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Changing the World,
One Leader at a Time[1]
By Dr. Wayne Visser |
We face a
crisis of leadership. Our global challenges
loom large and clear, but we seem to lack
leaders who can make change happen at a
scale and speed that match the size and
urgency of the problems we face. In an
attempt to understand this leadership
impasse, I’ve done some research with the University
of Cambridge’s
Programme for Sustainability Leadership on
how change happens. In this blog, I’ll
briefly outline some of our conclusions.
Let’s start with what kind of change we’re
talking about. Jim Collins, author of Good
to Great, observes that companies
that went from being 'good to great' did not
rely on revolutions, dramatic change
programs or wrenching restructurings.
'Rather, the process resembled relentlessly
pushing a giant flywheel in one direction,
turn upon turn, building momentum until a
point of breakthrough, and beyond.'
A tipping point on
sustainability?
So we're
talking about catalyzing and scaling up
change. And for this change to be
successful, leaders need to foster and
entrench new values, culture, incentives,
rules and resources. In
Accenture and the UN Global Compact’s
2010 survey, 54 percent of CEOs
felt that a cultural tipping point on
sustainability is only a decade away—and 80
percent believe it will occur within 15
years, so perhaps we are nearing a moment of
infectious change. Meanwhile, at the
organizational level, leaders must catalyze
change for sustainability through a suite of
actions, including innovation, empowerment,
accountability, closed-loop practices and
collaboration.
We found that effective sustainability
leaders are good at promoting creativity in
business models, technology, products and
services that address social and
environmental challenges. Sustainability
leaders also implement structures and
processes for good governance, transparency
and stakeholder engagement.
A culture of discipline
Accountability does not have to be all about
structures and controls however. Collins
believes great leaders foster a culture of
discipline, saying "When you have
disciplined people, you don't need
hierarchy. When you have disciplined
thought, you don't need bureaucracy. When
you have disciplined action, you don't need
excessive controls." According to Jeffrey
Immelt, CEO of G.E.,
"Enron and 9/11 marked the end of an era of
individual freedom and the beginning of
personal responsibility. You lead today by
building teams and placing others first.
It's not about you."
The best sustainability leaders adopt
principles of cradle-to-cradle production,
internalizing externalities and extending
these principles to the supply chain.
Sustainability leaders also build formal
cross-sector partnerships, as well as
innovative and inclusive collaborative
processes such as social networking (Web
2.0). Betty Sue Flowers, co-author
of Presence, poses the challenge as a
question, saying, "We know a lot about
heroic action because that’s in the past of
leadership. But how do you have leadership
in groups across boundaries,
multi-nationally?"
Achieving sustainability through
storytelling
At the people level, leaders catalyze change
for sustainability by providing a compelling
vision, encouraging long term thinking,
making strategic investments and promoting
intergenerational equity. Immelt says "every
leader needs to clearly explain the top
three things the organization is working on.
If you can't, then you're not leading well."
Ray Anderson,
the late CEO of Interface, saw this as a
process of inclusion, saying, "For
Interface, sustainability is broader than
before: sustainability reaches out to
embrace people, processes, products, place,
the planet and profits—we now know that none
can long be afforded allegiance at the
expense of the others."
Sustainability leaders have to show deep
knowledge and skills and provide
opportunities and resources for appropriate
action. This embraces Robert Greenleaf's
notion of servant leadership. He explains
that "It begins with the natural feeling
that one wants to serve. Then conscious
choice brings one to aspire to lead. The
best test is: do those served grow as
persons; do they, while being served, become
healthier, wiser, freer, more autonomous,
more likely themselves to become servants?"
Transformational sustainability leaders also
focus on creating a culture and structure
that provides peer support and encouragement
and recognizes achievement. Immelt says,
"Today, it’s employment at will. Nobody's
here who doesn't want to be here. So it's
critical to understand people, to always be
fair, and to want the best in them."
In the end, I believe the best leaders are
effective storytellers. And they realize
that we need a new collective story. As I
wrote in Beyond
Reasonable Greed, "each time the
world changes – when civilizations rise and
fall, when new scientific theories challenge
our understanding of the universe, when
technological innovation reinvents our
lifestyle, when political revolution breaks
down the old structures of society, or when
a global crisis threatens to destroy our
planet – humanity is forced to let go of
some of its most cherished beliefs in order
to create a new mythology to guide its
collective psyche."
Small actions lead to big
changes
We are at just such a fulcrum of change, and
the beliefs we need to challenge and modify
are many. Maybe it is our belief in the
beneficence of the "invisible hand" of the
market. Or our belief that a global
political deal is all we need to solve the
climate crisis. Or that that business has
the power to act unilaterally in bringing
about a more sustainable and responsible
future.
If my experience of living through the
political changes in South Africa has taught
me anything, it is that change is systemic.
It happens because of millions of small
actions by millions of people all over the
world, some coordinated, some diffuse. Yes,
change also happens because of bold
leadership, but it always needs an enabling
environment, a society or an organization
that is ready to change.
Change is something organic. It is worth
remembering that the largest living thing in
the world is a honey mushroom in Oregon – an
interconnected fungus measuring 3.5 miles
across. It is said to be 2,400 years old and
takes up 2,200 acres (1,665 football
fields), with the small mushrooms visible
above ground representing only a tiny
proportion of its real girth and substance.
I think change is something like that too:
spread out, interconnected, growing where
the ground is most fertile ground and often
invisible.

Posted with permission of CSR News –
Quest for CSR 2.0 series. Blog Post
of January 12, 2012.
About Wayne Visser
Dr.
Visser is Founder and Director of the
think-tank CSR
International and
the author of twelve
books. In
addition, Dr. Visser is Senior Associate at
the University of Cambridge Programme for
Sustainability Leadership and Visiting
Professor of Sustainability at Magna Carta
College, Oxford. Before getting his PhD in
CSR, Dr. Visser was Director of
Sustainability Services for KPMG and
Strategy Analyst for Cap Gemini in South
Africa. In 2011, he was listed as one of
the Top
100 Thought Leaders in Europe & the Middle
East. Dr.
Visser lives in London, UK, and enjoys art,
writing poetry, spending time outdoors and
travelling. A full biography and much of his
writing and art is on www.waynevisser.com.
Read other posts of Dr. Visser