Older Doesn’t Mean Better
René Carayol MBE
Author | Leading Executive Coach | Inclusive Leadership Keynote Speaker
Businesses Must be Quick to React
Similar collaborative and cooperative behaviour and attitudes rarely exist in business, no matter how bad things get.
In the past a good enough strategy, with a good enough management team and a strong brand were good enough to ‘get by’; but in this new rapidly changing world these strengths alone will solve little.
Let’s be explicit. By management we mean strategy, process, procedure, task, execution, KPIs etc. all the activities that ensure things don’t go wrong. Every business practices management now and it is readily available to all. Each and every aspect of management has become commoditised and all your competitors have similar approaches and are subsequently playing by similar rules.
Management is no longer a differentiator and it no longer covers the cracks of a failing business. This over reliance on continuing to do the same things in the same manner but a little more efficiently every year is crucially locking out a new generation of potential leaders. They have different philosophies to tackling new and disruptive technology driven challenges.
This is far from an argument against management, it is still essential. Without management, you will go out of business very quickly. But in these times of transformation and high velocity change, management is no longer anywhere near enough on its own.
Many of the great corporate institutions still cannot escape the ‘pull of the past’ and even in times of crisis, far too many keep looking for answers back in their history and from previous experience.
It is what a management ethos will naturally lead you to do; forever looking at lessons learnt from years before and studying what the “best practice” from their industry is, gleaned from a string of previous successes and failures.
But that makes the gross assumption that what is being experienced now has been experienced before. And it just hasn’t.
The Land of Innovation
Having now had the opportunity to work with the leadership of many multinational businesses in many industries and sectors, it is clear that there are many talented managers and experts, but perhaps nowhere near enough leaders.
These experiences have left me with strong views on the way forward.
The primary one is that there is more talent than most know what to do with. A younger and better qualified, and more travelled generation with more naturally collaborative instincts are struggling to get anywhere near the top of their respective companies.
This is both worrying and dangerous. The really top talented ones are thinking of leaving, because they are in demand elsewhere and know they are in this new super connected smartphone world, that their bosses are not privy to.
In many respects if things don’t change a younger generation could well become, ‘nurtured here, capitalised upon elsewhere’.
These hard working, aspirational and ambitious employees have fallen victim of the ‘tall poppy syndrome’, where the best of the best, eventually heads elsewhere, to deliver on their obvious potential. Some are so frustrated that they look to other like-minded and frustrated colleagues and join the growing ‘start-up’ community.
Many governments have started to recognise this and are trying to further stimulate this entrepreneurial culture with many decent and well-intentioned initiatives. Many of the banks have also sensed the commercial, community and long-term opportunities that their active involvement will bring.
The recent research paper, Global Employment Trends for Youth from the International Labour Organization provides stark insights into the challenge that the young face when it comes to employment.
Between 1997 and 2017, the youth population grew by 139 million people, while the youth labour force shrank by 35 million people. This dynamic is also reflected in a declining youth proportion of the overall global labour force, from 21.7 per cent to 15.5 per cent. The youth labour force participation rates have deteriorated in the past 20 years from 55.0 per cent to 45.7 per cent.
Compared to older workers, young workers are more comfortable with new technologies and likely to adapt faster to such technologies.
The way in which young workers engage in the labour market is also changing, with a clear move towards less secure forms of work and while young women and men are ready to ride the wave of new technologies, they value stability and security in their working lives.
Technology can be divisive but also inclusive.
Realising potential opportunities for youth in a technology-rich labour market requires a more risk embracing mindset to developing better opportunities that capitalise on their different approaches.
We must start to view the next generation of leaders as a huge asset and not impatient and entitled novices.
Many countries are seeing that the advancement difficulties that a generation that thinks and behaves differently face, has fertilised fervent breeding grounds for start-ups that are innovative and visionary. They have been ground breaking and pioneering but most struggle with early stage funding and the banks must remain tuned into taking such risks despite economic downturns.
With the banks aligned to a more positive disposition to those without long track records of success, most have courageous and insightful initiatives that are making a tangible difference to young entrepreneurs but it's far too early for them to ‘bear fruit’ or necessary returns yet.
These fledgling projects should not be ditched because of a dip in the economy. They will be a strong part of the medium-term solution and should not be seen as part of the short-term expediencies.
Being unique, special and different is an inherent strength of these youngsters’ start-ups and an invaluable ingredient in the recipe for survival in the downturn.
Many of these young entrepreneurs have yet to feel that asking for help is a sign of strength not weakness. It is something that needs to be addressed.
Not feeling able (or sometimes willing) to ask for help (to therefore not risk being seen as a failure) leads to two things:
? Zero collaboration
? Great small companies rarely become great medium or big companies.
To get to the very top you need to share. Collaboration is the new leadership.
And you need someone to lead the way, forget the fact that they may be young and inexperienced, or perhaps do not have the high academic qualifications.
If you’re capable, you’re qualified.
Where are Your New Ideas Coming From?
In unprecedented times the only way out of the darkness is leadership; inspired leadership at that.
By leadership, I mean – vision, people, teams, culture.
Management is IQ and Leadership is EQ. Management is the hardware and Leadership is the software.
Leadership is not management; it is how you inspire and energise your people towards your vision – show not tell. This approach through role modelling, naturally creates more leaders for the organisation, in a virtuous circle that means the best talent continues to be drawn towards wanting to stay and deliver for the business.
These new age leaders want to belong to something that wants and appreciates them, and want to believe in a leader that also wants and appreciates them.
We are witnessing a new generation that thinks and acts differently to the past and has a different set of values.
This new generation are sometimes described as acting with a sense of entitlement and not having the work ethic of previous generations, these are sweeping generalisations and unhelpful.
They’re not born of the ‘permission culture’ of the past, and are pioneering a new path. But that alone won’t stop them from migrating away or going off to start their own enterprises. They need to feel that they ‘belong’ and that their voices will be heard and matter.
A sometimes-ultra-cynical business media is not helpful, and all the more optimistic young business people deserve a little more balance. Let’s recognise the need to be just that little bit more positive about the authentic hard-working approach to business and life at work that most exemplify.
Just how optimistic are YOU?
Do you energise your people or depress them?
Are you driven by fear of failure or the desire for success?
Do they come to you with new ideas or share problems with you?
The historical business dilemma is no longer about talent, it’s clearly about leadership and consequently, corporate culture.
Read the full article at https://www.carayol.com/older-doesnt-mean-better/
Founder of Beyond Our Youth and Black Leaders Awareness Day, Baton Awards Winner, OBE for services to young people. Mother of twins, mentor of many, learning with multi generations.
6 年Excellent article René. Thank you for sharing this. I see the value that young people make to organisations and to my own thinking about leadership. They really are a rich source of knowledge and current/future thinking. Claud Williams Rachael Owhin Emmanuel Ayoola Leanne Armitage Marcus Nelson Nissy Nsilulu Zulum Elumogo Kéana Aitcheson Aharoun-Jordan Adeniyan Leanna Dixon Senyo Aidam Monica K. Isaiah Wellington-Lynn Shanice Cameron-Richards BA(Hons) CMgr MCMI
Passionate about delivering challenging IT projects and helping people grow
6 年in many companies today, older is seen as outdated not better. There is a real discrimination against older candidates in recruitment processes.