In today's world of business where organizational boundaries are blurry, intense competition dictates rapid change, and complex issues and relationships cut across departments, business units, and even companies, the old hierarchical command-and-control management approach is no longer sufficient. Distributed leadership approaches are necessary and no one individual can do it all. In fact, an enterprise is more than just the traditional organization. Value today is often created not just within a company, but also across a network of companies. Being able to connect the various components and to work collaboratively within the network is essential to maintaining competitive advantage. Leaders today must be capable of identifying potential partners, initiating and maintaining relationships, resolving conflicts, and reconfiguring their relationships. Cross-Enterprise Leadership is a new model for success in today's world of complexity and ambiguity. Leaders who adopt this approach will be more comfortable dealing with ambiguity, uncertainty, complexity and time pressures, and with creating value through networks of relationships.
Small, domestic, entrepreneurial companies are, by their very nature, cross-enterprise focused. Entrepreneurs will tell you that they live in a world of uncertainty and ambiguity and that they constantly need to adjust on the fly. Equally, large multi-national companies like Wal-Mart, Nestle, or Coca-Cola are inherently complex and issues and relationships cut across functions, levels, geographies, and companies.
Cross-Enterprise Leadership goes beyond a functional perspective to understanding the complexity of business issues from all angles and how they can be integrated, how leaders can rely almost entirely on influence when they may be operating without power or authority, and how they can develop the capacity to make decisions and implement them in an environment filled with uncertainty and complexity.
Most managers operate like the traditional orchestra-waiting to do their written part. But there is no tidy score for business today. CEL enables today's leaders to be more like a jazz band, improvising and building off of one another, creating music in real time and in relationship to one another.
About the Author: THE RICHARD IVEY SCHOOL OF BUSINESS is widely acknowledged as Canada's top business school, and it's consistently ranked as a leading international business school by the Financial Times, Bloomberg Businessweek, and the Wall Street Journal. Affiliated with the University of Western Ontario, where its main campus is located, Ivey also has executive teaching facilities in London, Toronto, and Hong Kong. Renowned for its case study method, Ivey is the second-largest producer of business cases in the world (after Harvard Business School) and the world's leading producer of Asian case studies. CAROL STEPHENSON, O.C., is Dean of the Richard Ivey School of Business at the University of Western Ontario and holds the Lawrence G. Tapp Chair in Leadership. She is a former CEO with more than 30 years' experience in the private sector. Since joining Ivey as Dean in 2003, she has led the drive to re-shape business education for the 21st century.
DR. MARY CROSSAN is a Professor of Strategic Management and the Taylor/Mingay Chair in Business Policy at the Richard Ivey School of Business at the University of Western Ontario. Her research on leadership, organizational learning, and improvisation is published in the top management journals including the Academy of Management Review, Strategic Management Journal, and Organization Science.
DR. JEFFREY GANDZ is Managing Director, Program Design-Executive Development and a Professor in the General Management area at the Richard Ivey School of Business at the University of Western Ontario. He designs and delivers executive programs for corporations and public sector organizations.
DR. GERARD SEIJTS is an Associate Professor of Organizational Behaviour and the Ivey Alumni Association/Toronto Faculty Fellow in Business Leadership at the Richard Ivey School of Business at the University of Western Ontario. He also heads the Leading Cross-Enterprise Research Centre.