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Page 1 of 4 A paper delivered to the Optus Foundation – May 19th, 2002
Tonight I want to throw out a number of leadership challenges for us to toss around
at the end of this presentation. All of them could be described as “soft”
issues, but all of them I would argue have bottom line consequences for
organizations. It’s weird, isn’t it, that we’ve come to
use the word soft to describe issues that centre around people. In my
experience, these issues are anything but soft – they are tough,
knotty problems that require long term, strategic thinking, and considerable
courage in stepping up to the challenges they represent.
My
first challenge to you is this – if, as Jack Welch insists, ideas
are the currency of the future, what are you doing to imbed an ideas culture
in your organization? At Saatchi & Saatchi we’ve tackled this
by challenging ourselves to become the hottest ideas shop on the planet.
We want our clients to revere us for ideas that transform their businesses,
brands and reputations.
Big
call – how do you deliver against a mission statement like that?
For us, as for every service firm, it’s critical. Ideas are all we
have to sell. All service firms are facing intense cost pressures, and
are struggling with the issues of creating differentiated offerings that
can deliver competitive advantage for longer than around the three months
it takes to copy someone else’s idea.
It’s
ironic that globalization, which was meant to enhance consumer choice
through increased competition has in fact delivered fewer competitors
in virtually every category. In the case of advertising, for instance,
60% of the world’s advertising is now controlled by 4 firms.
So
an ideas culture is crucial to sustaining competitive advantage, and identifying
and nurturing the ideas leaders within the organization is a key task
for business leaders.
And
that’s not easy. Too often an organization’s leadership team
are drawn from the same talent pool. Their socialization and life experiences
tend to be similar, as, alas, are their ideas. So the challenge for organizational
leadership is to accept that ideas leadership is probably going to come
from further down the food chain. The task is to identify those ideas
leaders and to manage them creatively – particularly because they
have a very low boredom threshold, and are inclined to wander off if they
are not sufficiently challenged or rewarded.
Creating
an ideas culture means embracing diversity as the only means of enlarging
the ideas gene pool. This has implications for recruitment and training
that may require strategic intervention from the leadership team.
At
Saatchi & Saatchi, we rate intuition more highly than intelligence,
and we test for it. We do this because the research seems to indicate
that highly intuitive people are better ideas generators than their more
prosaic colleagues.
In
our business, every new recruit has to be an ideas person, regardless
of their final destination within the firm. A bank, for example, may not
need so many ideas people, although given the difficulties associated
with product parity within banking, and the poor public image of banks
generally, I’d argue that they could probably do with a few more.
Second
leadership challenge – I want you to conduct a mental audit of every
piece of communication your company produces. Visualize your human resources
manual, your marketing guidelines, your call centre scripts, your analysts
briefings, your annual general report, and ask yourself, do you know anyone
who talks like that?
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