- What business is Rotary International (RI) in?
- Who is its customer?
- What do its customers value?
- What results does it want?
Only when RI
(or any other organization) answers
these questions will it be in a position to embark on creating an effective plan
to achieve its desired results.
RI's planning group, The Guiding Coalition, must be a powerful force! No one individual has the capabilities to
develop the right vision, communicate it to large numbers of people, eliminate
all the key obstacles, generate short-term successes, lead and manage dozens of
high energy-type people, and anchor new approaches, particularly in an
established organization's culture. The
Guiding Coalition must have high credibility, and its first action should be to
ban RI's organizational structure from its thought processes. Leading change takes transformational leadership. Teamwork is essential. Unfortunately, most senior level Rotary
leaders today, sadly mostly male, developed when teamwork was a metaphor; when
'teamwork' was accomplished by the 'team' - Boss and his direct yes-sir subordinates.
This type
leadership is no longer effective because innovators, the very people who
should be attracted to local Rotary clubs and RI staff, do not fit in organization
chart squares because it boxes them in and minimizes the use of their brain
power. RI should lead the way by creating an organization where the goals of all staff members and Rotary leaders, while applying specialized talents, overlap so all are striving to attain one single result - grow at a steady rate by delivering to Rotary clubs, Rotarians and TRF donors what they value.
RI is an
association with a worldwide customer base - over 35,000 member clubs, each to
whom RI should be delivering what the clubs value. Each club's customers - Rotarians - have enterprising
minds and want to connect with like-minded people to make greater impacts in their
communities and the world - each to whom clubs should be delivering what their
members value. RI and its member clubs, to
sustain a steady growth rate, must transform themselves from their perceived
positions of 'service' organizations to 'member' organizations that deliver value. Nothing should be off limits to change: what doesn't
help attain the desired result must be abandoned; what does help must be
strengthened; and the quicker the better.
Transformational leaders, knowing what business they are in,
who their customers are and what they value, lead from the front. They are
results oriented, employ the power of language, disperse leadership, and create
accurate measures of performance. Does
this type innovative leadership exist in RI's hierarchy?
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