a lot
of time walking around battlefields). Ms Goodwin s advice about teams of
rivals would produce havoc in the average corporation. Any boss who imitated
Mr Spielberg s Lincoln and roared that he was clothed in immense power would
soon find himself out of a job. Towering genius disdains a beaten path,
Lincoln once said, which limits what can be learned from his example.
But not all Lincolnology is tosh. In his new book, Indispensable , Gautam
Mukunda, of Harvard Business School, uses Lincoln to examine one of the
liveliest debates in modern management whether insiders or outsiders make
better bosses. Before the financial crisis the consensus was strongly in favour
of insiders. But it is shifting, partly because so many insiders made a hash of
things and partly because companies are casting around for a way to reignite
growth. In an annual study of 2,500 companies Booz & Company, a consultancy,
calculates that the proportion of chief-executive posts going to outsiders rose
from 14% in 2007 to 22% in 2011. In Europe the share went from 14% to 31%. On
November 26th Britain broke with precedent by appointing a Canadian, Mark
Carney, to run the Bank of England.
The better angels of our nature
Mr Mukunda divides leaders into two types, filtered and unfiltered . The
filtered are known quantities: insiders who have been subjected to a succession
of tests designed to reveal their strengths and weaknesses. The unfiltered are
enigmas: outsiders like Lincoln who have never been tested by high office;
insiders like Winston Churchill who have fallen out of favour; or transplants
like Mr Carney who have made their reputations in alien organisations. Filtered
leaders tend to make little difference: the other insiders on the shortlist
might have done just as well. But unfiltered leaders can make a huge
difference, sometimes for the better as Lincoln and Churchill did, but more
often for the worse.
Another recent book from the HBS stable, William Thorndike s The Outsiders ,
reinforces Mr Mukunda s argument about the possible advantages of unfiltered
leaders. Mr Thorndike examines eight bosses whose firms outperformed the S&P
average by more than 20 times over their business careers and finds that they
were all outsiders who brought fresh perspectives to their industries.
Katharine Graham of the Washington Post was a widow who had not had a paid job
for years, Bill Anders (General Dynamics) was a former astronaut, Tom Murphy
(Capital Cities) had never worked in the media before he took over a struggling
television station and Warren Buffett (Berkshire Hathaway) is Warren Buffett.
But for every successful outsider there are a dozen failures: think of Carly
Fiorina at Hewlett-Packard, John Sculley at Apple, Bob Nardelli at Home Depot,
Richard Thoman at Xerox or Jeff Skilling at Enron. Al Dunlap leapt from company
to company, cutting jobs and boosting short-term profits as he went, until the
Securities and Exchange Commission forced him to put his chainsaw away. Booz
points out that in 2009-11 34.9% of outside bosses were sacked, compared with
only 18.5% of insiders.
This suggests that it is best to avoid outsiders if things are humming along
fine. It is much easier to go from good to bad than it is to go from good to
great. But if things have stopped humming if your company is in crisis, like
General Motors, or your industry is being reshaped, like telecoms then you
should look for an outsider. The standard method is to choose a star from
another organisation, but many turn out to be duds. One alternative is to
appoint an insider-outsider , such as a high flyer who has left to do
something else. Tony Hall, appointed to the BBC s top job to replace a man
ousted after 54 days in the post, fits that bill: he was a BBC man who left the
corporation to run the Royal Opera House. Another option is to draft in someone
to do a senior job for a while before deciding whether to give him the top
slot. Mr Mukunda suggests that you take informal soundings from any prospective
hire s colleagues rather than rely on formal interviews. The reason why
companies tend to bet on insiders is not that they think they might be clothed
in immense power but that they know what they look like in their underwear.
http://Economist.com/blogs/schumpeter
from the print edition | Business