DAY 16 – 30 Days To The New Economy
Your Role In History As An Entrepreneur
Imagine Leadership
and Management
The traditional organizational chart is a construct left over from Alfred Sloan’s leadership at General Motors in the early 20th Century. That, my friends, is 100 years ago.
Adapted from the book 30 DAYS TO THE NEW ECONOMY written and published by Peggy Salvatore
In the 1980s, the hierarchical organizational chart was challenged by enterprises that found products were better built when workers had ownership of their production. The philosophy of pushing decision making down to the employee flattened the organizational chart somewhat and relationships became “matrixed.” In other words, people sometimes had multiple layers of reporting and responsibility as well as accountability and all those layers were spread throughout the organization.
The shift away from top-down thinking has been gradual. It paved the way for entrepreneurs in the New Economy to be comfortable spreading responsibility, accountability and rewards across the organization — based on performance, not role.
Leadership and management in the New Economy is about vision— and goal-setting.
It’s about being able to get out in front of the parade with a baton while respecting the fact that without a parade, Internet Joe is leading no one.
And here is where the distinction between leadership and management takes a leap.
True leadership isn’t conferred as much as it is earned.
True leaders are people who others follow, in fact emulate, for their innate qualities. This harkens back to our first and most important quality of leadership, and that is integrity. People naturally follow someone they trust; they know they will wind up somewhere worth going. That requires a bit of a track record.
Management skills can be learned. Management is about the ability to align and assign resources to achieve goals. Managers don’t require the kinds of rigorous traits of a true leader but they do require consistency, persistence and organization.
Managers don’t need to be leaders.
But great leaders get nowhere without great management of resources. If an entrepreneur is not a great organizer, it is critical she or he hires one.
A great idea, even with enthusiastic followers, goes nowhere without someone to arrange the resources in straight lines, all headed in the same direction.
Leadership and management don’t have to be embodied in the same individual. They do, however, need to be together at all times for efficient allocation of resources. An entrepreneur in the New Economy needs efficient organizational alignment with wise distribution of responsibility and accountability — even though your business map will not resemble, even remotely, Alfred Sloan’s hierarchical organizational chart at GM.
A successful Entrepreneurial Leader today
is not at the top of her or his organization.
He or she is in the lead, and that is a very different position.
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For more information on Peggy Salvatore’s book: 30 Days to the New Economy [© Peggy Salvatore 2015. All Rights Reserved.] click on ENTREPRENEUR NEWS or visit ow.ly/RysnP for the E-book
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