Strategy & Leadership

Fostering collaboration

June 22, 2016

Global

June 22, 2016

Global
Becca Lipman

Editor, EMEA

Becca is currently a supporting editor and writer for The Economist Intelligence Unit's thought leadership division in the Americas and EMEA. Her primary focus is on healthcare policy and financial market trends. She has also recently developed research programmes that analyse themes in infrastructure and smart cities, as well as C-suite perspectives on talent strategy, small business and IT development. 
 
Before joining the EIU in New York, and later in London, Becca worked as senior editor at Wall Street & Technology where she reported on IT advances in capital markets. She previously held posts as lead editor for a US stock brokerage. Becca earned her bachelor’s degree in both economics and environmental studies from New York University.

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Fostering an environment of collaboration in businesses large and small is a continuous process that is not without its difficulties, but research suggests it is worth the effort. Collaboration not only plays a key role in making strategy personal—this report finds a consistent correlation between effective enterprise-wide collaboration and business success.

This EIU research, sponsored by BTS, explores whether firms are leveraging collaborative techniques to improve business success, the difficulties of collaboration and the value of collaborating across functions and levels to achieve strategic alignment. It is based on a survey of 249 business leaders in North America, Europe and Asia-Pacific. 
 
Key findings from the research include:
• Effective collaboration correlates with better business results. In terms of market share leadership, the study found that leader organisations more often say it is practised routinely, than non-leader organisations (73%).
• In top-performing companies by industry market share, collaboration is believed to be more effective at every level, from the C-suite down to line employees
• Top-performing companies collaborate differently. They more frequently use collaboration to fix intra-organisational issues, such as planning future endeavours, while non-leaders are more frequently collaborating to fix specific client and customer issues
• Collaborative culture is less fully realised in many large organisations, but executives from these companies remain convinced collaboration will play an increased role in the years to come

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