As leaders balance this triad of activity, it becomes apparent that many firms’ structures, systems, and processes are put in place – by design – to ensure efficiency, consistency, and stability. While this is important, given today’s turbulence and speed, there’s a premium on increasing the certainty in decisions and actions as well as improving the agility of the enterprise. Thus, executives are on point to critically assess where and when the firm should be “fast,” where it should be “slow” and how to redesign the enterprise for overall agility, smart growth, and value at speed.
The case studies and learning sessions at the Summit also illuminated new ways to think about complex operations and supply-chain challenges and the key leadership skills needed to start and sustain progress. For example, first, leading firms focus laser like on changing customer expectations and what that means for redesigning a supply chain and operations. Second, leaders are thinking intentionally about the pace of innovation in services and solutions, the use of data and analytics to drive insight, and the implications for people and culture. Third, leaders have to prepare themselves for the challenge by developing an understanding of the “Technical Work” of transformation – the design of governance, structures, and technological systems that enable a supply-chain to change over time, and the “Adaptive Work” – the methods of exercising leadership to build ongoing alignment, trust, innovation, and sustainability.