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Three steps to building a better top team

When a top team fails to function, it can paralyze a whole company. Here’s what CEOs need to watch out for.

Few teams function as well as they could. But the stakes get higher with senior-executive teams: dysfunctional ones can slow down, derail, or even paralyze a whole company. In our work with top teams at more than 100 leading multinational companies,1 including surveys with 600 senior executives at 30 of them, we’ve identified three crucial priorities for constructing and managing effective top teams. Getting these priorities right can help drive better business outcomes in areas ranging from customer satisfaction to worker productivity and many more as well.

1. Get the right people on the team . . . and the wrong ones off

Determining the membership of a top team is the CEO’s responsibility—and frequently the most powerful lever to shape a team’s performance. Many CEOs regret not employing this lever early enough or thoroughly enough. Still others neglect it entirely, assuming instead that factors such as titles, pay grades, or an executive’s position on the org chart are enough to warrant default membership. Little surprise, then, that more than one-third of the executives we surveyed said their top teams did not have the right people and capabilities.

The key to getting a top team’s composition right is deciding what contributions the team as a whole, and its members as individuals, must make to achieve an organization’s performance aspirations and then making the necessary changes in the team. This sounds straight-forward, but it typically requires conscious attention and courage from the CEO; otherwise, the top team can underdeliver for an extended period of time.

That was certainly the case at a technology services company that had a struggling top team: fewer than one in five of its members thought it was highly respected or shared a common vision for the future, and only one in three thought it made a valuable contribution to corporate performance. The company’s customers were very dissatisfied—they rated its cost, quality, and service delivery at only 2.3 on a 7-point scale—and the team couldn’t even agree on the root causes.

A new CEO reorganized the company, creating a new strategy group and moving from a geography-based structure to one based on two customer-focused business units—for wholesale and for retail. He adapted the composition of his top team, making the difficult decision to remove two influential regional executives who had strongly resisted cross-organizational collaboration and adding the executive leading the strategy group and the two executives leading the retail and the wholesale businesses, respectively. The CEO then used a series of workshops to build trust and a spirit of collaboration among the members of his new team and to eliminate the old regional silo mentality. The team also changed its own performance metrics, adding customer service and satisfaction performance indicators to the traditional short-term sales ones.

Customers rated the company’s service at 4.3 a year later and at 5.4 two years later. Meanwhile, the top team, buoyed by these results, was now confident that it was better prepared to improve the company’s performance. In the words of one team member, “I wouldn’t have believed we could have come this far in just one year.”

2. Make sure the top team does just the work only it can do

Many top teams struggle to find purpose and focus. Only 38 percent of the executives we surveyed said their teams focused on work that truly benefited from a top-team perspective. Only 35 percent said their top teams allocated the right amounts of time among the various topics they considered important, such as strategy and people.

What are they doing instead? Everything else. Too often, top teams fail to set or enforce priorities and instead try to cover the waterfront. In other cases, they fail to distinguish between topics they must act on collectively and those they should merely monitor. These shortcomings create jam-packed agendas that no top team can manage properly. Often, the result is energy-sapping meetings that drag on far too long and don’t engage the team, leaving members wondering when they can get back to “real work.” CEOs typically need to respond when such dysfunctions arise; it’s unlikely that the senior team’s members—who have their own business unit goals and personal career incentives—will be able to sort out a coherent set of collective top-team priorities without a concerted effort.

The CEO and the top team at a European consumer goods company rationalized their priorities by creating a long list of potential topics they could address. Then they asked which of these had a high value to the business, given where they wanted to take it, and would allow them, as a group, to add extraordinary value. While narrowing the list down to ten items, team members spent considerable time challenging each other about which topics individual team members could handle or delegate. They concluded, for example, that projects requiring no cross-functional or cross-regional work, such as addressing lagging performance in a single region, did not require the top team’s collective attention even when these projects were the responsibility of an individual team member. For delegated responsibilities, they created a transparent and consistent set of performance indicators to help them monitor progress.

This change gave the top team breathing room to do more valuable work. For the first time, it could focus enough effort on setting and dynamically adapting cross-category and cross-geography priorities and resource allocations and on deploying the top 50 leaders across regional and functional boundaries, thus building a more effective extended leadership group for the company. This, in turn, proved crucial as the team led a turnaround that took the company from a declining to a growing market share. The team’s tighter focus also helped boost morale and performance at the company’s lower levels, where employees now had more delegated responsibility. Employee satisfaction scores improved to 79 percent, from 54 percent, in just one year.

3. Address team dynamics and processes

A final area demanding unrelenting attention from CEOs is effective team dynamics, whose absence is a frequent problem: among the top teams we studied, members reported that only about 30 percent of their time was spent in “productive collaboration”—a figure that dropped even more when teams dealt with high-stakes topics where members had differing, entrenched interests. Here are three examples of how poor dynamics depress performance:

The top team at a large mining company formed two camps with opposing views on how to address an important strategic challenge. The discussions on this topic hijacked the team’s agenda for an extended period, yet no decisions were made.

The top team at a Latin American insurance company was completely demoralized when it began losing money after government reforms opened up the country to new competition. The team wandered, with little sense of direction or accountability, and blamed its situation on the government’s actions. As unproductive discussions prevented the top team from taking meaningful action, other employees became dissatisfied and costs got out of control.

The top team at a North American financial-services firm was not aligned effectively for a critical company-wide operational-improvement effort. As a result, different departments were taking counterproductive and sometimes contradictory actions. One group, for example, tried to increase cross-selling, while another refused to share relevant information about customers because it wanted to “own” relationships with them.

CEOs can take several steps to remedy problems with team dynamics. The first is to work with the team to develop a common, objective understanding of why its members aren’t collaborating effectively. There are several tools available for the purpose, including top-team surveys, interviews with team members, and 360-degree evaluations of individual leaders. The CEO of the Latin American insurance company used these methods to discover that the members of his top team needed to address building relationships and trust with one another and with the organization even before they agreed on a new corporate strategy and on the cultural changes necessary to meet its goals (for more on building trust, see “Dispatches from the front lines of management innovation”). One of the important cultural changes for this top team was that its members needed to take ownership of the changes in the company’s performance and culture and to hold one another accountable for living up to this commitment.

Correcting dysfunctional dynamics requires focused attention and interventions, preferably as soon as an ineffective pattern shows up. At the mining company, the CEO learned, during a board meeting focused on the team’s dynamics, that his approach—letting the unresolved discussion go on in hopes of gaining consensus and commitment from the team—wasn’t working and that his team expected him to step in. Once this became clear, the CEO brokered a decision and had the team jump-start its implementation.

Often more than a single intervention is needed. Once the CEO at the financial-services firm understood how poorly his team was aligned, for example, he held a series of top-team off-site meetings aimed specifically at generating greater agreement on strategy. One result: the team made aligning the organization part of its collective agenda, and its members committed themselves to communicating and checking in regularly with leaders at lower levels of the organization to ensure that they too were working consistently and collaboratively on the new strategy. One year later, the top team was much more unified around the aims of the operational-improvement initiative—the proportion of executives who said the team had clarity of direction doubled, to 70 percent, and the team was no longer working at cross-purposes. Meanwhile, operational improvements were gaining steam: costs came down by 20 percent over the same period, and the proportion of work completed on time rose by 8 percent, to 96.3 percent.

Finally, most teams need to change their support systems or processes to catalyze and embed change. At the insurer, for example, the CEO saw to it that each top-team member’s performance indicators in areas such as cost containment and employee satisfaction were aligned and pushed the team’s members to share their divisional performance data. The new approach allowed these executives to hold each other accountable for performance and made it impossible to continue avoiding tough conversations about lagging performance and cross-organizational issues. Within two years, the team’s dynamics had improved, along with the company’s financials—to a return on invested capital (ROIC) of 16.6 percent, from –8.8 percent, largely because the team collectively executed its roles more effectively and ensured that the company met its cost control and growth goals.

Each top team is unique, and every CEO will need to address a unique combination of challenges. As the earlier examples show, developing a highly effective top team typically requires good diagnostics, followed by a series of workshops and field work to address the dynamics of the team while it attends to hard business issues. When a CEO gets serious about making sure that her top team’s members are willing and able to help meet the company’s strategic goals, about ensuring that the team always focuses on the right topics, and about managing dynamics, she’s likely to get results. The best top teams will begin to take collective responsibility and to develop the ability to maintain and improve their own effectiveness, creating a lasting performance edge.

About the Authors

Michiel Kruyt is an associate principal in McKinsey’s Amsterdam office, Judy Malan is a principal in the Johannesburg office, and Rachel Tuffield is an alumnus of the Sydney office.


The authors wish to acknowledge the contributions of Carolyn Aiken, a principal in McKinsey’s Toronto office, and Scott Keller, a director in the Chicago office.

Notes

1 For the purposes of this article, we define “top teams” as groups of executives responsible for either an entire corporation or a large business unit or division, but not boards of directors or supervisory boards.

Recommend (133)
  • 23 APRIL 2011
    Silva Sarkar
    Assistant Manager - HR
    Future Group
    Kolkata, India

    I completely agree that the senior team should only intervene in matters where their active participation is needed....

    .
    Silva Sarkar
    Assistant Manager - HR
    Future Group
    Kolkata, India

    I completely agree that the senior team should only intervene in matters where their active participation is needed. They should give more priority to strategic alignment of the team with the business goal, and also from time to time they should try to feel out the team dynamics, for the betterment of the team bonding. The top team can also use data from the HR team (such as training attendance, productivity, and attrition) and correlate the same with their own business performance.

    .
  • 26 MARCH 2011
    Rahul Singhal
    Business Strategy Leader
    GE Energy India
    Delhi India

    ...one thing on a macro level which is equally important for an organization is to have a vision, and this vision (for the company) should be effectively communicated to all team members....

    .
    Rahul Singhal
    Business Strategy Leader
    GE Energy India
    Delhi India

    Apart from the three steps mentioned here, one thing on a macro level which is equally important for an organization is to have a vision, and this vision (for the company) should be effectively communicated to all team members. Top management should make sure that every action of the team is aligned to this vision. Also, a constant endeavor is needed from the top management to keep the team motivated. These are not one-time tasks but have to be executed from time to time. Setting the right goals, clear communication of these goals to the team, and then having the right team members on the bus is the key to a successful organization.

    .
  • 23 MARCH 2011
    Tomi Oni
    Securities and Exchange Commission
    Abuja, Nigeria

    Getting the right people on the bus and the wrong ones off is easy to do in the private sector. In the public sector, especially in emerging markets, the top team in most cases are political appointees....

    .
    Tomi Oni
    Securities and Exchange Commission
    Abuja, Nigeria

    Getting the right people on the bus and the wrong ones off is easy to do in the private sector. In the public sector, especially in emerging markets, the top team in most cases are political appointees. Their poor performance notwithstanding, the CEO can’t get them off the bus.

    .
  • 10 MARCH 2011
    Biju Behanan
    Business Analyst
    Tata Capital
    India

    ...It is the CEO’s high priority job to create an environment of “productive collaboration’ within the organisation.

    .
    Biju Behanan
    Business Analyst
    Tata Capital
    India

    Point 3, on negative team dynamics and disfunctional pulls is what makes top management ineffective. The top management team collobration needs to deliver synergy. It is the CEO’s high priority job to create an environment of “productive collaboration’ within the organisation.

    .
  • 9 MARCH 2011
    Michael Cushman
    President
    Key Change Institute
    Denver, CO USA

    Nice advice, and sadly unlikely to lead to any useful change. I’m sure the authors mean well; however, is the typical CEO skilled at analyzing and effecting good group dynamics? Don’t think so....

    .
    Michael Cushman
    President
    Key Change Institute
    Denver, CO USA

    Nice advice, and sadly unlikely to lead to any useful change. I’m sure the authors mean well; however, is the typical CEO skilled at analyzing and effecting good group dynamics? Don’t think so. And by the way, each situation is unique just to make it really challenging for CEOs. Hire the right team and what then? Nine months later everything has changed and there’s a growing gap between the team’s capabilities and what’s needed in the new environment, isn’t that so? Going to replace everyone again? Don’t think so.

    For CEOs to get what they want from the their businesses, they need a tool that precisely pinpoints what the team needs to make the required breakthrough and a just-in-time (JIT) process that develops the executive team (including the CEO), to become capable of achieving what they want.

    The solution is not to expect CEOs to become group dynamic wizards. It will never happen. CEOs have too many other pressing demands from the business. Rather, the solution is to empower and support each CEO to continually develop his or her executive team, JIT, so that the team is more and more capable of maintaining excellent group dynamics on its own, as well as solving more and more business challenges together. (Yes, that is possible and in the marketplace.) Let us let CEOs do what CEOs do best.

    .
  • 15 FEBRUARY 2011
    Somasundaram N
    Senior Vice President
    Vedanta Aluminium Limited
    India

    ...steps 2 and 3 require constant monitoring as situations become dynamic. In a matrix organization, the powers are loosely defined and it makes the task more complicated.

    .
    Somasundaram N
    Senior Vice President
    Vedanta Aluminium Limited
    India

    Good insights. While Step 1 may seem relatively less difficult to achieve, steps 2 and 3 require constant monitoring as situations become dynamic. In a matrix organization, the powers are loosely defined and it makes the task more complicated.

    .
  • 15 FEBRUARY 2011
    Lee Scott
    Principal
    Unleashing Leaders Inc.
    Sacramento, CA USA

    ...Metrics are pretty, but it’s the visceral day-to-day that is most powerful. You usually don’t need a metric to know when someone isn’t playing the good-team-member role....

    .
    Lee Scott
    Principal
    Unleashing Leaders Inc.
    Sacramento, CA USA

    To Mr. White’s question re: step 3, experience has shown us that changing a team’s behaviors follows a similar pattern as implementing most changes. 1) Set clear expectations, 2) Monitor performance against expectations, and 3) provide relentless feedback. The metrics depend on having clarity around the expectations.

    1) Clear Expectations:
    Rather than starting from scratch to define “rules of engagement,” most companies have a strategic plan with goals and values already described. The values often describe a decent standard for the executive team to emulate. It may be useful to work with the executive team to name examples of what behaviors do and do not align with those values. Another place to look is the emergence of core competencies. These often describe interpersonal items as well as technical ones.

    2) Measure Performance:
    Based on the expectations (values and core competencies), surveys can collect data for metrics. A baseline with quarterly updates is just as relevant as financials. Team-based metrics are displayed in a scorecard along with performance against strategic goals. Individual metrics are embedded in performance expectations and reviews. Nothing’s perfect. All you need are indicators of progress.
    Examples for teams:
    -% of team members who are clear about the values/expectations for team behavior.
    -% of team members who think the values are important accelerators to organizational performance.
    -% of peers/direct reports/indirect reports who agree executive behavior consistently aligns with values/competencies.
    Examples for individuals (same ones above plus):
    - Average perceived proficiency in core competency/value.
    - Frequency with which others observe this competency/value.
    Of course, all the metrics for fiscal/customer results are also lagging indicators to team dynamics.

    3) Feedback. Metrics are pretty, but it’s the visceral day-to-day that is most powerful. You usually don’t need a metric to know when someone isn’t playing the good-team-member role. In this case, the old adage, “Praise in public, criticize in private” fails. If it is a public issue, the criticism should also be public. And every executive should have the responsibility to call their peers on it. “Excuse me. You just interrupted your peer during her presentation to list 5 ways it can’t be done. First, interrupting doesn’t jibe with our definition of respect. Second, I can appreciate that you have some concerns, and we need to hear them. I also expect you to show some vision and innovation to help us see how we can address them. I find myself less willing to hear your ideas when you aren’t open to those of your peers. Now, try saying that again when it’s your turn with vision and respect.”

    A couple of these nuggets will let folks know in short order what the expectations are and whether or not they are meeting them.

    .
  • 14 FEBRUARY 2011
    Miss Maryam Siddique
    None
    London UK

    ...being a secretary and having managed the time of many organisations through ‘diaries,’ I fully agree that the agendas of executives are jam packed with issues/decisions that can go ahead without them....

    .
    Miss Maryam Siddique
    None
    London UK

    First, I wonder if ‘top teams’ don’t collaborate due to internal ‘politics’ because people in ‘top teams’ are usually CEO hopefuls, so when a new CEO is chosen internally or externally, then the top team loses its motivation because they are disappointed that they weren’t chosen as the CEO, which results in a ‘win-lose’ rather than a ‘win-win’. So the CEO has two choices:
    a) fire the existing team or
    b) help the top team to be hired as CEOs for external organisations by developing them and giving them PR (recognition for their effort in media). This will motivate the team to continue to deliver best results so they can be hired as CEOs ASAP.

    Second, being a secretary and having managed the time of many organisations through ‘diaries,’ I fully agree that the agendas of executives are jam packed with issues/decisions that can go ahead without them. This is usually because:

    a) executives don’t ‘pro-actively’ manage their agendas, secretaries are given a freehand to manage the executive’s time rather than being briefed/involved in how they can best manage their boss’s time to deliver the boss’s priorities.
    b) organisations don’t do a ‘time audit’ to assess how the executives managed their diaries in the previous year to assess whether they manage their time effectively.
    c) executives are ‘controlling’ and not ‘risk-oriented’ so they want to be involved in everything their sub-ordinates do, which minimises the ‘risk’ of things going wrong in the short-term, but increases the risk of staying too focused on what’s under the nose rather than looking forward and having a ‘long-term’ focus so literally everyone from top to bottom is involved in the same project.
    d) subordinates are not confident, and lack decision-making skills and are not risk-oriented so they seek their boss’s approval constantly and involve them in lower-level work rather than allowing the boss to spend their time on higher-level projects.
    e) subordinates are selfish, they want to move their projects faster so they try to involve the boss in their projects at ‘every’ stage rather than at a stage where the boss is required to be involved or to pass a decision. This is good for the subordinates because they can move the project faster because the boss can tell them in stage 1 if they are doing something wrong, rather than waiting until stage 2. This is bad for the boss and organisation because the boss is not spending enough time on his own projects. Arriving too early and arriving too late are both indicators of bad time-management. By delivering projects faster than they should be, the organisation operates at the wrong ‘speed’.

    .
  • 12 FEBRUARY 2011
    Andrew Martin
    COO
    Private
    Singapore

    25 years in business and three degrees to my name, and it all boils down to this: get the right people and do the right things well.

    .
    Andrew Martin
    COO
    Private
    Singapore

    25 years in business and three degrees to my name, and it all boils down to this: get the right people and do the right things well.

    .
  • 12 FEBRUARY 2011
    Margaret Wei
    Managing Director
    self-employed
    Beijing China

    ...It is, however, building trust among team members that really matters. Sometimes, even you think you have the right people who are in line with the CEO, it is not guaranteed that they will collaborate smoothly...

    .
    Margaret Wei
    Managing Director
    self-employed
    Beijing China

    The first point is basically the same as what was already mentioned in the book From Good to Great. It is, however, building trust among team members that really matters. Sometimes, even you think you have the right people who are in line with the CEO, it is not guaranteed that they will collaborate smoothly, and point 3 is therefore linked to this.

    .
  • 11 FEBRUARY 2011
    Keehong LU
    Performance Consultant
    Integrated Performance Associates (iPA)
    Singapore

    Integrity is important as people with integrity will know that they are not the right people at a certain point in time of the corporate life cycle and give up their seats at the gravy train. Not easy....

    .
    Keehong LU
    Performance Consultant
    Integrated Performance Associates (iPA)
    Singapore

    Integrity is important as people with integrity will know that they are not the right people at a certain point in time of the corporate life cycle and give up their seats at the gravy train. Not easy. How many ‘senior’ people overstayed their welcome while their leader did not have the heart to ask them to move on?

    .
  • 11 FEBRUARY 2011
    LJ Lekkerkerk
    lecturer
    Radboud University
    Nijmegen, Netherlands

    Nice reading. The first paragraph has more or less the same advice as Jim Collins gave in his book ‘Good to great’ chapter 3: First who .. then what (do note that it was published already in 2001 ...).

    .
    LJ Lekkerkerk
    lecturer
    Radboud University
    Nijmegen, Netherlands

    Nice reading. The first paragraph has more or less the same advice as Jim Collins gave in his book ‘Good to great’ chapter 3: First who .. then what (do note that it was published already in 2001 ...).

    .
  • 11 FEBRUARY 2011
    Biswajit Parashar
    VP
    UK

    A useful article. Intuitive as most wise revelations are. Books like “Good to Great” have emphasized similar methods. But also as most wise revelations, people benefit from regular reminders.

    .
    Biswajit Parashar
    VP
    UK

    A useful article. Intuitive as most wise revelations are. Books like “Good to Great” have emphasized similar methods. But also as most wise revelations, people benefit from regular reminders.

    .
  • 10 FEBRUARY 2011
    Thurman White
    President and CEO
    Progress Investment Management Company LLC
    San Francisco, CA USA

    ...I want to hear/learn from other experts and/or CEOs what diagnostics and/or metrics they use to chart senior- or managment-team effectiveness—especially around issues like firm culture...

    .
    Thurman White
    President and CEO
    Progress Investment Management Company LLC
    San Francisco, CA USA

    Very interesting article. I want to hear/learn from other experts and/or CEOs what diagnostics and/or metrics they use to chart senior- or managment-team effectiveness—especially around issues like firm culture, senior-team support for each other (vs. functional goals), etcetera. thanks.

    .
  • 10 FEBRUARY 2011
    Dick Townsend
    Director
    Strategic Flair
    London, UK

    ...team dynamics can only really be worked on if you’ve got a “big” CEO, who is able to take the feedback. Not everyone can deal with the feedback....

    .
    Dick Townsend
    Director
    Strategic Flair
    London, UK

    I agree with these priorities, and would add two angles for those who are trying to make these sorts of changes. One is that most people on these teams need help to stop doing stuff. It’s no good agreeing to only talk about, say, 5 strategic issues—the folk in the team will need help to stop doing all the other stuff, after all, it is by doing the other stuff that they got on to the top team. Secondly, team dynamics can only really be worked on if you’ve got a “big” CEO, who is able to take the feedback. Not everyone can deal with the feedback. Trying to resolve top team dynamics when the individuals cannot deal with the feedback can make the business worse.

    .
  • 10 FEBRUARY 2011
    Karl Pister
    President
    The Coaching Group, Inc.
    Portland, OR USA

    I echo the sentiments that the senior team must learn to monitor more that “do.”...

    .
    Karl Pister
    President
    The Coaching Group, Inc.
    Portland, OR USA

    I echo the sentiments that the senior team must learn to monitor more that “do.” My experience seems to indicate that the major challenge for senior executives is to realize that clarifying and promoting the vision that has to come from their level is “work.” However, most have arrived at that level due to long and successful work in the trenches. Moving them to that higher level of leadership can be the biggest hurdle.

    .
  • 10 FEBRUARY 2011
    J Jeyaseelan
    Director
    Infotwins Technologies India Pvt Ltd
    New Delhi India

    ...I am all for CEOs carrying out discrete surveys to feel the pulse of those doing real work as well as to know the undercurrents that often go unnoticed....

    .
    J Jeyaseelan
    Director
    Infotwins Technologies India Pvt Ltd
    New Delhi India

    These recommendations come handy for startups like ourselves who are trying to put together lean but effective top teams to lead the company.

    A key learning point from this article is the need to constantly improve the ratio of productive collaborations to unproductive discussions. I can very well relate to the long-winding and energy-sapping interaction sessions that leave people throughly exhausted and exasperated. This clearly is a sign of the lack of focus and cohesion at the top.

    I am all for CEOs carrying out discrete surveys to feel the pulse of those doing real work as well as to know the undercurrents that often go unnoticed. In my view what will ultimately win for the company is unified thought momentum within the company, brought about by a realistic alignment of strategies and goals encompassing the top teams and the front-line and back-office executives.

    I believe the greatest challenge for any CEO would be to transform a company into one team with a unified common goal.

    .
  • 10 FEBRUARY 2011
    Leon Goren
    CEO
    Presidents of Enteprising Organizations (PEO)
    Toronto, ON Canada

    ...The CEOs I continue to have the privledge to work with constantly underestimate the time required to change the dynamics of a team....

    .
    Leon Goren
    CEO
    Presidents of Enteprising Organizations (PEO)
    Toronto, ON Canada

    Over the past 18 months I’ve been fortunate to be able to facilitate and sit through a number of Executive Team Meetings of our Leaders. Your last paragraph hits home for me—Good Diagnostics followed by workshops are required to ensure change is sustainable. I would add the diagnostics are a small but critical part—the key are the ensuing conversations that occur. In many cases these conversations are quite silent in the early hours, but once the silence is broken, small steps are taken towards aligning an executive team.

    The other key point I would reinforce: employees watch the behaviour of both their leader and senior executive team—your actions drive their behaviour and engagement. It’s a cascading effect—too many companies think they can simply dive into the director level to increase engagement. Inspiration and engagement starts with the CEO.

    My final point which is absolutely critical to the success of changing the dynamics of an executive team: this takes time. The CEOs I continue to have the privledge to work with constantly underestimate the time required to change the dynamics of a team. A weekend workshop or retreat is a start but unless you understand that it may take close 12 to 15 months you are going about it the wrong way. As leaders, most of us understand developing strategy, organizational structures, and managing the financial aspects. Very few of us understand the impact of our behaviours and how to change them. It pays sometimes to take a look in the rear view mirror.

    .
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