Who keeps the rhythm for your business? If the CEO is the lead singer, who is keeping them at the right tempo?

Who Keeps the Rhythm

October 23, 2023

Good morning! If you love autumn, these last several days in Central Minnesota — world headquarters of Without A Vision Consultancy LLC — have been nearly perfect. Later this week our two youngest will be married… and we are thrilled for them. Put this on your list:  How To Know a Person, (Brooks, 2023)

  • So-called fifth generation technology (5G) was launched four years ago — and the United States is lagging behind the world’s leaders for penetration.
    • Hong Kong leads the way with 74% — followed by The People’s Republic of China with 60%.
      • (You could argue it’s the same country and calculate a weighted average, but it/ they would still win.)
    • The United States is in 10th place globally with 43% penetration of the 5Gs.  (Fitzgerald, 2023)
  • Check yourself:  There are good Boards, mediocre Boards (the most common, though perhaps well-meaning), and poor, even destructive, Boards.
    • Every organization needs — and deserves — a good Board.
    • But, how to get — and sustain — one?  (Be ever so grateful if you’re there!)
    • Patience and Persistence along Parallel Paths… stay focused, build bench strength, possess and communicate an authentic shared vision.
    • “If the CEO of an organization is the lead singer, the Board of Directors is the rhythm section.
    • The CEO fronts the company, leading the team in day-to-day operations to carry out strategy and create value…
    • The Board of Directors provides direction and oversight to ensure shareholder and broader stakeholder interests…”  (Huber, Etc., et al., 2022)
  • The population explosion (earth’s current number of people = ~8.1 billion) is shifting from Asia to the continent of Africa.
    • With Nigeria as the epicenter.
    • The growing labor force in Africa will need ~18 million new jobs annually to absorb the growth up until 2035.
    • Africa’s population is set to double by 2050, and 40% of the total population will be younger than fifteen.
    • Manufacturing is proposed as the key; it provides jobs close to home yielding the greatest benefit to broader, local economies.  (Meredith, 2023)
  • Thrift may no longer be a virtue.
    • According to McKinsey’s ConsumerWise Global Sentiment Data (2023), splurging is often supplanting thrift when it comes to short-term happiness.
    • When asked how they intend to splurge over the next three months, consumers ranked travel behind only restaurants and groceries.
    • Travel companies are advised to take note — and to look to artificial intelligence to improve customer experiences and increase (create) value.
  • According to Field, Etc., et al. (2023), women are more ambitious than ever, and workplace flexibility is fueling the trend.
    • Yet, despite some hard-fought gains, women’s representation is not keeping pace.
    • The so-called broken rung is the greatest obstacle women face on the path to senior leadership — as opposed to the glass ceiling.
    • Women face their biggest hurdle at the first critical step up to manager.
    • In 2023, for every 100 men promoted from entry level to manager, 87 women were promoted; 73 women of color… women fall behind and can’t catch up.
    • Women are about one-in-four C-Suite leaders (25%) , with women of color just one in sixteen (7%).
    • “For women, hybrid or remote work is about a lot more than flexibility.
    • When women work remotely, they face fewer microaggressions and have higher levels of psychological safety.”  (Field, Etc., et al., 2023)
  • Ways leaders can turn pushback into progress:
    • “By effectively responding to ambivalence, disagreement, or resistance, leaders can boost team learning while moving their organization forward.” (Clampitt, DeKoch, 2023)
    • Responding to pushback may well rank as one of the more important competencies leaders can possess — and it’s especially critical during times of transition.
    • Pushback can take many forms, ranging from voicing concerns and raising questions to active opposition and sabotage.
    • Effective leaders think of pushback as an opportunity to boost their team’s learning while moving their organization forward.
    • The objective should be to increase people’s understanding and build support by tempering both advocate enthusiasm and contrarian pessimism.
    • This deeper level of understanding, while not necessarily satisfying to all in the moment, fosters a climate of candor, humility, adaptation, and trust,
    • thereby subtly steering pushback away from latent disruptive tendencies.  (Informed by Clampitt, 2023)

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