Every night on the evening news, we see oil soaked animals and witness interviews with unfortunate and hardworking people who can’t make their mortgage payments.  Then we cut to the underwater camera which shows the continued rapid flow of oil and finally we  switch to a map that shows us a bigger and bigger area of destruction.  Recently, ABC Evening News superimposed a map of Nebraska over the Gulf.  Maybe by now, they are showing Alaska.   Last weekend, in acts of PR “genius” BP’s Chairman sympathized with the “little people” and its President attended a yacht race,

As this goes on we get angrier and  feel more hopeless.  We wonder how and why the parties could have done what they did, why we can’t fix it faster, and last, who exactly is responsible. 

Assigning responsibility is tricky. Certainly BP underestimated risks and cut corners and deserves its current prominence for malfeasance.  But, the responsibility is  broader.  The  oil industry wasn’t prepared and this isn’t the first leaking rig.  The government structure for regulation was in place, but the people who did the regulating didn’t act in the public interest.  Despite the warning signs, our appetite for petroleum fuels remains unabated.  The consequence seems to be riskier and riskier drilling.  Should we hold successive administrations responsible for insufficiently dealing with this potential crisis?  

Besides bail out, the solutions that are now being proposed address responsibility and punishment.   The mechanisms are increased penalties and better regulation.  Given the current malaise in Washington, the Congressional debate on how exactly what to enact will go on for years and will end with the public having little confidence in the final result.

Last week the news also brought the story of a Tylenol recall because bottles manufactured in Mexico gave off an offensive, and to some, sickening odor.   Before BP took them off the top half of the page, Toyota also showed offensive irresponsibility.  The problems caused by the Greek governments irresponsible  stewardship of the country’s economy have also impacted us all.  The sources of threat are everywhere!   If you believe that global warming is in progress, that ups your level of concern about the fate of our earth.

Our ability to cope hasn’t kept up with our ability to  manage global interdependency.   National governments are now dealing with issues of international impact with agreement between nations almost impossible because of diverging interests.

Dealing with these issues will require systems thinking on an international scale with a corresponding  recognition of the problems and a will to deal with them.  The track record isn’t good so this is highly unlikely.  I can only anticipate a long series of unanticipated disasters.   These issues don’t have a single culprit or even a root cause.  The problem is that we can’t manage a diverse system.   Fortunately a company is a smaller entity than the world economy and some are managed very well.    

Executive recruiting is more problematic than the search industry wants to publicize.   Just to get you oriented, recent surveys have shown that 40% of newly hired CEOs don’t last 18 months.  For more metrics that show how dismal executive retention rates are, click here.  

When you are an owner who sees that a hiring mistake has been made, you are seeing an oil leak on a smaller scale as the business makes bad decisions, looses market credibility, experiences drops in profits and morale, and begins to lose its best people.   The cause can be summarized by this phrase: people get hired based on their resumes and get fired because of their personalities and their failure to provide leadership in the right way in an organization with a specific culture.  

A non-systems oriented search will list the skills and experience that the resume of the new executive should contain.  On the other hand, a systems perspective would consider the culture of the organization, its strategic plan, the role a new executive can play in implementing it and the obstacles the new executive would have to overcome to be effective.  The specification would go beyond the resume and consider personality, character and ability to fit into the culture while simultaneously being a change agent. 

The systems view would then go broader still: It would consider that the organization and its current leadership need to collaborate for success and therefore will have as much or more responsibility for achieving the organizations goals as the new executive.  That  is  follow up and integration is included as an important step for success.  Both the organization and the new executive need feedback to ensure they stay on track to achieve the larger goals of the organization. 

Conclusion

The time for limited, non-systems thinking has past.  Those who are engaged in executive search can continue to make the mistake of seeing the responsibility for success as only being in the hands of the person hired (e.g. if that person doesn’t work out, we hired the wrong person) and begin to take a broader systems look at what the organization wants to achieve and the responsibility of the whole for achieving it.