Here are five reasons why that pivot is so important:
1. Trust powers ecosystems; control kills them
The way organizations create value is changing. This process has typically been linear. It took place in chains of participants – from sourcing of raw materials to the delivery of a finished product. Now we’re in an era of value created by ecosystems, because ecosystems provide the fluidity and flexibility needed to meet changing consumer demands.
In an ecosystem, trust is essential. All the participants are connected to and dependent upon each other for their combined and continued success. It takes high levels of data sharing between ecosystem players to meet evolving consumer demands in a timely manner while managing supply and demand efficiently. Otherwise, each addition to the ecosystem just adds more nodes and increased complexity, without increasing the ability to capture value effectively.
In response to the pandemic, trust became a key driver of value for company ecosystems. Some consumer products companies such as Unilever supported supplier networks with early payment and relief funds to keep liquidity in their supply chain. Others such as AB InBev pivoted their manufacturing to make and distribute hand sanitizers. Demand spikes through online channels forged new direct to consumer alliances between CP companies and agile distribution platforms to ensure they could fulfill and deliver to their customers.
2. Trust accelerates digital transformation; control creates siloes
Often new technologies are designed to meet the needs of a particular business function – such as finance or marketing – rather than the needs of the business as a whole. This can cause a proliferation of conflicting or redundant technologies and priorities, which undermines business performance and speed, making it harder to adapt to change.
Many of the business models that will be relevant to the future consumer create value by sharing data and co-operation, between the consumer and the business and between businesses in the ecosystem. Is it helpful to treat back-office operations as separate from a front-office that takes care of the consumer experience, when functions like logistics are so critical to enabling that experience? This kind of parochial divide makes it much more difficult to execute new models.
The key here is balance. The risks around uncontrolled data sharing and technology implementation are very real. As we move toward greater degrees of data integration across functions and ecosystem partners, it’s possible - and essential – to create data controls that allow for and enable a higher degree of trust among all stakeholders.
3. Trust attracts and motivates talent; control repels it
People are changing the way they work, and how they want to work in the future. This has challenged many old assumptions about how much control an organization needs to exert over its talent. More managers have come around to the idea that people can become more productive, engaged and valuable when they work in a climate of trust.
There’s more to this than trusting people to work away from the office. A talent model designed around the principle of control leads to a rigid workforce where people are salaried or contracted to deliver fixed outcomes. This limits any sense of personal responsibility and narrows the scope for creativity.
Huge areas of untapped potential lie dormant. Companies struggle to put people at the center of their business or to get the best from them. They can’t pivot their operations to meet or shape new market needs because their legacy workforces and cultures make them slow to move.
Trust creates flexibility and speed. People are empowered to make the decisions they need to, when they need to. They are encouraged to use all their talents to achieve the right outcome, and not be limited to the box created by a job title. They are not recruited for their ability to execute yesterday’s tasks, but for their ability to help the company become what it needs to become, in a rapidly evolving environment.
This is a profound change. It takes a different mindset and skillset to manage people in an environment built on trust, rather than control. It requires an ability to adapt to uncertainty. And it challenges deep assumptions about who is ‘talented’ and what value they can add.
4. Trust enables innovation to flourish; control stifles it
Organizations often control their innovation portfolio by keeping ideas in a safe box or sandpit, before the good ones are ready to scale. As a result, it is common for "innovation" to be a discrete function that sits outside other areas of the business.
Sometimes this is the right approach. If a particularly disruptive idea might cannibalize the wider organization, it’s best to keep it in a protective cocoon. Then it has space and time to evolve. But the separation of innovation from the business can make it more difficult to embed or scale good ideas that are needed now. It makes it more likely that creativity is limited to the ideas and experiences of only a small number of specialists, not a large and diverse pool of talent.
Trust democratizes innovation. It creates a culture in which ideas can bubble up from anywhere. People on the front line, dealing with consumers and ecosystem partners daily, are often the best sources of ideas. In a culture of trust, it’s easier to listen to your people and to your consumers; to quickly vet ideas and pilot, test, and scale the winners. That kind of possibility-focused culture is predicated on trust, not on compliance.
5. Trust builds common purpose; control limits long term value
A quarter-by-quarter focus causes management to double down on the things they know they can control, so they can report earnings that meet expectations. This has led to short-term thinking and incrementalism. Financial performance becomes the bottom line that everything is judged against and non-financial imperatives have secondary importance at best.
In a world where brand purpose and sustainability are increasingly important, this is a big problem. A growing number of consumers, across all categories, want to buy from companies they can trust to reflect their values. They expect them to meet those values over the long term, in everything they do – 68% of consumers, globally, agree that companies or organizations need to act as leaders in driving positive social and environmental outcomes. Investors and regulators have growing sustainability expectations too, and they are becoming more interested in sustainability in its broadest sense – not just climate change but wider concerns such as social and economic inequality, diversity and inclusion.
Companies won’t meet these expectations unless they truly embed non-financial priorities into every business decision. That means measuring and managing long-term value across a full range or metrics.
A future-fit model
To make their organizations future fit, leaders need to make deep and transformational changes to their operating models. The five areas we’ve talked about here – ecosystems, digital, talent, innovation, purpose – touch every part of the business.