Lead the Work. Creelman David
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Название: Lead the Work

Автор: Creelman David

Издательство: Автор

Жанр: Зарубежная образовательная литература

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isbn: 9781119040071

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СКАЧАТЬ new ways to organizations and to each other. Leaders are recognizing that this connected era is fundamentally changing how people engage, and this puts pressure on leadership to adapt.

      Let this book be your navigation guide to the new world of work.

      If you are a corporate officer, investor, or manager, read this book to understand how to lead and engage the new workforce. Share the book with your HR leaders, and discuss how you can work with them to optimize the opportunities, and avoid the pitfalls, of the new global workplace.

      If you are an HR leader, read this book to be inspired and guided on how you can contribute in new ways, as the evolving world of work will alter virtually every element of your profession. Please share this book with your colleagues outside of HR, and together craft your unique vision of a new kind of strategic partnership.

      If you are a professional, read this book and be inspired by the expanding options for you to craft an even more fulfilling and rewarding work life.

      If you are a policy maker, read this book and consider the role of governments, nations, and societies in ensuring that this evolution is fair, inclusive, and sustainable.

– Diane GhersonSenior Vice PresidentHuman Resources, IBM

      Acknowledgments

      This book is the result of tireless support from many friends and colleagues.

      We thank our colleagues at Towers Watson, particularly Juliet Piekarski, who reviewed and read every chapter countless times, Jorn Janssens, who helped advance some of our original ideas, and Shatrunjay Krishna who helped us tell the intriguing story of Bharti Airtel.

      We are also grateful for the sponsorship and support of Julie Gebauer, who embodies all the attributes of the engaging leader in her leadership of Towers Watson's Talent and Rewards segment.

      We wish to thank the executives at each of our case study companies for sharing their stories with us.

      We are also grateful for the comments and feedback from many trusted colleagues, particularly John Bronson, Jim Duffy, Doug Milroy, Sandy Ogg, Scott Sherman, Laurie Siegel, and Mara Swann.

      In addition, we wish to acknowledge the editorial staff at Wiley publishing; Karen Murphy, Shannon Vargo, Judy Howarth, Tiffany Colon, and Abirami Srikandan, for their support.

      Part One

      The Background

      Chapter 1

      Leading Work – Not Managing Employees

      We create boxes to make sense of the world. We talk about organizations and jobs as boxes. Employees sit inside jobs that sit inside organizations. This is how we think things get done. In practice, it's never really so cut and dried, but the simple mental model works – or at least it used to.

      Now we are seeing those comfortably familiar boxes begin to disintegrate.

      Have you heard phrases like “nonemployment work arrangements,” “freelance talent platforms,” and “labor market intermediaries?” They reflect an emerging trend in which work and workers exist “beyond employment.” Many leaders have hardly noticed the rising frequency with which these terms crop up in discussions about the future of work. To leaders, “nonemployment work arrangement” may sound like something to be delegated to specialists in procurement or personnel. Or they might ask, “Are these new arrangements just simple extensions of cost-reduction techniques we've seen for years, such as outsourcing, temporary contract workers, and consultants?” Sometimes they sound familiar, but increasingly these new approaches to work are already fundamentally changing how you compete and achieve your organization's mission. Leaders who overlook them risk making the same mistake that taxi services made when they dismissed the emergence of the Uber ride-sharing service.

      A world where work moves “beyond employment” will challenge fundamental strategic assumptions in virtually every industry and sector. The world is changing, and the role of a leader is not to stand back, or marvel at the change, or delegate the decisions to administrative rules. A leader's job is to achieve organizational goals through the work of others. Leaders must develop the tools to grapple with this new world. Work is escaping the confines of regular full-time employment, and it is leaving your organization. These changes create opportunities that should not be ignored.

      This shift is reminiscent of the diversity movement that seeks out talent regardless of gender or ethnic origin. The beyond employment opportunity is to seek out talent among free agents, anywhere in the world, who prefer free agency to employment. In particular if you are looking for authentic innovators and creative agents, this is where they are likely to be found.

      The problem for leaders is that they face a bewildering array of stories and examples of how work is changing, but no framework to guide their decisions. It's like seeing lots of bright shiny objects in the sky, with no framework of astronomy to guide you. The stories and examples tend to focus on two things, and have omitted a vital third element.

      Many stories and examples focus on the Workers. You hear a lot about the plight of contingent workers, the exploitation of part-time workers, but also about the freelance coder who is earning $100,000 a year sitting on a beach in Bali, or the crowdsourced gamers that solved a thorny riddle in AIDS treatment. You wonder if you should be using such workers, or even whether you should become one yourself.

      Other stories and examples focus on the Client for the work. You hear a lot about Netflix saying that “adequate performance gets a generous severance package,”1 companies like Colgate-Palmolive producing ads for the Super Bowl through crowdsourcing,2 and early-stage companies that consist of a few employees who lead the work by tapping a vast global network of workers connected through cloud technology and personal technology. You wonder if you should adopt some of these practices in your organization when you are the client for the work.

      These examples and stories can appear like the lights on a Christmas tree in a dark room. If you can't see the shape of the tree that holds the lights, it's often difficult to understand their pattern. What you need is to see the tree underneath the lights. This book focuses on the decisions you make about the Work. It draws on the excellent ideas that others have proposed regarding the Worker and the Client, and then builds upon them by illuminating how understanding the Work helps to explain the stories and examples. More important, because a leader's job is to achieve a mission through the work of others, this book's focus on the work gives you a way to navigate this emerging world beyond regular full-time employment.

Work: Escaping Traditional Regular Full-Time Employment

      Does being a leader mean leading your regular full-time employees? What does it mean to lead when workers are not employees? For example, should you and your leaders be the best at leading free agents or contractors?

      Let's look at some examples of work being done by workers who are outside the confines of traditional regular full-time employment for your business. These workers may be “free agents” who work for themselves, employees of an organization you are allied with, employees of an outsourcing firm, or even volunteers. In these next three examples the workers are as important in getting the work done as the firm's own employees.

How Free Agents Built the Software for Managing Genomes

      The leaders at Ion Torrent had a problem. Managing the huge data files that result from sequencing DNA,3 even with fast computers, was slow and expensive. The company's IT leader was tasked with finding ways to СКАЧАТЬ



<p>1</p>

Reed Hastings, Slideshare, posted August 1, 2009, www.slideshare.net/reed2001/culture-1798664 (accessed February 10, 2015).

<p>2</p>

Peter H. Diamondis, XPrize.org, posted March 4, 2013, www.xprize.org/news/ceo-corner/tongal-produced-ad-scores-super-bowl-touchdown (accessed March 12, 2015).

<p>3</p>

Ion Torrent website, Life Technologies, created 2014, www.Topcoder.com/case-studies/ion-torrent (accessed March 17, 2015).