INTRODUCING
THE SELF-DISRUPTIVE LEADER
To ensure organizations succeed in a rapidly changing business world in the years ahead, a new kind of future-ready leader must take priority. Current models of leadership go some way to answering this, but research by the Korn Ferry Institute reveals the ideal leader for tomorrow’s disruptive business environment: The Self-Disruptive Leader.
This new model of high-performing leader incorporates and builds on existing concepts of agile, digital, and inclusive leadership, but also highlights the importance of leaders who are experts in the creation of opportunity and the capitalization of the flow of knowledge. In this model, the new source of competitive advantage is a leader who can connect resources and people adeptly to build an innovation ecosystem. This enables them to bring robust ideas to market at a rapid pace and, crucially, to adapt quickly to change by disrupting themselves again and again.
Businesses
urgently
need to begin
cultivating the
right leadership
pipeline:
Businesses urgently need to begin cultivating the right leadership pipeline:
ABOUT
THIS STUDY
This study reveals the skills that leaders will need in the future of business—and in today’s increasingly disruptive environment. We uncover how many leaders are performing highly in these areas and where there is a pressing need for improvement. By analyzing the leadership profiles of 150,000 leaders from the Korn Ferry Institute’s proprietary data, the study underlines the five key qualities of effective, future-focused leadership—qualities which correlate with a country’s ability to innovate and which correlate with a company’s likelihood of being an acclaimed brand. It also reveals how well leaders in 18 key global markets are performing in each dimension, and where improvement is urgently needed.
Additionally, the study uses opinion research from 795 investors and analysts to model the gap between the current supply of these high-performance behaviors and the market’s demand for them, to reveal just how wide leadership skills shortages are globally and by market.
Future proof
Yourself
Leaders of the future will need to retain a self-disruptive outlook as a central feature of their leadership style to prosper.
Why
Adapt?
With 67% of investors insisting that the current leadership pool is not fit for the future, it’s no surprise then that investor confidence in current leadership styles and organizations is wavering. Organizations could be faced with a double bind if they fail to develop self-disruptive behaviors. Not only will they be less able to adapt to the changing business environment, they may face a penalty from those who evaluate their businesses.
For leaders
to succeed in the
future of work,
they must adapt:
For leaders to succeed
in the future of work,
they must adapt:
Cultivating
an invaluable
talent
The pursuit of Self-Disruptive Leaders will mean seeking them out in unusual places, and it is crucial that talented people are not blocked because they do not fit traditional training or personality criteria. As a group, tomorrow’s leaders will look and act differently to current directors and C-suite executives. They will have attended a variety of schools and come from a range of different places, and many will have risen to the top through non-traditional paths. Diversity and inclusion will become more imperative than ever, and talent assessment—with true insight, objectivity, and value—will be vital.
“Investing in and developing those with self-disruptive tendencies throughout the business is critical, but frankly it can rankle senior leaders. ‘Natural’ self-disruptors may be considered impossible rebels by their bosses because they often won’t accept conventional wisdom and constantly agitate for change. This unconventional thinking positions them perfectly for leadership in a disruptive world. But it also can, ironically, block this important talent from advancement.”
Khoi Tu, Senior Client Partner, Korn Ferry
To tackle this complex and multilateral issue, organizations need to think about talent as a system—including recruitment, compensation, training, development, and succession planning. These functions and programs may need a full revamp to ensure that organizations widen and maintain a flow of diverse talent, especially of hard-to-find Self-Disruptive Leaders.
The
final word
To create opportunities in an ever-fluctuating world, organizations need Self-Disruptive Leaders—people who are engines of change, but also generate it from within, at the pace of their business. Traditional training routes aren’t equipped to solve the leadership crisis, often producing outmoded mindsets that can’t keep up with the rate of change. Instead, a revolution in how companies develop leaders is vital for closing the leadership pipeline gap.
To capitalize on an increasingly disruptive world, companies must accelerate their identification, recruitment, retention, development, and promotion of leaders with self-disruptive potential at all levels of the business. Organizations must develop a culture that empowers everyone within them to challenge their own thinking and disrupt themselves. This final point underpins the solution to the leadership crisis. Leadership can no longer be isolated and inscrutable: by cascading ADAPT proficiencies throughout the organization, companies will develop a self-perpetuating ecosystem of leaders, ready for whatever the future of work brings.
“Investing in and developing those with self-disruptive tendencies throughout the business is critical, but frankly it can rankle senior leaders. ‘Natural’ self-disruptors may be considered impossible rebels by their bosses because they often won’t accept conventional wisdom and constantly agitate for change. This unconventional thinking positions them perfectly for leadership in a disruptive world. But it also can, ironically, block this important talent from advancement.”
Khoi Tu, Senior Client Partner, Korn Ferry
Cultivating
an invaluable talent
The pursuit of Self-Disruptive Leaders will mean seeking them out in unusual places, and it is crucial that talented people are not blocked because they do not fit traditional training or personality criteria. As a group, tomorrow’s leaders will look and act differently to current directors and C-suite executives. They will have attended a variety of schools and come from a range of different places, and many will have risen to the top through non-traditional paths. Diversity and inclusion will become more imperative than ever, and talent assessment—with true insight, objectivity, and value—will be vital.
To tackle this complex and multilateral issue, organizations need to think about talent as a system—including recruitment, compensation, training, development, and succession planning. These functions and programs may need a full revamp to ensure that organizations widen and maintain a flow of diverse talent, especially of hard-to-find Self-Disruptive Leaders.
The
final word
To create opportunities in an ever-fluctuating world, organizations need Self-Disruptive Leaders—people who are engines of change, but also generate it from within, at the pace of their business. Traditional training routes aren’t equipped to solve the leadership crisis, often producing outmoded mindsets that can’t keep up with the rate of change. Instead, a revolution in how companies develop leaders is vital for closing the leadership pipeline gap.
To capitalize on an increasingly disruptive world, companies must accelerate their identification, recruitment, retention, development, and promotion of leaders with self-disruptive potential at all levels of the business. Organizations must develop a culture that empowers everyone within them to challenge their own thinking and disrupt themselves. This final point underpins the solution to the leadership crisis. Leadership can no longer be isolated and inscrutable: by cascading ADAPT proficiencies throughout the organization, companies will develop a self-perpetuating ecosystem of leaders, ready for whatever the future of work brings.