The
Future of Management Is Teal
Organizations are moving
forward along an evolutionary spectrum, toward self-management, wholeness, and
a deeper sense of purpose.
Many people sense that
the way organizations are run today has been stretched to its limits. In survey
after survey, businesspeople make it clear that in their view, companies are
places of dread and drudgery, not passion or purpose. Organizational
disillusionment afflicts government agencies, nonprofits, schools, and hospitals
just as much. Further, it applies not just to the powerless at the bottom of
the hierarchy. Behind a facade of success, many top leaders are tired of the
power games and infighting; despite their desperately overloaded schedules,
they feel a vague sense of emptiness. All of us yearn for better ways to work
together — for more soulful workplaces where our talents are nurtured and
our deepest aspirations are honored.
The premise of this
article is that humanity is at a threshold; a new form of organization is
emerging into public view. Anthropological research suggests that this is a
natural next step in a process that began more than 100,000 years ago. There
have been, according to this view, at least five distinct organizational
paradigms in human history. Could the current organizational disillusionment be
a sign that civilization is outgrowing the current model and getting ready for
the next?
A number of pioneering
organizations in a wide variety of sectors — profit and nonprofit — are already
operating with significantly new structures and management practices. They tend
to be successful and purposeful, showing the promise of this emerging
organizational model. They show how we can deal with the complexity of our
times in wholly new ways, and how work can become a place of personal
fulfillment and growth. By contrast, they make most of today’s organizations
look painfully outdated.
A History of Organizational Paradigms
In describing the
pattern of organizational evolution, I draw on the work of a number of thinkers
in a field known as “developmental theory.” One of its basic concepts is the
idea that human societies, like individuals, don’t grow in linear fashion, but
in stages of increasing maturity, consciousness, and complexity. Various
scholars have assigned different names to these stages; philosopher Ken Wilber
uses colors to identify them, in a sequence that evokes the light spectrum,
from infrared to ultraviolet. I borrow his color scheme as a convenient way to
name the successive stages of management evolution
Around 10,000 years
ago, humanity started organizing itself in chiefdoms and proto-empires. With
this shift away from small tribes, the meaningful division of labor came
into being — a breakthrough invention for its time. With it came the first real
organizations, in the form of small conquering armies. These organizations,
which in integral theory are labeled Red, are crude, often violent groups.
People at this stage of development tend to regard the world as a tough place
where only the powerful (or those they protect) get their needs met. This was
the origin of command authority. The chief, like the alpha male in
a wolf pack, needs to constantly inspire fear to keep underlings in line, and
often relies on family members in hopes that they can be trusted. Today’s
street gangs, terrorist groups, and crime syndicates are often organized along
these lines.
Starting around 4000
BC in Mesopotamia, humanity entered the Amber age of agriculture, state
bureaucracies, and organized religion. Psychologically, this leap was enormous:
People learned to exercise self-discipline and self-control, internalizing the
strong group norms of all agricultural societies. Do what’s right and you will
be rewarded, in this life or the next. Do or say the wrong things, and you will
be excommunicated from the group.
All agrarian societies
are divided into clearly delineated castes. They thrive on order, control, and
hierarchy. In organizations, the same principles characterize the Amber stage.
The fluid, scheming wolf pack–like Red organizations give way to static,
stratified pyramids. The Catholic Church is an archetypal Amber organization,
complete with a static organization chart linking all levels of activity in
lines and boxes, from the pope at the top to the cardinals below and down to
the archbishops, bishops, and priests. Historically, the invention of formal
roles and hierarchies was a major breakthrough. It allowed
organizations to scale beyond anything Red society could have contemplated.
Amber organizations produced the pyramids, irrigation systems, cathedrals, the
Great Wall of China, and other structures and feats that were previously
unthinkable. They also considerably reduced violence; a priest whose role is
defined by a box in an organization chart doesn’t scheme to backstab a bishop
who shows a sign of weakness. A second breakthrough was the invention of stable,
replicable processes, such as the yearly cycle of planting, growing, and
harvest in agriculture.
Today, this
hierarchical and process-driven model is visible in large bureaucratic
enterprises, many government agencies, and most education and military
organizations. In Amber organizations, thinking and execution are strictly
separated. People at the bottom must be instructed through command and control.
In today’s fast-changing, knowledge-based economy, this static, top-down
conception of management has proven to be inefficient; it wastes the talent,
creativity, and energy of most people in these organizations.
Starting with the
Renaissance, and gaining steam with the Enlightenment and the early Industrial
Revolution, a new management concept emerged that challenged its agrarian
predecessor. In the Orange paradigm, the world is no longer governed by
absolute, God-given rules; it is a complex mechanism that can be understood and
exploited through scientific and empirical investigation. Effectiveness
replaces morality as the yardstick for decision making: The best decision is
the one that begets the highest reward. The goal in an Orange organization is
to get ahead, to succeed in socially acceptable ways, and to best play the
cards one is dealt. This is arguably the predominant perspective of most
leaders in business and politics today.
The leap to Orange
coincided with three significant management breakthroughs that gave us the
modern corporation. First was the concept of innovation, which
brought with it new departments such as R&D, product management, and
marketing, as well as project teams and cross-functional initiatives. Second
was accountability, which provided leaders with an alternative to
commanding people: Give people targets to reach, using freedom and rewards to
motivate them. This breakthrough, sometimes called management by objectives,
led to the creation of modern HR practices, budgets, KPIs, yearly evaluations,
bonus systems, and stock options. Third was meritocracy, the idea
that anyone could rise to any position based on his or her qualifications and
skills — a radical concept when it appeared.
The transition to
Orange brought a new prevailing metaphor. A good organization is not a wolf
pack or army, but a machine. Corporate leaders adopted engineering terms to
describe their work: they designed the company, using inputs and outputs,
information flows, and bottlenecks; they downsized the staff and reengineered
their companies. Most large, mainstream publicly listed companies operate with
Orange management practices.
In just two and a half
centuries, these breakthroughs have generated unprecedented levels of
prosperity, added decades to human life expectancy, and dramatically reduced
famine and plague in the industrialized world. But as the Orange paradigm grew
dominant, it also encouraged short-term thinking, corporate greed,
overconsumption, and the reckless exploitation of the planet’s resources and
ecosystems. Increasingly, whether we are powerful leaders or low-ranking
employees, we feel that this paradigm isn’t sustainable. The heartless and
soulless rat race of Orange organizations has us yearning for more.
Postmodernity brought
us another world view. The Green stage stresses cooperation over competition
and strives for equality, solidarity, and tolerance. Historically, this
perspective inspired the fights for the abolition of slavery, and for gender
equality, and today it helps combat racism, homophobia, and other forms of
discrimination. Green organizations, which include many nonprofits as well as
companies such as Southwest Airlines, Starbucks, and the Container Store,
consider social responsibility the core of their mission. They serve not just
shareholders but all stakeholders, knowing that this often results in higher
costs in the short term, but better returns in the end.
Green leaders have
championed the soft aspects of business — investing in organizational culture
and values, coaching, mentoring, and teamwork — over the hard aspects of
strategy and budgeting so prized in Orange. Family is their metaphor;
everyone’s voice should be heard and respected. You can’t treat knowledge
workers like cogs in a machine. Empowerment and egalitarian management are
among the breakthroughs they introduced.
Practice shows, alas,
that empowerment and egalitarian management are hard to sustain. Efforts to
make everyone equal often lead to hidden power struggles, dominant actors who
coopt the system, and organizational gridlock. Green companies, universities,
and organizations that take egalitarianism too far have tended to bog down in
debate and factionalism. Successful Green companies maintain a careful balance:
taming the traditional hierarchy through constant investment in training and
culture; reminding leaders and managers to wield their power carefully; and
raising the skills of people on the front lines.
All of these
organizational paradigms coexist today. In any major city one can find Red
organizations (entities at the fringes of the law), Amber organizations (public
schools and other government entities), Orange organizations (Wall Street and
Main Street companies), and Green organizations (values-driven businesses and
many nonprofits). Look closely at how an organization operates — its structure,
leadership style, or any core management process — and you can quickly guess
the dominant paradigm. Take compensation, for example: How are people rewarded?
In a Red company, the boss shares the spoils as he or she pleases, buying
allegiance through reward and punishment. In Amber organizations, salaries are
tightly linked to a person’s level in the hierarchy (“same rank, same pay”) and
there are no incentives or bonuses. Orange companies offer individual
incentives to reward star performers, while Green companies generally award
team bonuses to encourage cooperation.
Today, in small but
increasing numbers, leaders are growing into the next stage of consciousness,
beyond Green. They are mindful, taming the needs and impulses of their ego.
They are suspicious of their own desires — to control their environment, to be
successful, to look good, or even to accomplish good works. Rejecting fear,
they listen to the wisdom of other, deeper parts of themselves. They develop an
ethic of mutual trust and assumed abundance. They ground their decision making
in an inner measure of integrity. They are ready for the next organizational
paradigm. Its color is Teal.
The Nature of Teal
In 2012, I set out to
find some examples of Teal organizations and describe the factors that set them
apart. To qualify, an organization had to employ a minimum of 100 people and
had to have been operating for a minimum of five years in ways that were
consistent with the characteristics of a Teal stage of human development.
After screening a
great number of organizations, I focused on 12, selecting those that were most
advanced in reinventing management structures and practices. (See “Examples of
Teal Management,” where ten are listed; the other two, AES and
BSO/Origin, reverted back to more traditional management practices after a
change of CEO or ownership). I was struck by the diversity of these
organizations. They include publicly held and privately held for-profit
corporations along with nonprofits in the consumer products, industrial,
healthcare, retail, and education industries. Typically, the leaders of these
companies didn’t know about one another. They often thought they were the only
ones to be so foolhardy as to rethink their management practices in fundamental
ways. Yet, after much trial and error, they came up with strikingly similar
approaches to management. It seems that a coherent new organizational model is
emerging.
EXAMPLES
OF TEAL MANAGEMENT
Buurtzorg: a Netherlands-based healthcare nonprofit, profiled in this
article.
ESBZ: a publicly financed school in Berlin, covering grades
seven to 12, which has attracted international attention for its innovative
curriculum and organizational model.
FAVI: a brass foundry in France, which produces (among other
things) gearbox forks for the automotive industry, and has about 500 employees.
Heiligenfeld: a 600-employee mental health hospital
system, based in central Germany, which applies a holistic approach to patient
care.
Morning Star: a U.S.-based tomato processing company
with 400 to 2,400 employees (depending on the season) and a 30 to 40 percent
share of the North American market. (If you have eaten pizza or spaghetti sauce
in the U.S., you have probably tasted a Morning Star product).
Patagonia: a US$540 million manufacturer of climbing gear and outdoor
apparel; based in California and employing 1,300 people, it is dedicated to
being a positive influence on the natural environment.
Resources for Human Development (RHD): a 4,000-employee nonprofit social
services agency operating in 14 states in the U.S., providing services related
to addiction recovery, homelessness, and mental disabilities.
Sounds True: a publisher of multimedia offerings related to
spirituality and personal development, with 90 employees in the United States.
Sun Hydraulics: a maker of hydraulic cartridge valves
and manifolds, with factories in the U.S., the U.K., Germany, and Korea
employing about 900 people.
Holacracy: a management system first developed at the
Philadelphia-based software company Ternary, which has been adopted by a few
hundred profit- and not-for-profit organizations around the world, most
famously by Zappos.
·
Source: Frederic
Laloux, Reinventing Organizations (Nelson Parker, 2014)
Like previous leaps to
new stages of management, the new model comes with a number of important
breakthroughs:
• Self-management. Teal organizations operate effectively,
even at a large scale, with a system based on peer relationships. They set up
structures and practices in which people have high autonomy in their domain,
and are accountable for coordinating with others. Power and control are deeply
embedded throughout the organizations, no longer tied to the specific positions
of a few top leaders.
• Wholeness. Whereas Orange and Green organizations
encourage people to show only their narrow “professional” selves, Teal
organizations invite people to reclaim their inner wholeness. They create an
environment wherein people feel free to fully express themselves, bringing
unprecedented levels of energy, passion, and creativity to work.
• Evolutionary
purpose. Teal
organizations base their strategies on what they sense the world is asking from
them. Agile practices that sense and respond replace the machinery of plans,
budgets, targets, and incentives. Paradoxically, by focusing less on the bottom
line and shareholder value, they generate financial results that outpace those
of competitors.
Changing Paradigms at Buurtzorg
Buurtzorg, a large
Dutch nursing care provider, is a good example of an organization running with
Teal management structures and practices. Since the 19th century, every
neighborhood in the Netherlands has had a local nurse who makes home visits to
care for the sick and the elderly. These nurses operated largely autonomously
until the early 1990s. Then, to maximize efficiency and reduce costs, the
government created incentives for care-giving agencies to merge into larger
enterprises.
The new agencies, most
of which were private companies, gravitated toward an Orange paradigm. Seeking
to minimize downtime and allocate staff flexibly, they set up centralized call
centers; instead of calling their nurse personally, clients now had to dial the
center. Planners were hired to devise daily visiting schedules that minimized
travel times. The agencies instituted time standards: 10 minutes for
intravenous injections, 15 minutes for bathing, and 2.5 minutes for changing a
compression stocking. Barcode stickers, placed on patients’ front doors,
tracked the nurses’ progress so central managers could analyze their
efficiency. As these organizations consolidated, they added more layers of
management, all with the intention of increasing efficiencies and squeezing out
costs.
The outcome has been
distressing to patients and nurses alike. Clients, who are often elderly, have
to cope with new faces in their home at every visit. They must repeat their
medical histories to hurried nurses who have no time allotted for listening.
The nurses, for their part, find these working conditions degrading. They know
they should spend more time trying to understand the changing conditions of
their patients, but they simply can’t. The whole system is prone to errors,
conflicts, and complaints.
Buurtzorg (the name
means neighborhood care in Dutch) was founded in 2006 by Jos
de Blok, who had experienced these problems firsthand, as a nurse for 10 years
and then as a manager. His new organization is extraordinarily successful,
having grown from four to 9,000 nurses in its first eight years and achieving
outstanding levels of care. He set up the company as a self-managing
enterprise. Nurses work in teams of 10 to 12, each team serving around 50
patients in a small, well-defined neighborhood.
Buurtzorg has a distinctive
outlook on the nature of care. Its purpose is not to give shots and change
bandages as efficiently as they can, but to help its patients live, as much as
possible, a rich and autonomous life. Nurses regularly sit down for coffee with
their patients. They help them structure their own support networks and reach
out to families and neighbors. Patients see the same one or two nurses all the
time, and often form deep bonds of trust and intimacy with them
Clients and nurses
love Buurtzorg. Only eight years after its founding, its market share has
reached 60 percent. Financially, the results are stellar, too. One 2009 study
found that Buurtzorg requires, on average, only 40 percent of the care hours
needed by a more conventional approach, because patients become self-sufficient
much faster. Emergency hospital admissions have been cut by a third, and the
average hospital stay of a Buurtzorg patient is shorter. It’s estimated that
the Dutch social security system would save $2 billion per year if the entire
home-care industry adopted Buurtzorg’s operations model.
Self-Management and Its Misconceptions
Buurtzorg’s 9,000
employees operate entirely with self-managing practices. Local teams of 10 to
12 nurses decide which patients to serve, how to allocate tasks, where to rent
offices, how to integrate with the local communities, which doctors and
pharmacies to work with, and how to collaborate with nearby hospitals. They
monitor their own performance and take corrective action if productivity drops.
Teams don’t have team leaders; management tasks are spread across the members,
all of whom are nurses.
One common
misconception about self-management is that everyone is equal and decisions are
made by consensus, which requires endless meetings. The truth is very
different. Self-management requires a whole set of interlocking structures and
practices, so that decision rights and power flow to any individual who has the
expertise, interest, or willingness to step in to oversee a situation. Fluid,
natural hierarchies replace the fixed power hierarchies of the pyramid. This
requires explicit training. At Buurtzorg, all new team members take a course
called Solution-Driven Methods of Interaction, learning sophisticated listening
and communication skills, techniques for running meetings and making decisions,
and methods of coaching one another and providing perspective.
You might assume that
all this is managed through staff functions — the source of capability and
power in many Orange and Green organizations. But Buurtzorg’s 9,000 nurses are
supported by fewer than 50 staff people. The nurses do their own recruiting and
purchasing, contracting for specialized medical or legal expertise when needed.
They align with the larger organization not through rules and procedures, but
through the collaboration methods they learned. A powerful internal social
network allows them to draw on guidance and medical expertise from fellow
nurses in other parts of the country, many of whom they’ve never met.
The Embrace of Wholeness
In Amber, Orange, and
Green organizations, people typically show up wearing a mask: the bishop’s
robe, the doctor’s white coat, and the executive’s suit all embody subtle, but
real, expectations. Leaders fear that if people brought all of themselves to
work — their moods, quirks, deepest aspirations, and uncertainties — things
would quickly fall into disorder. Most people adopt an air of resolution and
determination, favoring their masculine, rational selves. It feels unsafe to
reveal the caring, inquiring, intuitive, and spiritual aspects of the self, or
to express a desire for meaning. Many of us end up disowning some fundamental
aspects of our selves. When an organization feels lifeless, is it because we
bring so little life to work?
Teal organizations
start from the premise, resonant with many wisdom traditions, that a person’s
deepest calling is to achieve wholeness. These organizations engender vibrant
workspaces and practices where trust flourishes. People feel they can truly be
themselves. Simple management practices foster a sense of personal connection.
At Patagonia’s headquarters in Ventura, Calif., for example, the company
maintains a child development center for employees’ preschoolers. Children’s
laughter and chatter are regularly heard; kids visit their parents’ desks, join
adults for lunch at the cafeteria, and run around in the playground outside.
One sometimes sees a mother nursing her child during a meeting. At another Teal
company, Sounds True, people regularly bring their dogs to work. Meetings often
take place with two or three dogs lying at people’s feet. Having children and
animals present tends to reconnect people with deeper parts of themselves; they
see one another not only as colleagues, but as part of a common humanity.
One harbinger of the
rise of consciousness in the business world is the support given to
contemplative practices. It’s becoming fashionable, even in Wall Street banks,
to offer meditation classes. But these are often treated as add-ons, separate
from the real work. At the Heiligenfeld hospital chain inner work is woven
deeply into daily life. Every week, colleagues from their five hospitals come
together for 75 minutes of intensive, reflective dialogue about a theme such as
dealing with risks or learning from mistakes. Heiligenfeld also devotes four
days per year to silence. The staff speaks only when needed, in whispers;
patients engage in forms of therapy that require no words, such as walks in the
woods or painting sessions. People learn to interact from a deep place when
words are not at hand.
The quest for
wholeness can also be seen on the factory floor. At FAVI, a French automotive
supplier, all engineers and administrative workers are trained to operate at
least one assembly-line machine. When orders must be rushed out, white-collar
workers come in to run the machines for a few hours. It’s a wonderful
community-building practice. People in engineering and administrative roles
work under the guidance of the machine operators. They see for themselves how
hard the work on the machines can be and how much skill it involves.
FAVI also has an
in-depth onboarding process that ends with new teammates writing an open letter
to the colleagues they have joined. The letters often describe how, perhaps for
the first time in their career as a machine operator, their voice counts at
work and they are considered worthy of trust and appreciation.
Evolutionary Purpose
Most organizations
define a purpose for themselves in the form of a mission statement, which is
typically engraved on a plaque in the headquarters lobby. Most of these
statements, of course, sound hollow. The espoused purpose can’t compete with
the pursuit of profits or competitive advantage.
Buurtzorg’s purpose,
as discussed above, is to help sick and elderly patients live a rich and
autonomous life. Its competitive advantage is the way it fulfills that purpose,
with self-organization and wholeness. If it were a more traditional
organization, it would try to keep this competitive advantage secret, and gain
market share accordingly. Founder de Blok did the opposite. He wrote a book (Buurtzorg:
Menselijkheid Boven Bureaucratie, [Boom Lemma uitgevers, 2010], coauthored
with Aart Pool, whose title translates as “Humanity above Bureaucracy”) in
which he documented Buurtzorg’s revolutionary ways of operating in great
detail. He accepts all invitations from competitors to explain his methods, and
acts as an advisor for two direct competitors without compensation.
“The whole notion of
competition makes no sense,” says de Blok. “If you share knowledge and
information, things will change more quickly.”
Making purpose the
cornerstone of an organization has profound consequences for leadership. In
today’s dominant management paradigm (Orange), leaders are supposed to define a
winning strategy and then marshal the organization to execute it, like the
human programmer of a machine who controls what it will do. In the Teal
paradigm, founders and leaders view the organization as a living entity, with
its own energy, sense of direction, and calling to manifest something in the
world. They don’t force a course of action; they try to listen to where the
organization is naturally called to go. None of the organizations I researched
has a strategy document. Gone are the often dreaded strategy formulation
exercises, and much of the machinery of midterm plans, yearly budgets, cascaded
KPIs, and individual targets. Instead of trying to predict and control, they
aim to sense and respond.
FAVI uses a metaphor
to explain this. Other companies look five years ahead and make plans for the
next year. They prefer to think like farmers: Look 20 years ahead, and plan
only for the next day. A farmer must look far out when deciding which fruit
trees to plant or which crops to grow. But it makes no sense to plan a precise
date for the harvest. One cannot control the weather, the crops, the soil; they
all have a life of their own. Sticking rigidly to plan, instead of sensing and
adjusting to reality, leads to having the harvest go to waste, which too often
happens in organizations.
Practices based on
sensing and responding, combined with self-management, lead to high levels of
innovation. Two nurses on a Buurtzorg team found themselves pondering the fact
that elderly people, when they fall, often break their hips. Could Buurtzorg
help prevent this? Their team created a partnership with a physiotherapist and
an occupational therapist from their neighborhood. They advised patients on
small changes they could bring to their home interiors, and changes of habit
that would minimize the risk of falling. Happy with their success, they
approached de Blok to suggest turning “Buurtzorg+” (Buurtzorg + prevention)
into a national program.
Had de Blok been a
traditional CEO, he might have analyzed the idea and, if he approved it,
assigned a team in headquarters to develop a comprehensive implementation plan.
His actual answer was much humbler: Why should he, rather than the system
itself, decide if this was a wise thing to do? He suggested that the same team
of nurses package their approach and disseminate the idea on the company’s
internal social network. Hundreds of teams showed interest and the idea quickly
caught on. Within a year, almost all teams had incorporated prevention into
their work using that model.
In a self-managing,
purpose-driven organization, change can come from any person who senses that
change is needed. This is how change has occurred in nature for millions of
years. Innovation doesn’t happen centrally, according to plan, but at the
edges, when some organism senses a change in the environment and experiments to
find an appropriate response. Some attempts fail to catch on; others rapidly
spread to all corners of the ecosystem.
Becoming a Teal Organization
Some companies, like
Buurtzorg, are advanced on all three Teal breakthroughs: self-management,
wholeness, and evolutionary purpose. Others are more advanced in one area than
others — FAVI in self-management, Heiligenfeld in wholeness. None of the Teal
companies I have identified have the scale of the largest Orange companies
(such as Walmart) or Green ones (such as Southwest Airlines). This is still the
dawn of the Teal paradigm. However, its promise is suggested by the success
these organizations are having.
Every stage of
organizational evolution is more mature and effective than the previous stage,
because of the inherent attitude toward power. A Red leader asks, How can I use
my power to dominate? An Amber leader asks, How can I use it to enforce the
status quo? An Orange leader asks, How can we win? A Green leader asks, How can
we empower more people? A Teal leader asks, How can everyone most powerfully
pursue a purpose that transcends us all?
Research suggests that
there are two — and only two — necessary conditions for developing a Teal
organization.
1. Top leadership. The chief executive must have an
integrated world view and psychological development consistent with the Teal
paradigm. It is helpful if a few close colleagues share this perspective.
2. Ownership. Owners of the organization must also
understand and embrace Teal world views. Board members who don’t get it,
experience shows, can temporarily give a Teal leader free rein. But when the
organization hits a rough patch or faces a critical choice, owners will want to
regain control in the only way that makes sense to them: appointing a CEO who
exerts top-down, hierarchical authority.
What about businesses,
nonprofits, schools, hospitals, government agencies, and other institutions
where these conditions are not in place? Can a middle manager hope to influence
an entire enterprise by showcasing Teal practices locally? As much as I would
like to believe this is possible, my hopes are not high. Experience shows that
it takes more than a successful local example to catalyze this sort of
system-wide change.
However, as a middle
or senior manager, you can introduce some elements of the new paradigm for your
own benefit and that of your colleagues. Practices that encourage people to
show more of their true selves might come across as unusual, but are unlikely to
raise red flags with top leadership. Some elements of self-management can be
introduced; for example, instead of imposing new targets, ask team members to
determine, in a peer-based process, which targets could be changed. If the team
functions well, don’t attend the meeting. Let them come up with the best
solution on their own so the targets will be theirs. Or when it’s time to
appoint someone to report to you, don’t do it yourself. Let the team one level
below write up the job description, interview candidates, and select their
boss. Executives who have tried this find that subordinates take choosing their
boss very seriously, and the process gives the boss a much stronger working
relationship with the team.
The full benefit, of
course, accrues to those organizations that fully embrace the new paradigm.
When I spent a day with de Blok in the small headquarters of Buurtzorg, I was
struck by how much simpler work life could be. Buurtzorg is a 9,000-person
organization growing at breakneck speed. But after several hours of
conversation, I realized we hadn’t been interrupted once. No urgent phone
calls; no assistant coming in to whisper in the CEO’s ear that something had
come up. Work in Teal organizations seems to unfold so easily it sometimes
verges on the magical. Control and self-correction is embedded in the system,
and no longer requires leaders to be on top of everything at all times.
In the past, with
every change in consciousness (from Red to Amber to Orange and to Green), more
powerful and life-enhancing forms of management have emerged. After the full
emergence of the Teal paradigm, we will probably look back and find the
organizational forms and practices of the late 20th and early 21st century
alienating and unfulfilling. Already, it’s clear that we can create radically
more productive, soulful, and purposeful businesses and nonprofits, schools,
and hospitals. We are at an inflection point: a moment in history where it’s
time to stop trying to fix the old model and instead make the leap to the next one.
It will be better suited to the complexity and challenges of our times, and to
the yearning in our hearts.
·
by Frederic Laloux
http://www.strategy-business.com/article/00344?gko=10921
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