The list
of the world’s CEOs regularly includes celebrities, billionaires, big egos,
risk takers, and failures. What it does not include are social media experts;
but that’s about to change. When IBM(NYSE: IBM) conducted its study of 1709 CEOs around the world, they found
only 16% of them participating in social media. But their analysis shows that
the percentage will likely grow to 57% within 5 years.
Why?
because CEOs are beginning to recognize that using email and the phone to get
the message out isn’t sufficient anymore.
The big takeaway: That using social technologies to engage with customers, suppliers
and employees will enable the organization to be more adaptive and agile.
“As CEOs ratchet up the
level of openness within their organizations, they are developing collaborative
environments where employees are
encouraged to speak up, exercise personal initiative, connect with fellow
collaborators, and innovate,” the IBM study concluded.
encouraged to speak up, exercise personal initiative, connect with fellow
collaborators, and innovate,” the IBM study concluded.
Simply
put, CEOs and their executives set the cultural tone for an organization.
Through participation, they implicitly promote the use of social
technologies. That will make their organizations more competitive and
better able to adapt to sudden market changes.
Other key
findings of the study include:
·
The study reveals that CEOs
are changing the nature of work by adding a powerful dose of openness,
transparency and employee empowerment to the command-and-control
ethos that has characterized the modern corporation for more than a century.
·
Companies that outperform their peers are 30 percent more likely to identify openness – often
characterized by a greater use of social media as a key enabler of
collaboration and innovation – as a key influence on their organization.
·
While social media is the least utilized of all customer
interaction methods today, it stands to
become the number two organizational engagement method within the next five
years, a close second to face-to-face interactions.
·
More than half of CEOs (53
percent) are planning to use technology to facilitate greater partnering and
collaboration with outside organizations, while 52 percent are
shifting their attention to promoting great internal collaboration.
·
Championing collaborative
innovation is not something CEOs are delegating to their HR leaders.
According to the study findings, the business executives are interested in
leading by example.
·
CEOs regard interpersonal
skills of collaboration (75 percent), communication (67 percent), creativity
(61 percent) and flexibility (61 percent) as key
drivers of employee success to operate in a more complex, interconnected
environment.
·
The trend toward greater
collaboration extends beyond the corporation to external partnering
relationships. Partnering
is now at an all-time high. In 2008, slightly more than half of the CEOs IBM
interviewed planned to partner extensively. Now, more than two-thirds intend to
do so.
·
CEOs are most focused on gaining insights into their customers. Seventy-three percent of CEOs are making significant
investments in their organizations’ ability to draw meaningful customer
insights from available data.
I’ve often held IBM as the best example of a Social Business and a
company to emulate rather than Apple. I believe
this study and the analysis behind it, reinforces that view.
The IBM
study shows that CEOs and the companies they manage must constantly evolve to
stay competitive. Partners, suppliers, employees and customers want CEOs to
communicate with them on a personal level to build trust and to help align them
to the organization’s strategy. There is a lot at stake here. And if CEOs
continue to hide in their Ivory Towers under the guise of some old command and
control mentality, the next chapter in their career might be written somewhere
else.
No one
wants that.
source: http://www.forbes.com/sites/markfidelman/2012/05/22/ibm-study-if-you-dont-have-a-social-ceo-youre-going-to-be-less-competitive/
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