Leading from afar: The new world of work calls for a more creative and adaptable approach to leadership

“Leadership matters hugely when it comes to the extent to which your people are engaged,” says Randall S Peterson, professor and academic director of the Leadership Institute at London Business School.“You can be in the best organisation in the world but if your boss is a jerk then your working life is bad.”

Mr Peterson says the research is very clear: when people feel engaged they produce better outcomes. Engaged employees result in greater productivity, profitability, retention and customer perception.

Changing with the times: category management at a crossroads

This report was written by Siddharth Poddar and edited by Pooja Chaudhary and Harsheen Sethi, with support from Amanda Simms on sub-editing. Economist Impact wishes to thank the following experts for their participation in the interview programme:
 
• Alan Day, chairman and founder, State of Flux
• Pardeep Gill, chief procurement officer (CPO) and vice president of supply chain, Ameren
• Phil Ideson, founder and managing director, Art of Procurement
• Lisa Martin, senior vice president, global procurement, and CPO, GSK

Work in progress: Aligning workforce transformation to business strategy

About the research

Work in progress: Aligning workforce transformation to business strategy is an Economist Intelligence Unit report, sponsored by Fujitsu and Citrix, that examines the extent of workforce change within organisations and the different approaches that firms take to manage it.

The best preparation for digital transformation: an open mind

When Thomas Edison built the first commercial electricity generators in New York and London in the 1880s, businesses were surprisingly slow to adopt this miraculous new energy source. Their factories were designed around steam power, and few could see the benefits of the new paradigm. Those that did were reportedly disappointed with the results. 

This, at root, was not just an engineering issue; it was a matter of mindset. As economist and writer Tim Harford puts it, “to take advantage of electricity, factory owners had to think in a very different way”.

From data overload to effective decision-making

The same data deluge applies to business—never before have companies and the executives who lead them had access to so much readily available data. But is this abundance of data leading to better decisions?

A survey of European C-suite executives, conducted by The Economist Intelligence Unit and sponsored by Workday, set out to answer this question. The results show that those who consider their organisations to be market leaders are more data-driven in their decision-making. But they also reveal widespread room for improvement in making decisions with data.

Idea management platforms supporting great ideas

Coming up with new ideas when you are running a business of any size is a challenge. Where can you source creative thinking that is also relevant and how do you channel innovative ideas to fruition? The beginning of the year is a good time to tackle this question, particularly given the current uncertain economic and political climate.

Shaken by the roots

In the 19th and 20th centuries technology radically reshaped those industries that relied on physical labour, such as manufacturing and agriculture. Professional services firms, whose business was driven by intellect, education, experience and relationships, were left relatively untouched. 

That is no longer the case. In recent times the professional services sector has found itself at the nexus of a number of era-defining forces that have shaken the foundations of its long-established business model.

Fostering collaboration

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:

Fostering collaboration

For the purpose of this study, we define collaboration as the practice of working together across different functions and across different locations or business units.

The survey, sponsored by BTS, was conducted in March 2016. About half the respondents are C-suite executives, with the balance holding a variety of high-level management positions. North America, Europe and Asia-Pacific are all represented—nearly six in ten respondent organisations have annual revenues exceeding $500m.

Our future of abundance—and joblessness

Vivek Wadhwa, Fellow, at Stanford University Law School, explores the impact of technology on employment—and on the future of the human race

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