qualityview
An Interview With John P. Kotter
John P. Kotter is Konosuke Matsushita Professor of Leadership at the
Harvard Business School. He is a graduate of MIT and Harvard, and has been
on the Harvard Business School faculty since 1972.
Kotter is the author of six management books, including Corporate Culture
and Performance (1992, with Jim Heskett) and The New Rules: How to Succeed
in Today's Post-Corporate World (1995). He has also created two executive
videos, Leadership (1991) and Corporate Culture (1993). Kotter's most
recent book, Leading Change, was recently released by Harvard Business School
Press.
QD: Why should companies initiate change when most are struggling
with unprecedented levels of upheaval?
Kotter: Many people look at the current business environment as a tornado
or a hurricane. They are, therefore, quite rationally it would seem to them,
either running around boarding up the house or shuffling all the children
and valuables down into the basement. But the strong winds they are feeling,
winds that are creating a lot of activity and anxiety, are not associated
with traditional hurricanes or tornadoes. Instead, the basic business climate
is changing in some fairly fundamental ways, and strong, powerful winds
are increasingly becoming the norm instead of the dreaded exception.
This shift is being driven, at least from all I've seen, by the globalization
of the economy along with associated technological and social changes-forces
that will only grow larger over the next few decades. The only sound response
to this is to build organizations that not only can withstand these more
powerful winds but will turn the new climate into an opportunity. Building
these new organizations that will survive and prosper in the new climate
requires a great deal of change. Incremental adjustments are insufficient.
Defensive maneuvering is insufficient. Not even competent "management,"
from well-meaning people, will do.
QD: How is the program you outline in Leading Change different
from the experience of many who have been part of restructurings, mergers
or other dramatic change in their own companies?
Kotter: The track record to date for reengineering, quality programs,
the implementation of major new strategies, acquisitions and cultural change
efforts is not very impressive. Attempts at business transformation often
have achieved only half of what had been desired and even then at unacceptably
high financial and human costs. Based on my analysis of experiences in nearly
100 organizations, Leading Change explains why this is so, what the most
common errors are that even very intelligent people make, the eight stages
that are always found in a successful change, and the key force behind successful
transformations-leadership, which is different from high quality management.
QD: By "leadership" do you mean one strong charismatic
person?
Kotter: The notion that all you need is one Lee Iacocca is a
very dangerous idea. Competent leadership from the top is a necessary but
insufficient condition for the kind of change increasingly needed today.
In successful transformations, a committed team of leaders and managers
guide the effort, but large numbers of people at some time need to play
a helpful leadership role in their domain of activities. Only with the combined
force of all this leadership can the huge barriers to meaningful change
be overcome. Only with this leadership team can a powerful vision be formulated
and widely communicated, all employees be empowered to act on that vision,
sufficient short-term wins be created to give the transformation credibility
and momentum, sufficient changes be made to cope with the new economic climate,
and all new practices be anchored securely in the organization's culture.
QD: Why is the "managerial mind-set" dangerous for business?
Kotter: By a managerial mind-set, I refer to a set of attitudes-very
common attitudes that virtually anyone who has worked for a living will
recognize-associated with controlling activities, taking few if any risks
and planning everything possible in detail. If an organization has good
people and products, and is operating in a slowly changing environment,
such a mind-set can pervade the culture and be quite helpful. But today,
and even more so in the future, few organizations will be operating in slowly
changing environments.
In a more rapidly changing world, people with only a managerial mind-set,
even if they try to transform their firms, almost always make a predictable
set of mistakes that ultimately hurt stockholders, employees, customers
and others. They allow too much complacency, don't create enough teamwork,
ignore the power of the vision or don't communicate it well enough, quit
before the full job is done or fail to anchor changes adequately in the
organization's culture.
QD: Why do you think so many corporations can't recognize that they
have a culture of complacency?
Kotter: The forces that foster complacency in organizations are
many and powerful. Too much past success, too many visible signs of wealth,
too little externally provided feedback going to too few people, internal
standards that are based on history instead of current competitive realities,
too much "happy talk" from senior managers, a general lack of
candor in meetings, a general human tendency to settle into comfortable
routines, and many other factors can easily add up to an attitude of "things
aren't that bad" when in fact the opposite is true. And once all this
settles into the culture, it can become invisible to most insiders, just
as water is invisible to fish.
QD: Why is it so important for a company to anchor change in the
culture?
Kotter: New ways of operating that aren't well-connected to an
organization's culture can be remarkably fragile after the initiators move
on or shift their attention elsewhere. Anchoring change means getting it
into group norms and shared employee values so it will stick. Because culture
is such a soft and fuzzy concept, people with only a managerial mind-set
often ignore it-to their peril. For when the pressure to implement change
lets up, even just a little, the company culture will always reassert itself,
and the transformation program will derail.
QD: With more companies focusing on strong leadership, are managers
a thing of the past?
Kotter: No. Management and leadership serve different functions.
The former keeps things under control while the latter launches you into
a shifting future. Both are necessary. The problem today is that too many
organizations are overmanaged and underled. What we need is for more senior
executives to delegate managerial responsibilities to lower levels in the
hierarchy, to train those people to handle their new assignments well, to
give them the proper information technology to help with the managerial
processes and then to use the freed-up senior management time for leadership.
The very best firms around today are doing just that.
QD: You paint an exciting portrait of the corporation of the future.
What will it look like?
Kotter: It will be less bureaucratic, with fewer levels, with
many more people playing a leadership role and management delegated to lower
layers. There will be many fewer irrelevant policies and procedures, much
more performance information from external sources going to far more people,
more externally oriented, more empowering, faster in decision making, more
candid in communication and more willing to take calculated risks. I agree
that this can be exciting. Very powerful macroeconomic forces are creating
this new organizational form-forces that ultimately will overwhelm opposition
from those with a big stake in the status quo, including parochial governments,
overpaid executives and narrow, self-serving labor unions.