Tuesday, January 12, 2021

Do you really want a CEO to be a role model?

strategy+business, January 12, 2021

by Theodore Kinni



Photograph by RgStudio

When Fortune magazine named Elon Musk as the 2020 Businessperson of the Year, its CEO, Alan Murray, announced the news with palpable distaste: “I have never been a Musk fanboy; he is a mix of some of the worst characteristics of today’s leaders — more messianic than Adam Neumann, as allergic to rules and governance as Travis Kalanick, nearly as narcissistic as Donald Trump.” So why honor Musk? He has been extraordinarily successful at turning bold visions into successful companies. As a result, Tesla’s stock is up more than 1,000 percent since the summer of 2019, making its CEO and largest shareholder, with a nearly 20 percent stake, the second richest person in the world.

Musk is the latest in a long line of celebrated leaders who aren’t exactly paragons of good behavior. Steve Jobs was another notable example. In his acclaimed biography of Jobs, Walter Isaacson documented his subject’s famously petulant and abusive interpersonal conduct. But then Isaacson spun it to support his conclusion that Apple’s cofounder and, later, savior was the “the greatest business executive of our era.”

Murray’s ambivalence to Musk and Isaacson’s efforts to excuse Jobs got me thinking about the role that CEOs and other senior leaders inhabit as behavioral exemplars. Programs for corporate or cultural transformation invariably require that senior executives model the behaviors they are trying to encourage in managers and workers. When Jon Katzenbach and his colleagues at the Katzenbach Center (PwC Strategy&’s global institute on organizational culture and leadership) formulated their 10 principles of organizational culture, they specifically called that dictate out. “The people at the top have to demonstrate the change they want to see,” they declared... read the rest here

2 comments:

Ujval Vaishnav said...

Hello Theodore,

Enjoyed reading your article on S+B. I have a question, appreciate your ideas.

In small and mid sized companies, the CEO is all powerful and his agenda is the company mission and vision. I have seen mostly that the negative attributes get mirrored quicker. Aggression, Dominance, Coteries etc. get into the psyche more than the other Musk or Jobs strong points you mention in the article.

The CEO enjoys such a toxic behavior as it justifies his or her style. In such a situation, how does one create environment of listening, empathy, learning in the company so that group think and 'aping' CEO's behavior does not become the 'new normal'.

Thank you for wonderful writing and igniting thoughts.

Best Regards,

Ujval

Follow The Leader said...

Great article which I have posted on my leadership blog. Thank you.