Navigation überspringen
A Noble Purpose Alone Won’t Transform Your Company
Article

A Noble Purpose Alone Won’t Transform Your Company

Leadership behaviors that nurture interpersonal collaboration are the true drivers of change.



Editorial Rating

9

getAbstract Rating

  • Applicable
  • Concrete Examples
  • Engaging

Recommendation

Business leaders appreciate the importance of employee engagement, but many misunderstand what truly drives it – and most neglect its fundamental enabler. In an interesting white paper for MIT Sloan Management Review, Rob Cross, a professor of global leadership at Babson College; Amy Edmondson, professor of leadership and management at Harvard Business School; and Wendy Murphy, associate dean and professor of management at Babson College, report on research based on organizational network analysis and interviews with 200 business leaders that reveal the central role of interpersonal collaboration in employee engagement. The authors offer a three-step process for generating positive collaboration and specific leadership behaviors to support each step.

Summary

For building employee engagement, nothing else matches the impact of interpersonal collaboration.

Many leaders believe a sense of purpose drives engagement, but organizational network analysis (ONA) shows that interpersonal collaboration makes the biggest difference. At software as a service (SaaS) developer WorkDay, despite the company’s relatively workaday mission, the workforce enjoys high levels of engagement, energy and enthusiasm. As the cause, Workday’s leaders point to their dedication to fostering collaboration. Recruiters hire candidates who show empathy and a service orientation, and the company’s leaders encourage employees to build interpersonal networks.

A three-step process fosters collaboration, beginning with establishing safety and trust.

Leaders should build collaboration in three phases. First, lay...

About the Authors

Rob Cross is a professor of global leadership at Babson College and founder of Connected Commons, a research consortium of 80 leading global firms. Amy Edmondson teaches leadership and management at Harvard Business School. Wendy Murphy is associate dean and professor of management at Babson College.


Comment on this summary

More on this topic

Related Skills

Kreativ sein
Emotionale Intelligenz entwickeln
Eigenes Wohlbefinden stärken
Drive Team Performance
Innovationskultur fördern
Personalwesen
Innovation
Ethisch führen
Sich selbst führen
Gut leben
Change managen
Unternehmenskommunikation managen
Performance managen
Management
Marketing
Navigate Leadership Challenges
Persönliche Entwicklung
Diversity, Equity & Inclusion fördern
Unternehmenskultur beeinflussen
Berufliche Kompetenzen
Team motivieren
Sich selbst verstehen
Selbstbeherrschung entwickeln
Sozialverhalten verstehen
Durch Change führen
Persönlichkeitstypen verstehen
Inklusiv führen
Employee Resource Groups nutzen
Soft Skills
Menschliches Verhalten verstehen
Funktionsübergreifend zusammenarbeiten
Ideenfindung moderieren
Foster Team Culture
Kreativ zusammenarbeiten
Unternehmens-Purpose kommunizieren
Eigenverantwortung fördern
Offene Kommunikation fördern
Zusammenarbeit meistern
Einsamkeit überwinden
Andere unterstützen
Kulturelles Bewusstsein entwickeln
Positiv denken
Sinn finden
Experimentieren fördern
Empathie und Mitgefühl zeigen
Führung
Employee Experience verbessern
Servant Leadership praktizieren
Manage People and Talent
Mitarbeiterbeziehungen managen
Practice Transformational Leadership
Strengthen Team Collaboration
Teamzusammenhalt stärken
Vertrauen gewinnen
Verletzlichkeit zeigen
Zugehörigkeitsgefühl fördern
Starke Beziehungen aufbauen
Employee Engagement steigern
Führungswirkung steuern
Soziale Kompetenzen entwickeln
Psychologische Sicherheit fördern