Posts Tagged ‘The Winning Performance’

The Loneliness of Command

Wednesday, November 14th, 2012 by Troy Schrock

“Jukes was uncritically glad to have his Captain at hand.  It relieved him, as though that man had, by simply coming on deck, taken at once most of the gale’s weight upon his shoulders.  Such is the prestige, the privilege, and the burden of command.  Captain MacWhirr could expect no comfort of that sort from anyone on earth.  Such is the loneliness of command.”  (Joseph Conrad’s Typhoon, pg. 75, published in 1919 by Doubleday & Company)

I found this reference in The Winning Performance.  We speak about it being “lonely at the top” in reference to CEOs.  Here are two ways CEOs can deal with this issue:

  • Build a strong, cohesive executive team.  This allows the CEO to “share the burden.”
  • Even with a strong, cohesive executive team in place, there will still be issues that CEOs shoulder on their own.  It can be helpful to partner with a seasoned CEO advisor, someone who can come alongside him to provide wise perspective and direction to excellent resources on-point with the issue at hand.
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The Fundamental of Core Culture

Monday, October 15th, 2012 by Troy Schrock

The great thing about working on business fundamentals is that they will be equally as relevant in twenty years as they are today and were twenty years ago.

Perhaps the most important fundamental is culture, which is defined by the organization’s core values and purpose.  Strong leaders spend a great deal of time repeating the core values and purpose of their organizations and creating mechanisms that support the culture.  In The Winning Performance, Richard Cavanagh and Donald Clifford, Jr. provide a plethora of examples of businesses where the CEO and executive team spend a significant portion of their time communicating the fundamental values of the organization in an effort to protect the culture.  “Successful companies,” they write, “are run by people who have their priorities straight, their values clear, their direction tight, and a strong grasp of culture” (p. 17, emphasis added).

Don’t lose sight of culture.  The larger the organization, the greater amount of time the executive team should spend communicating and reinforcing the core ideology throughout the organization.

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