The Hidden Discipline for Transformation Success

The Hidden Discipline for Transformation Success

GUEST POST from Geoffrey A. Moore

In Zone to Win, we lay out a playbook for transformational initiatives that focus on prioritizing a single effort across the entire enterprise for a period of no longer than two years. Core to success is the unswerving commitment of the CEO, the Executive Leadership Team, and the Board of Directors to see this through to completion come hell or high water. That means it is top of the agenda at every operational review and in between has an open-door escalation path to address any obstacles that come up in real time. It also means that the company as a whole is continually getting updates on the progress being made, the importance of the mission, the imperative that it get everyone’s support.

All necessary, all good. That said, there is a hidden discipline that makes the difference between success and failure, one that can be made visible in the annual operating plan, and thereby remove some of the mystery that surrounds transformational success. It begins with the transformation team simply calling out any dependencies it has on deliverables that come from divisions in the Performance Zone.

That list will get supplemented by additional unanticipated requests that inevitably crop up in the race to get to material scale. Taken together, these are the actions that are most subject to delay or deprioritization whenever the Performance Zone gets under performance pressure. The problem is that time is the one resource you cannot replenish, so you can never afford to delay or deprioritize any request from the Transformation Zone.

So, the discipline required for success is to call out every dependency as soon as it becomes visible, put it on a strict timeline, and then monitor it relentlessly through to completion. At every juncture, you will get pushback, not for the request per se but for the timeline on which it needs to be delivered. Capitulating to that pushback is the nice thing to do—the requests always have merit in their own right—but you cannot take that route and expect the transformation to succeed.

To make this brutally clear, if at any time during a transformational initiative, you lose momentum for any reason, that initiative will fall short of the game-changing goals you set for it. Said another way, inertia is a hugely powerful force, and the world does not naturally want to transform. Give it any other path, and it will take it. Your job is to block every other path. You don’t have to be brilliant to do this. You just have to be undistractedly vigilant.

That’s what I think. What do you think?

Image Credit: Geoffrey Moore

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