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Leadership is futile if you are not willing to manage for outcomes

This blog always had a combined section on Leadership and Management and I am glad that it did when I read True Leaders Are Also Managers by Robert Sutton. For some reason leadership is equated to a grand "vision" of "doing the right thing" and management is seen as the more mundane "trenches" where implementation happens and "doing things right" is seen as tasks that anyone can do. But guess what-  management is what puts leadership into action or when the rubber hits the road. As Robert Sutton mentions organizations are full of leaders who put out a vision without having a sense of either the rubber or the road.They expect their reports  to implement and when things don't work out the reports are considered incompetent and might actually be replaced. This goes on for a few cycles till the Board of Directors realize and replace the CEO/particular C-Officer and this time hopefully the new CEO gets a better sense of implementation issues before pushing a grand vision.

And hey, this blog truly supports 'grand visions'- just that the leader must always have  a better first-hand sense of the road-map and ensure  that the road-map does reflect the terrain. Here is how the Chief Marketing Officer (CMO) and the Chief Supply/Procurement Officer (CSO/CPO) can make sure that their leadership gets management  traction:

Are these obvious things to do? Not really as there are just too many examples where both Marketing and Supply Chain Leaders operate from high in the air, while the CEO and Board wonder  why initiatives don't materialize in outcomes.

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