While dominance has been touted as a marketplace nirvana, the reality of the global marketplace has brought with it an unanticipated, strange and painful consequence: somehow, dominance has become as much a liability as an asset.

Small, nimble competitors can emerge from nowhere, move with blinding speed and subvert industry incumbents because incumbents can't respond quickly and effectively. Disconcertingly, dominance can disappear almost overnight.

To survive—let alone thrive—in this climate requires creating and continually renewing a spirit of disciplined entrepreneurship.

Disciplined, renewable entrepreneurship is the source for continuous generation of "disruptive innovations"—products and services that alter the rules of the competitive landscape—in your favor. It ensures rapid, effective response to evolving customer needs. It's the source of employee passion, creativity and commitment.

Yet, fewer than 3 in 10 executives think that their organizations are very entrepreneurial. Over half of executives admit that their organizations lack entrepreneurial role models and leaders do not really encourage entrepreneurship. Creating corporate entrepreneurship is clearly a conundrum.

Creating disciplined, renewable entrepreneurship is possible, but doing so demands significant changes in how we build, lead and manage companies.

Discipline and Creativity

Discipline is the brains and brawn of the entrepreneurial enterprise; creativity is its heart and soul.

Discipline is crucial for successful execution of any business model and strategy. Critical success factors for disciplined execution include these:

  • A clear, well-deployed business model and strategy 

  • Products and services that are tightly aligned with customer needs

  • Effective, flexible core business processes 

  • Clear roles, responsibilities, goals and measures for teams and individuals, coupled with a clear structure of freedom, empowerment and accountability

  • A culture that rewards high performance, creativity and learning

Creativity—the pure, unconstrained, blue-sky kind—must be deep down in the core of the entrepreneurial enterprise, and safeguarded like a precious jewel. Why? It's the source of enterprise vitality and the wellspring for rule-busting "disruptive" product, service and business model innovations.

The ultimate wellspring of organizational creativity is social diversity—i.e., internal variety or differentiation. And the more diversity, the more potential for creativity.

This obviously includes diversity in its current sense, but goes way beyond it. If you want a deeply creative culture, you've got to foster the expression and engagement of authentic, genuine individuals. John F. Kennedy expressed this very simply: "Conformity is the enemy of growth."

The Cycle of Renewal

In an entrepreneurial enterprise, business models, strategies, products and services are in a state of continual renewal. So are supporting components like business processes, organization designs, competencies, culture and technologies.

To remain competitive and retain the entrepreneurial spirit, senior executives must lead the organization through the "Cycle of Renewal" on an ongoing basis:

The cycle is a never-ending movement between the poles of disciplined execution and creative exploration. It has five phases:

  1. Action: Disciplined execution of the current business model and strategy

  2. Awareness: Intellectual awareness that change or reinvention is necessary to create, or respond to, a new, rule-changing business innovation

  3. Acceptance: Emotional and political readiness to let go of the old and move on to the new 

  4. Focus: Creative exploration of alternative business models, strategies, products and services, coupled with disciplined lasering down to the critical "right" next move 

  5. Build: Design and implementation of changes required to any or all of the elements inside the circle in the above graphic

  6. Action: The cycle begins anew!

Each move through the cycle is like a rebirth: some part or parts of the enterprise, connected to its perceived identity—like its business model, or long-held strategy, or suite of products, or culture—have to literally die, and something new needs to be "born."

This is energizing and creative, but it's also profoundly challenging and painful. Remember: the deeper the change, the more profound and deeply embedded the resistance.

Managing the renewal cycle requires a "full engagement" and "full bandwidth" approach.

Full engagement means involving the entire organization, including senior leadership, in every phase of the cycle. Full bandwidth means going beyond addressing only the rational, practical, technological and political dimensions of change (the province of traditional change-management methods).

Of course they're critical, but you'll need to engage your people on deep emotional, creative, intuitive—even "spiritual" (identity)—levels, too. Remember: you're rocking people's worlds here—possibly to the core! That's never going to be an exercise in pure rational analysis.

Without widespread engagement, or without openly addressing the painful emotional issues, each move through the cycle creates negative political and emotional "baggage" that gets dumped in the organizational "cellar." As baggage accumulates underground, organizational resistance grows and the entrepreneurial flame dims.

But when a full-bandwidth, full-engagement process is adopted, each pass-through of the cycle becomes easier. Also, with each pass-through, the cycle builds incremental improvements in enterprise resilience, competence and creativity.

Here's why: it is primarily through engaging deeply in transformational change that we grow in competence, creativity, resilience, resourcefulness, wisdom and maturity.

A New Leadership Paradigm

The foundation of execution is alignment—getting everyone "on the same page." The old leadership paradigm, founded on a parent-child model, used the tools of control, compliance and conformity to gain alignment.

In today's marketplace, the costs of the old approach are staggering. Bluntly put, the old paradigm serves only to perpetuate an increasingly stagnant status quo, and it devastates commitment, creativity and diversity—the foundations of renewable entrepreneurship.

The new paradigm replaces the parent-child model with an adult-to-adult, commitment-driven model based on mutual respect, accountability, negotiation and experience-based trust. This model fosters initiative, engaged commitment and creativity.

To enact the new paradigm, leaders will need to grow toward intellectual, emotional and spiritual "wholeness," so that they can balance and integrate the polarities between discipline and creativity:

Discipline Creativity
Power Humility
Accountability Freedom
Directing Listening
Mastery Learning
Strength Vulnerability
Rationality Intuition/Emotion

Wholeness is also critical for successfully engaging in a "full-spectrum" strategy for managing the cognitive, emotional, social, practical and political challenges of the Cycle of Renewal.

Creating a highly diverse, inclusive culture requires facilitation, support and community-building skills as well as the inner strength to foster the growth and empowerment of others without feeling threatened.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Dr. Dean Robb is president of Robb Consulting, LLC (www.robbconsulting.com). Reach him at drobb@robbconsulting.com.

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