2016-05-22 SRE2by beCause CEO Nadine Hack – Successful businesses have moved from transactional to relational, which acknowledges interdependence among a diversity of parties as essential for sustainable success.  Dramatic new technologies, evolving business models, environmental impact, economic instability, political upheaval, and broad-scale migration resulting from regional conflicts, now demand improved engagement between business leaders and their myriad stakeholders.

A broad spectrum of stakeholders has a direct impact on your core business. That’s why I call my framework “Strategic Relational Engagement” (SRE) because incorporating meaningful relationships into your business can transform stakeholder fear and/or animosity into understanding, productivity and strategic impact.  In a shareholder environment in which annual growth is expected (achievable or not), all-out strategic relational engagement of stakeholders is the only path to satisfaction of shareholders and stakeholders.

Business leaders’ assumptions (often prejudices) about the capacity and validity of stakeholders – inside or outside the company – weaken the leaders’ ability to make wise decisions.  When they rise above such bias and engage all stakeholders, they strengthen their decision-making and status.  Economic Science Nobel Laureate, Michael Spence, emphasizes inclusiveness as key to sustainable growth – and SRE is a critical for achieving inclusiveness.

To help you envision the stages of SRE, I’ve delineated three core components:

  1. Create Value through SRE
  2. Overcome Obstacles to SRE
  3. Sustain long-term SRE

For each component, I’ve used a real-life case in which I participated as a facilitative consultant.  I believe you’ll recognize the lessons stakeholders learned, because you may have faced comparable situations.  Whether or not you’ve been through such experiences, I hope you’ll see how the insights from each case can be applicable to your own challenges and opportunities.

  1. CREATE VALUE

To create value with SRE, leaders must know what capabilities they have and which they need to acquire; what conditions must be created or eliminated; and which processes will move them forward.  The following case is about engaging external stakeholders with opposing views, but the core principles also apply to engaging internal stakeholders.

Case I:  Seeing the Forest and the Trees

Until the mid-1970s in California, US, the logging industry – among the most important enterprises in the state – was in flux.  Major companies, state government, community organizers, and environmental activists were vehemently unwilling to work together to solve industry-related problems.  But addressing their disparate concerns was essential to the industry’s prosperity, as well as for environmental protection and community quality of life.  Ultimately, as a cross-sector team, they developed a series of legislative initiatives called “Investing for Tomorrow’s Prosperity” still in place today.  As a group, they started with reforestation and moved on to other state-wide renewable resources.  Their efforts became a blueprint for international Global Green Plans.

How did the transformation from enemies to partners emerge?  The lynchpin for success was that each stakeholder group had to understand how they would benefit before they would willingly engage.  First, a small group started talking.  Isabel Wade, from the State Department of Forestry, outlined a tree planting plan to Executive Director Paul Cobb and others from the civic organization Oakland Citizens Council for Urban Renewal (OCCUR).  That organization championed Oakland’s initiatives for community development, including combating considerable blight.  OCCUR’s daily imperative was getting food, clothing and shelter to needy families, so initially it was disinterested in tree planting.  But Wade said she viewed community involvement as her key ingredient for success.  The OCCUR organizers listened.

The city’s previous tree planting initiatives had failed, because as soon as trees were planted, local kids cut them down.  There had been no prior consultation with communities – a lack of SRE – and communities hadn’t asked for trees.  Wade suggested that if OCCUR went house by house and got residents to “adopt” the trees, they would be valued and survive.  OCCUR recognized the plan would give them an opportunity to visit people’s homes and champion their other efforts; if trees could provide such entrée, why not?

Wade also knew she had to unite the loggers and environmentalists to show them they had more in common than they thought.  She first met with environmental leaders most likely to cooperate.  She chose Hunter and Amory Lovins, co-founders of The Tree People, which had substantial policy and mobilizing capabilities.  They realized their efforts would benefit from positive relational engagement with the industry: without it they might not achieve the changes they advocated.

So, the State Forestry Department, OCCUR and Tree People approached the primary logging company, Weyerhaeuser, which had the financial and operational capabilities necessary for a significant impact.  The company was still practicing (profitable) strip logging, but was experiencing costly disruptions by environmental activists who opposed logging and chained themselves to trees in protest also creating unfavorable publicity for Weyerhaeuser.

As the company already had begun rethinking their logging practices, a workable solution emerged when Weyerhaeuser pledged to plant two trees for every one they cut down.  This satisfied environmentalists and ensured the company’s future sustainability and profitability.  Through better practices, Weyerhaeuser moved towards year-on-year double digit growth and helped safeguard the environment.  They’ve consistently built on that and Fortune Magazine ranked them number 10 of 350 companies recognized for social responsibility.

When representatives of each stakeholder group went united to the state legislature, they were able to convince lawmakers to champion state-wide legislation to protect its renewable resources.  These politicians, who formerly were wary of substantial environmental policy changes, were impressed by the endeavor that had unified previously adversarial constituencies.

The ROI was enormous and for all stakeholders.  Logging became more profitable and substantively transformed its position on the environment.  The governor began to work in better harmony with legislators.  Local environmentalists connected with global counterparts.  Community organizers began to work with more local and state businesses.  Beyond the many logic-based benefits, the human connection was essential to make the plan understandable and acceptable.  This was an SRE triumph for all.

In summary, everyone benefited from the practicality of productive relationship-building.  Agreement on the processes that created progress included: the ability to identify other catalytic leaders among similar constituencies; constant re-clarification of shared goals; explicit distinctions between corporate, government, and community responsibilities; and celebrating small victories, as well as coping with inevitable compromises.

  1. OVERCOME OBSTACLES

To overcome obstacles to SRE, leaders and their teams must: recognize and articulate obstacles that exist in the company; identify specific drivers to overcome those obstacles; and understand how to mobilize those drivers.  Creating effective SRE within a business is not necessarily easier: in fact, it’s sometimes more difficult if silo isolation is entrenched, or, if an event results in low morale and retreat into self-protection mode.  The following case shows how to overcome that.

Case II: Conquering Impediments to SRE

In 2008, after the economic crash, Xhong Inc., a global corporation, made drastic cuts in personnel and budgets across all business lines in all countries.  One Executive Board decision reduced the corporation from thousands of employees in scores of countries to significantly smaller operations in just a few countries.  Senior management had to rely on a reduced staff and using other resources (e.g., IT infrastructure, etc.) to leverage remaining assets. Managers and team members who had cooperated previously became territorial, having lost trust in the company, and felt insecure, guilty and resentful.  No one was sure they’d be retained and barely participated in reorganization efforts.  As a result, fissures in management and function hidden in the larger entity surfaced in the streamlined one.

The Board wanted an immediate strategic plan, but CEO Ying Lin and COO Michael Chang knew that first rebuilding confidence was critical to getting key players to execute any strategy.  They understood that keeping the company alive required getting Xhong’s employees re-engaged.  The lessons from how Xhong managed this using strategic relational engagement (SRE) are broadly applicable even without a precipitating crisis.

The Board tasked Lin with deciding how to restructure.  She was a sharply analytic leader who understood company priorities.  But she knew Chang had stronger human relations skills.  Given his engaging personality, he was right for communicating.  Therefore, Lin decided Chang’s first SRE effort should be openly acknowledging to his colleagues the seriousness of Xhong’s obstacles.  He began with individual meetings with managers, candidly explaining Xhong’s severe financial straits.

Chang solicited feedback, listening to managers’ assessments of key issues and paying attention to their ideas for solutions.  By accepting their input, Chang turned mistrust into openness to change.  Managers again felt valued, re-engaged with each other, and supported the company’s changes.  Good SRE had a very positive impact.

Once Chang re-created a willing team with renewed confidence in the corporation’s future, he identified the company’s most talented “drivers,” those with the ability to engage colleagues in coordinated action and successfully further the transition.  Chang dealt comfortably with the drivers’ professional and personal concerns, allowing them to communicate their fears and hopes.

This rebuilt trust among a core group who, as drivers, convinced others to re-engage.  Chang stayed in regular communication, soliciting uncensored feedback about what they were hearing from peers and among the ranks.  He and Lin then modified policies and practices to reflect their input.  This level of SRE created increasingly stronger engagement among a broader group of stakeholders.  The streamlined corporation began to function effectively, re positioned to rebuild core competencies.

Chang introduced a process of public acknowledgment.  He sent a monthly email extolling efforts of those who were helping others work together for the company’s common good.  Those who were praised were invited to meet with Lin.  These were celebrations of achievement and opportunities to share their insights with the CEO.  Word spread that this was a sincere effort to assess input from any source.  Thus, more people were motivated to become drivers, expanding SRE even further.

Most of Xhong’s workforce stepped outside their respective silos and comfort zones to cooperate together, creating a turn-around to profitability.  However, it’s easy to fall back into “business as usual” with everyone focused on their own deliverables.  Sustainable success is achieved only when policies and procedures that encourage stakeholder engagement are reinforced repeatedly, in good times and bad.  Is this a time- and labor-intensive luxury?  I believe this type of SRE-driven corporate culture is essential to 21st century business.

In summary, the key points to overcoming obstacles to SRE are: be open and transparent the obstacles; push yourself and others to deal with them; and recognize that inter-connectedness and a larger overview will lead to better solutions.  Build chains of trust that encourage stakeholders to engage; develop procedures that recognize and reward drivers; and foster a culture where people feel safe to participate actively and honestly.

III. SUSTAIN LONG-TERM SRE 

How many times have businesses overlooked systemic problems because they’re focused on executing standard operating procedures, productive or not?  Companies need systems to nourish relationships – even when there seems to be an imperative to just “get the job done.”  To keep SRE for the long-run, companies must learn how to: sustain it by acknowledging when it breakdowns and knowing what to do to mend breaches when that happens.

Case III: Cooperation is the Key to Sustainability

In the 1990s, Fujisimo Industries, an international conglomerate, acquired several related companies with the aim of leveraging synergy, yet lost sight of that intention.  By 2001, each unit within each business in each country was operating within the singular vision of its own silo and the whole was no longer greater than the sum of its parts; to the contrary, it was less.  An SRE intervention was critically needed.

Even in the company’s global C-suite, the only ones with a comprehensive picture of all the businesses, not all the executives understood the problems or their solutions.  But COO Shingo Shabu immediately realized that lost interconnection among the businesses was causing a decline in revenues for the parent company, as well as within each business. Shabu knew that recreating synergistic connections was vital to fulfill the motive for their acquisition: increased profitability.  He also understood he had to launch a creative initiative that would give all stakeholders a compelling rationale for mending the broken relationships.

To do this, in 2001 Shabu organized an off-site retreat for the heads of all global operational units to analyze what was preventing them from achieving synergy.  Professional external coaches led individual reflection sessions and cross-function team-building exercises to help everyone remember how and why they had mutually benefitted from supporting each other in the past.  Unit heads individually and collectively confronted the negative results of separation.  In preparation for the retreat, Shabu and the coaches created wall-size charts showing the financials of Fujisimo and its various companies.  They knew that showing how profits had risen during the years of effective SRE, and fallen after collaboration ended, would get the attention of all stakeholders.

It worked.  The unit leaders, stimulated by the bottom-line facts, grasped that SRE with their counterparts in the other businesses was to their advantage.  The strong bonds that had temporarily lapsed and been forgotten were successfully re-established.  But, we’ve all been to off-site events replete with epiphany moments, only to return to the office where nothing changes.  The real challenge began when executives who experienced insights at the retreat brought their revived understanding to their respective teams.  Each was given autonomy to decide what mechanism would be best for transmitting insights they had gained.

Some led open, spirited discussions about the problems and potential solutions.  Many took their teams through similar exercises from the global gathering at their own off-site retreats.  In some cultures, certain exercises would have been off-putting, so they weren’t used.  But all used the financial charts; no one, anywhere, regardless of culture, could refute the economic impact that the charts revealed about the importance of relationships.  Within six months, each business and the parent company saw a rise in revenue and profitability.

Even though Shabu had properly understood that recreating connectivity was needed, some members of the C-suite and the Board initially thought it counter intuitive to finance the retreat when the corporation was in financial decline.  But Shabu made a compelling case to outright opponents and fence-seated skeptics that the so-called soft mechanisms of SRE were actually the much-needed hard backbone for the parent company and its subsidiaries to survive.

After Fujisimo’s SRE was re-established, executives were encouraged to watch out for breakdowns and facilitate their repair through discussions with their teams.  As SRE is an active, dynamic process that requires upkeep, it is subject to erosion, misdirection, or being ignored.  It can break down in response to changes like the removal or introduction of new team leaders or members, products or services, IT procedures, production technology, and other reasons.

To avoid such breakdowns within Fujisimo, SRE openness allowed them to use constructive critique from many sources.  This is indicative of a growing phenomenon in business globally.  The arrival of cloud computing has led to the concept of “cloud thinking,” which espouses that “more brains are better than one.”  Less secure leaders may be threatened by this non-ego-driven model but, if so, they will not keep up with 21st century business needs.

The SRE action at Fujisimo opened opportunities its companies missed when individual agendas blinded them to larger purposes.  But they came to see how much they gained from each other when they dropped territorial protectiveness – because weakness in one silocompensated by strength in another, created mutually beneficial outcomes.  Introducing (or re-introducing) SRE in an environment where it has lapsed or has never existed is no easy feat.  At Fujisimo, Shabu was the catalyst who brought stakeholders back into cooperation.  He first targeted his colleagues in the C-Suite, creating authority from the top down through the hierarchy to support his efforts to reinvigorate synergy among the conglomerate’s subsidiaries.

In summary, companies must keep bolstering awareness of how individual goals align with mutual goals; and explore new areas of common interest.  Relationships inevitably break down.  Company leaders must openly, honestly and respectfully acknowledge when communication has broken down; remind people of the value these relationships; monitor distractions that pull people away from staying connected; and act promptly to repair lost bonds and recreate trust.

CONCLUSION: SRE is Essential

The central message from these cases is that all stages of SRE require increasing relational intelligence and implementing practical mechanisms for it.  Interestingly, the most important is what has defined human evolution: the ability to communicate and form intricate relationships.  How often have you criticized a business (or bureaucracy) by saying “the left hand doesn’t know what the right hand is doing”?  Solidly-incorporated SRE assures that everyone functions as a connected team in an increasingly interconnected business environment.

Stage I. Create Value through SRE

The Weyerhaeuser case describes how wildly divergent stakeholders came together.  To incorporate its lessons – whether with internal or external stakeholders – you must determine the capabilities, conditions, and processes that are necessary for you to create value through SRE.  Remember:create a safe, trusting, collaborative environment in which your stakeholders feel engaged, valued and motivated to contribute to your business goals.

Stage II. Overcome Obstacles to SRE

The Xhong, Inc. case outlines effective action in dealing with obstacles that hindered SRE among their subsidiaries and the parent company.  To translate lessons from that, acknowledge your obstacles honestly, identify the drivers you have to overcome them, and determine how you can effectively mobilize those drivers.  Remember: be open and transparent, and find those willing and able to help stakeholders find common ground for the benefit of all.

Stage III. Sustain Long-term SRE  

The Fujisimo case conveys how stakeholders from related companies learned to make SRE last.  To use insights from that case, determine what it is that will sustain SRE; acknowledge when, where and how a breakdown might occur or has already occurred; and create what’s needed to mend the resulting breaches.  Remember: strengthen relationships continuously and take quick action to restore lost connectivity among stakeholders.

[Please note that all cases described are real, but some identifying names have been changed at the request of the companies and/or individuals who prefer anonymity.]

——–

This article was originally published in Brand and Rousers.  Author Nadine B. Hack, CEO beCause Global Consulting, gave a TEDx talk on this topic.  Named one of the Top 100 Thought Leaders on Trustworthy Business Behavior often enough to earn a Lifetime Achievement Trust Award, Global CEO named her Top 100 Corporate Social Responsibility Leaders.  She’s accepted numerous other awards including Mentor of the Year, International Outstanding Achievement, Woman of the Year, and Inspiration Award for lifetime achievement presented at the Säid Business School, Oxford University.   She was first woman Executive-in-Residence at IMD Business School where she maintains an affiliation.

{ 8 comments… add one }
  • David Wilcox May 22, 2016, 4:49 pm

    Nadine B Hack The cases are excellent, especially Seeing the Forest and the Trees. Such a telling example because in the same state we have the clear outcomes from not collaborating in the case of water conservation and agriculture. Seems there are a lot of advocacy organizations experimenting with SRE, Oxfam and WWF come to mind. Though each effort faces criticism for being co-opted. How to avoid those outcomes presents added SRE questions.

    Reply
    • Nadine B Hack May 22, 2016, 8:22 pm

      David – interestingly, when I worked on that case in the 1970s, I was accused of being “co-opted.” But, I realized that it was vital for different sectors to collaborate – despite their differences – to achieve anything. That’s only become more true in our increasingly inter-connected world.

      Reply
  • Peter Cook May 23, 2016, 11:46 am

    Yes, I call it “seeing the wood and the trees” Nadine

    Reply
    • Nadine B Hack May 23, 2016, 12:01 pm

      Yes, Peter, a basic but treasured skill that would be great if more had!

      Reply
  • Andrea Learned May 23, 2016, 5:25 pm

    Per your “sustain longterm SRE” point: Companies need systems to nourish relationships – even when there seems to be an imperative to just “get the job done.” This short-sightedness is so common, Nadine – and thus so crucial to name and make integral to your 3 step process. The case studies of companies waking up to the importance of systems that support/nurture relationships need to get a lot more notice (through your work and others). In a way, it seems we have to “social norm-alize” that sort of corporate/systems wisdom.

    Reply
    • Nadine B Hack May 23, 2016, 6:04 pm

      Andrea – you’re absolutely right. We constantly have to make “explicit” what is “implicit” and reinforce the importance of vital steps for sustainability, which involves sustaining people as well as the environment.

      Reply
  • Ravi Chaudhry June 2, 2016, 8:53 am

    What a beautiful concept, Nadine. Simple and yet so transformational.
    A crystal-clear message.
    Do not just focus on transcactions – focus on transactions with joy, transactions with sustainable impact. And that happens only when all parties in the transaction are equally happy. That perhaps is the difference between transient success and lasting success.

    Many thanks for sharing these incisive nuggets of wisdom.
    Warm reagards
    Ravi

    Reply
    • Nadine B. Hack June 2, 2016, 10:50 am

      Ravi – my life work has been helping people understand how to create and sustain truly connected relationships. I’m so glad my message resonates for you, especially as you focus on exceptional leadership and I believe this is a core skill for that.

      Reply

Leave a Comment

Cancel reply