1) The document discusses leadership development programs at several large, successful companies including GE, HP, Johnson & Johnson, Shell, Arthur Andersen, and the World Bank.
2) It finds that these companies tie leadership development closely to business strategy and invest significant financial resources in developing leaders.
3) There are five critical steps to making leadership development strategic: assessment, alignment, action, anticipation, and awareness. The document provides examples of how the profiled companies implement these steps.
How winning companies develop leaders mit sloan - fall 2000
1. MIT
Massachusetts
Institute of Technology
Fall 2000
Volume 42
Number 1
Robert M. Fulmer,
Philip A. Gibbs & Developing Leaders: How Winning Companies
Marshall Goldsmith Keep On Winning
Reprint 4214
2.
3. Developing Leaders: How Winning
Companies Keep On Winning
49
Robert M. Fulmer I Philip A. Gibbs I Marshall Goldsmith
How do General
Electric, Hewlett-
Packard and
Johnson & Johnson
keep a steady
stream of leaders
moving up? By
focusing on the
five essentials of
leadership
development.
Robert M. Fulmer is professor Last June, as the business world watched nization with strong leaders. When Ronald
of management at the expectantly, General Electric (GE) promot- Reagan was spokesperson for GE, their
Graziadio School of Business, ed three key executives (David Calhoun, slogan was, “Progress is our most impor-
Pepperdine University. Philip Joseph Hogan and John Rice). Each would tant product.” Today the mantra could be,
A. Gibbs is a visiting profes- report to one of the three potential candi- “Leaders are our most important product.”
sor at the College of William dates to succeed CEO Jack Welch (James
and Mary, where he teaches McNerney, Jeffrey Immelt and Robert Leaders who keep learning may be the
strategic management and Nardelli). Thus, if one of the latter moves ultimate source of sustainable competitive
mergers and acquisitions. into Welch’s office, another seasoned GE advantage. With that understanding, many
Marshall Goldsmith is co- professional will be ready to assume his companies are investing in leadership
founder of Keilty, Goldsmith & role. Where do GE leaders come from? development (programs that help key
Co. Contact the authors at: They do not spring up out of the earth executives learn leadership skills). As
robert.fulmer@business.wm. overnight. For many years the company early as 1993, Business Week estimated
edu, philip.gibbs@business. has worked hard to develop ongoing that $17 billion was being spent annually
wm.edu and marshall@ sources of leadership talent — not only to on helping managers develop the thought
kgcnet.com. prepare for Welch’s retirement next year, processes and company-specific skills that
but also to enrich every level of the orga- could enable them to move up and lead
Sloan Management Review Fulmer • Gibbs • Goldsmith
Fall 2000
4. their business areas. Training magazine estimates that GE’s CEO, Jack Welch, described the company’s
in 1998 U.S. companies spent $60.7 billion on train- Leadership Development Institute in Crotonville, New
ing.1 But spending isn’t the only commitment. World- York, as a “staging ground for corporate revolutions.”
class executives are investing significant amounts of In fact, innovative ideas such as the Six Sigma quality-
their time personally guiding and mentoring future improvement program and GE’s expansion into
leaders.2 To them, leadership development is not a emerging economies have come from presentations
luxury but a strategic necessity. made at leadership-development events. Tremendous
growth, reductions in the number of GE employees
What processes transform managers into strong worldwide and significant delayering of the organiza-
leaders ready for strategic action? How do the best tion in the 1980s and 1990s caused an enormous cul-
50 leadership-development organizations design, manage tural shift. With fewer layers of management, individ-
and deliver world-class programs? uals received fewer vertical promotions and hence
fewer opportunities to practice being leaders. A new
In January 1998, the nonprofit research group approach was called for. Today in the human-
American Productivity and Quality Center, based in resource department’s “Session C” meetings, senior
Houston, the American Society for Training and executives assess key GE personnel. After an initial
Development, based in Alexandria, Virginia and meeting in March, there are two or three additional
author Robert Fulmer set out to find the answers. The meetings and a wrap-up session in June or July to
group developed a study to investigate best practices
in leadership development; in 1999, they expanded Benchmarking Methodology
the study to explore the challenge of developing
leaders at all levels of an organization.3
Benchmarking, the study’s primary research methodology, involves
Thirty-five organizations participated as sponsors. (See identifying outstanding practices and processes from any organiza-
“Benchmarking Methodology.”) They sent representa- tion anywhere in the world, learning from them and adapting them
tives to a planning session, completed data-gathering to a specific company’s needs. Modeled on the human learning
surveys and attended or hosted on-site interviews. process, which also relies heavily on observation, benchmarking is
(See “Study Sponsors.”) The consortium identified the process by which organizations learn. The underlying rationale
six companies as having a strong or innovative is that learning from best-practice cases is the most effective
leadership-development process. Those six agreed to means of understanding the principles and the specifics of effec-
participate in the study as best-practice partners. (See tive practices.
“And the Winners Are…Best-Practice Partner
In phase one, the group conducting the study reviewed the litera-
Organizations.”) They were chosen because they
ture to identify leading companies in executive development; they
exhibited commitment to developing leaders — but with
talked with opinion leaders in management education, consulting
marked diversity of approach, emphasis and culture.
and business; and they administered a survey to various people to
identify their organizations’ leadership-development support, spe-
cific innovative approaches and willingness to be best-practice
The Strategic Perspective partners. At the end of phase one, the study team had compiled a
Most significant: Best-practice partners reported that list of candidates for potential best-practice partners and a screen-
they tied leadership development closely to business ing report. Sponsors met to review the initial report, select the
strategy and that they invested financial resources in final best-practice partners and discuss their objectives for the
it. CEOs did not support the programs out of a respect study.
for education but from a conviction that such pro-
grams can assist in aligning functional areas with cor- In phase two, representatives from the study sponsors visited
porate strategy. Johnson & Johnson, for one, revised best-practice partners for a day, seeking answers to detailed ques-
succession planning and performance-management tions about the evolution, design, execution and successes of their
systems to reflect the qualities anticipated by a leader- leadership programs. The study sought to identify innovative prac-
of-the-future exercise in a leadership-development tices and applicable quantitative data, such as budgets, program
conference. details and assessment criteria. The deliverables at the end of
phase two were site-visit summaries, a two-day knowledge-trans-
Increasingly, programs that focus on developing future fer session (in which all the study sponsors and best-practice part-
leaders are seen as a source of competitive advantage. ners participated) and a final report.
Fulmer • Gibbs • Goldsmith Sloan Management Review
Fall 2000
5. select employees who will attend the executive- behaviors required to be valued and trusted business
development courses at Crotonville. At the end of the advisors in an ever-changing marketplace.” To meet the
year, corporate leadership development, like all cor- needs of a business that continues to diversify and
porate functions, is measured by whether it was able globalize, managers aim to keep the program closely
to support GE initiatives. Steve Kerr, GE’s chief learn- linked with Arthur Andersen’s evolving business strategy.
ing officer, says jokingly, “Crotonville is GE’s only
unbudgeted and unmeasured cost center.” Then he Hewlett-Packard, under the leadership of CEO Carly
adds seriously, “Everyone would know if we weren’t Fiorina, is rushing to reclaim its status as a top high-
delivering strategic value.” tech innovator. Fiorina must convince the public and
HP employees that HP is the hottest new company of
Ralph Larsen, chairman and CEO of Johnson & the Internet era — without losing the old-time com- 51
Johnson, champions J&J’s Executive Conference. mitment to quality and integrity. Past HP glory led
Faithful to the company’s decentralization tenets, he many excellent engineers to focus on what used to
leaves the program’s details to subordinates around the be important, instead of on the future. Once HP start-
world but takes the time to suggest program themes. ed to improve leadership development, the company
could make better business decisions.
At Arthur Andersen, the mission of the Partner
Development Program (PDP) is “to help partners Today HP’s senior executives actively participate in
worldwide acquire and build the knowledge, skills and leadership development. Fiorina uses management
meetings and leadership-development programs to
articulate her vision of making the company “represent
Study Sponsors
the next decade rather than the past one.” Her prede-
cessor, Lewis E. Platt, showed his support for leader-
Lucent Technologies
ship development by making personal appearances at
AARP
Lutheran Brotherhood
all HP Accelerated Development Programs, opening
Aerojet
Medrad
and closing them with an opportunity for participants
Allstate Insurance
Nortel
to have a dialogue with him. And Bob Wayman, HP’s
American General
North American Coal
CFO, was the internal champion for a worldwide
Ameritech
PDVSA-CIED
broadcast on closed-circuit television. During the
Amoco
Pharmacia & Upjohn
broadcast, Wayman played an active role as facilitator
Buckman Laboratories
Shell International
of the panel discussion “Challenging the Growth
Canadian Imperial Bank of
Smith & Nephew
Barrier.” Senior HP executives have served as faculty
Commerce
Sprint
in part of every core program. Fiorina’s early commit-
Celanese
Thomas Cook Group
ment to communication with her management team
Chevron
The Timken Co.
has led to an expectation within the company that
Compaq Computer
U.S. Dept. of Treasury
she will continue using leadership development as a
Deere & Co.
U.S. Postal Service
“bully pulpit” for strategic change.
Eastman Chemical
Honda of America USA Group
USDA Graduate School
Cor Herkstroter, the former chairman of the Royal
Manufacturing
Wachovia Corporation
Dutch/Shell Group (which has dual headquarters in
Johns Hopkins University
Warner-Lambert
the Netherlands and the United Kingdom), once
Applied Physics Lab
Ziff-Davis
asked his top 50 to 60 leaders to suggest improve-
Johnson & Johnson
ments in the company’s financial performance. Shell’s
committee of managing directors decided that a new
leadership-development process could be a catalyst
And the Winners Are… for organizational change, and Shell’s Leadership and
Best-Practice Partner Organizations Performance (LEAP) program was created. After the
program showed measurable returns in the United
States and elsewhere, Shell made it corporatewide.
Arthur Andersen Johnson & Johnson
General Electric Co. Shell International
When James Wolfensohn joined the World Bank as
Hewlett-Packard Co. The World Bank
president in 1995, he created a mission statement that
Sloan Management Review Fulmer • Gibbs • Goldsmith
Fall 2000
6. continued the bank’s longstanding commitment to the University of Navarra, Spain) — which offers five
dispersing knowledge and financial resources but weeks of classroom training and a project to help the
placed a stronger emphasis on the goal of reducing bank become more of a world leader.4
poverty worldwide. The new focus required change.
Recognition of that need led to the Executive
Development Program (EDP) for managers — a unique The Five Critical Steps
collaboration among Harvard Business School, the Pronouncing a strategic vision is not enough to bring
Kennedy School of Government, Stanford University, about change or to tie leadership development to the
INSEAD and IESE (the graduate business school of company’s goals. Our data suggest that there are five
critical steps to achieving those ends. (See “Making
52 Leadership Development Strategic.”) Examples of
Making Leadership Development Strategic
each step can be found in the corporate leadership
programs of benchmark companies.
Five-Step Process Best-Practice Programs
Assessment
Awareness
• Arthur Andersen: Seeks quantifiable
The need for a process to build leadership skills has
measures.
best-practice organizations looking both inside and
• Shell: Looks for 25:1 ROI in its
outside their organizations for approaches that work.
action-learning projects.
The foundation of such companies’ leadership devel-
• World Bank: Uses internal and external
opment is awareness — awareness of external chal-
evaluation.
lenges, emerging business opportunities and strategies,
internal developmental needs and the ways other
Alignment • Johnson & Johnson: Ties 360-degree
leading organizations handle development.
feedback to J&J’s Standards of
Leadership and succession plans.
Arthur Andersen uses both internal and external data
• General Electric: Uses a nine-block
to determine the learning and development needs of
system (similar to competency ratings)
the partners in the firm. Internal data come from
and “Session C” meetings (where senior
client-satisfaction and employee-satisfaction surveys,
managers assess candidates for
upward communication and analysis of what the firm
development).
calls 450-degree feedback (360-degree feedback plus
• Hewlett-Packard: Considers strategic
client evaluations).5 Arthur Andersen wants to know
needs for diversity and new leadership
how its partners are perceived in terms of their techni-
models.
cal competence and their responsiveness to customers.
Action • General Electric: Uses programs called
External data about new financial and managerial
Work-Out and Change Acceleration
tools or about challenges in the business environment
Process.
come from market research, business trends and
• Johnson & Johnson: Uses real-time
leading-edge thinkers. The partner-development pro-
business issues in its action learning for
gram also exploits the research Arthur Andersen does
executive and midlevel managers.
while serving clients — and the conversations on
emerging trends partners routinely have with leading
Anticipation • Shell: Uses forward-looking, hypothetical
thinkers in management education and business prac-
scenarios.
tice. The PDP also makes use of the literature on
• Johnson & Johnson: Uses a program
new concepts in leadership development.
called Creating Our Future.
To ensure that its leadership-and-performance pro-
Awareness • Arthur Andersen: Is data-driven, uses
gram does not simply react to the immediate needs
feedback and surveys.
of the business, Shell’s LEAP team has an ongoing
• Shell: Uses committee of managing
conversation with the committee of managing directors
directors and Global Research Consortium
(representing all of Shell’s geographic and functional
(a group of transnational companies that
areas) about corporate transformation. LEAP staff
sponsor research).
members negotiate an agreement with the executive
Fulmer • Gibbs • Goldsmith Sloan Management Review
Fall 2000
7. of the business unit and the critical players who will potential challenges or the impact of emerging tech-
go through the program. Together they create budgets nologies; decentralized strategic planning (planning
for the team project and set time expectations and goals. that builds on many organizational levels’ imagining
of the future); analysis of future scenarios; and the
To gather external perspectives, Shell has joined the Delphi method (successive rounds of composite pre-
Global Research Consortium, a group of transnational dictions used to build awareness and consensus).6
companies that sponsors research. The consortium
gives its members the opportunity to hear and discuss Strategy guru Gary Hamel recommends decentralized
the latest on leadership and learning. Like other best- planning because revolutions are beneficial and they
practice companies, Shell also works with consultants “seldom start with the monarchy.”7 The participative
and professors to stay abreast of the latest in leader- and future-centered Merlin Process is an example of 53
ship research. decentralized planning.8 Managers imagine the orga-
nization a decade from the present and describe what
There is greater awareness today that best-practice it would look like if totally successful. In contrast to
organizations’ corporate leadership-development more conventional, top-down strategic planning, the
function is specifically for strategic issues; more-tactical Merlin Process has groups throughout the organiza-
management skills and business-specific challenges tion describe their ideal. The resulting presentations
are usually left to business units. That seems to work provide insight and input for senior executives and
well — corporate leadership efforts in best-practice lead to more-formal planning sessions.
organizations complement learning experiences with-
in the business units and don’t compete with them. From 1993 to 1996, J&J followed that pattern. During
Business operations are better equipped to handle its second set of Executive Conferences, executives
their own management-skill training; corporate lead- from around the world worked together for a week
ership programs concentrate on helping decision with outside consultants to create a vision for a decade
makers become more effective at using those skills. later. Participants challenged conventional wisdom
about the evolution of the health-care industry and
All the best-practice leadership programs tap leaders focused on actions their divisions could take to create
with extensive line experience. At Arthur Andersen, their future. J&J 2002, an extended scenario developed
Johnson & Johnson and Shell, the heads of the from future-focused interviews with more than 100
leadership-development process have senior-level executives in six countries — and from published
business experience. The use of business leaders is predictions about the future of health care — projected
based on a belief that participation from executives multiple trends and discontinuities. Using a modified
will help ensure buy-in from the businesses and will Delphi approach, participants assessed the probability
keep the programs practical. and impact of 14 hypothetical developments. An inte-
grative exercise called the Merlin Exercise was used
GE and Shell International bring in high-potential to tie the various aspects of the program together. (A
individuals on two-year rotational assignments to over- Merlin Process asks people to create a future vision
see leadership development. HP recruits key people of the company; the Merlin Exercise has participants
from line positions for the same purpose. In addition apply course concepts to that vision.) Participant
to drawing on the business units, best-practice orga- groups made formal presentations of the desired
nizations access the experience of individuals in future to the CEO or the vice chairman.
corporate education, human resources and academia.
The director of GE’s Crotonville center came from a The Merlin Exercise gets results. Upon being congrat-
university setting, and the head of World Bank’s EDP ulated about a significant promotion to head a new
has a background in corporate education. J&J venture, one program graduate responded, “Well,
it took almost a year, but I finally got our Merlin.”
Anticipation The first step in the envisioned future had become a
Although business cases traditionally focus on the past reality because of his commitment to the potential.
and best-practice reviews focus on the present, the
best leadership-development programs emphasize the For some organizations, anticipation involves devel-
future. Top leadership-development companies use oping a list of the competencies that the company
anticipatory learning tools: focus groups that explore will need. (See “About Competencies.”)
Sloan Management Review Fulmer • Gibbs • Goldsmith
Fall 2000
8. Action Recommendations made by the participant teams are
Action, not knowledge, is the goal of best-practice usually implemented. Students in one management
leadership-development processes. Best-practice course went to Russia and developed proposals for
groups bring the world into the classroom, applying GE’s operations there. A quality report from an indi-
real-time business issues to skill development.9 The vidual in another course led to corporatewide adoption
answers to tough questions are not in the instructor’s of the Six Sigma initiative, a quality-assurance program
head; learners must discover them on the spot. And designed to eliminate defects from all products.
with program participants implementing their own
recommendations, the learning experience benefits
both the organization and the learner. Such action Best-practice partners were more likely
54 learning can be complicated and costly, however. That
is why Arthur Andersen, for example, uses a modified to have developed their competencies
approach that still includes prework and postwork.
Before the course begins, the firm gives participants internally or with limited use of outside
criteria for selecting a client with a business problem
and a protocol for interviewing that client. Learners consultants rather than pursuing
work in a team to develop client recommendations.
After the course, the team must make a presentation extensive, formal competency studies.
to the actual client or the program sponsor.
At GE, Welch himself has been the one to choose the GE also supports what it calls the Change Acceleration
action-learning topics for each of the three annual Process (CAP), a systematic attempt to turn managers
business-management courses and for the annual into professional change agents by disseminating
executive-development course. Participants in both GE’s accumulated knowledge about how to initiate,
courses are highly motivated to carry out projects, accelerate and secure change. If CAP is successful,
important as they are to the company’s direction. says Welch, “people who are comfortable as coaches
About Competencies
A majority of the best-practice organizations Three-fourths of the organizations surveyed The three broad categories of competencies
have identified leadership competencies or at believe that once competencies are defined, are business development, personnel devel-
least have tried to define characteristics of they should be pursued consistently. Best- opment and personal development. The com-
successful leaders, but any discussion about practice companies considered position, busi- mon theme is leadership. The Partner
competencies is generally controversial. ness unit and geographic location before Development Program group aims to develop
Some even question whether competencies deciding about which competencies would be an Arthur Andersen partner who
can be defined at all. considered essential. Johnson & Johnson • is a change agent
sent a team around the world to make sure • plans strategically
Although not all the best-practice partners that what made a leader successful in the • is globally aware
define competencies, each tries to pinpoint United States would translate to Europe and • promotes advanced business and
the characteristics of successful leaders with- Asia. Although some of the wording for its professional knowledge
in its particular organization. That is also true competencies had to change, the behaviors • is a marketer
of the study sponsors, but the best-practice were consistent. • is a trusted business adviser
partners were more likely to have developed • provides valued integrated services
their competencies internally or with limited Arthur Andersen defines a competency as a • leads the team
use of outside consultants rather than pursu- statement of the behaviors necessary to per- • develops people
ing extensive, formal competency studies. form a job task. Although Arthur Andersen • builds relationships
The best-practice companies had more self- has no organizationwide set of competencies, • is a skilled communicator
confidence about their ability to identify the the partner-development program has created • develops self
key skills for leaders. And they made a point its own list for company partners. It concen-
of keeping their competencies and develop- trates on nontechnical competencies that Other companies also have competencies
mental activities updated. apply to all the service lines. geared to their particular business.
Fulmer • Gibbs • Goldsmith Sloan Management Review
Fall 2000
9. and facilitators will be the norm at GE. And the other
people won’t get promoted.”10 The best companies are beginning to
At Johnson & Johnson, the purpose of the third group integrate and align assessment,
of Executive Conferences, which started in 1997, was
to emphasize J&J’s Standards of Leadership (a model
development, feedback, coaching and
developed by key executives working with McKinsey
succession planning.
consultants) and to tie the standards to specific busi-
ness issues through action learning. The principal
session lasted five days, with prework and follow-up questionnaire, in which participants rate their perfor-
extending the experience. Before the core session, mance in many areas and get ratings from supervi- 55
each operating unit discussed the business topic it sors, peers and subordinates. Plans may be made for
would focus on. participants to be coached later or to engage in activ-
ities to strengthen weak areas as part of the program,
Different J&J executives in the various businesses but the facilitators’ assessments are not typically fed
“sponsor” each conference session. Those who directly into succession planning.
choose the topic are asked to pick one that can have
significant or transformational impact. Past pro- Although the data were not conclusive, we believe
gram topics have included top-line growth, product- the best companies are beginning to integrate and
development cycles, new-market entries and leader- align assessment, development, feedback, coaching
ship development. Once the topic is defined, the and succession planning. In the integrated model,
executive sponsor chooses 50 to 130 program partici- leadership development becomes an important part
pants, who do additional preparation, such as gather- of maintaining a steady flow of information through-
ing data and interviewing people in the company out an organization and ensuring that top talent is
who might have some relevant insight. tracked and continues to grow.
Participants go through the program and return later GE openly ties leadership development to succession
for a day to report on implementation results. planning. All employees are rated in a nine-block
Typically, the process takes six to nine months. J&J’s system for the annual Session C review. The review
Executive-Conference approach includes work teams includes discussion about people’s performance and
from the business area that is experiencing the prob- their adherence to the values in GE’s value statement.
lem being studied. The company’s action-learning The system is an approximation of a typical compe-
approach at the middle-management level, however, tency model but was created quickly, simply and with
brings together high-potential individuals from all GE self-confidence from a comment by Welch and
parts of J&J to tackle a more broad-based issue. The elaboration by his HR team. It features a chart on
Executive-Conference issues aim more at organizational which an employee’s bottom-line performance is
development, whereas middle-management programs rated on one axis, with adherence to GE values on
focus more on development of individuals’ skills. the other axis. Those who don’t make their perfor-
mance numbers but do adhere to GE values are
Alignment given a chance to improve those numbers and get a
Because best-practice organizations recognize the higher rating. Those who make their numbers but
importance of alignment between leadership develop- don’t demonstrate the GE values are rated low in the
ment and other corporate functions, they often tie four-level model, which gauges promotion suitability.
educational efforts to formal succession planning. At Those who do neither are rated lowest.
a few of our best-practice partners, the leadership-
development function and the succession-planning Senior managers spend most of their resources devel-
function report to the same executive; other enter- oping their best and brightest. They see that
prises merely emphasize that a natural link exists. approach as delivering the most mileage: creating
both role models and alignment on what is valued.
At J&J, all development functions use 360-degree- Crotonville’s leadership-development offerings are tar-
feedback evaluations as a part of leadership develop- geted at high-potential individuals, people the organi-
ment. Facilitators assess a multiple-choice, behavioral zation refers to as its “A Players.” Each year the insti-
Sloan Management Review Fulmer • Gibbs • Goldsmith
Fall 2000
10. tute trains about 10,000 of GE’s approximately the right people in the right programs. The goal of
300,000 employees. Shell’s LEAP program is to create leaders at all levels,
so the programs are open to anyone within the orga-
It is commonly said that, at GE, the corporate head- nization (although certain programs are targeted for
quarters owns the top 500 people in the company those with the highest potential). GE and HP are
and just rents them out to the businesses. To encour- more selective about entrance because they want to
age the sharing of business talent, GE includes a focus only on those individuals with the potential to
negative variable in its performance appraisals for move quickly through the ranks.
managers who hold back talented employees.
Outstanding business performance and development Assessment
56 of leaders go hand in hand. Best-practice organizations always assess the impact
of their leadership-development process. To collect
Hewlett-Packard provides myriad opportunities for information on the perceived value, the best-practice
emerging leaders to develop and grow. Platt, the for- partners use a number of tools and techniques. The
mer CEO, recognized that many people who grew up Kirkpatrick Four-Level Model of Evaluation (partici-
with the founders were retiring and that their imme- pant reaction, knowledge acquired, behavioral
diate successors looked a little too much like one change, business results) is typical.11 Participants,
another. He saw that as the company became more human-resource-development staff, consultants and,
global, it would need more diversity of ethnicity and in some instances, financial staff, do the assessments
gender. Having a female CEO now may help change — the latter weighing program expenditures’ return
perceptions about who is leadership material. And on investment. (See “An Executive Primer.”)
HP’s leadership-development process is clearly sup-
portive of diversity goals, providing stretch assign- Most best-practice partners use an assessment method
ments for the most promising people and making called the Kirkpatrick levels to quantify the effect of
accelerated programs available for individual contrib- leadership programs on business results. But both the
utors and first-level managers. study sponsors and best-practice partners use other
metrics, too — including corporate performance, cus-
Best-practice organizations use the goals of their tomer satisfaction and employee satisfaction. In gen-
leadership-development program as guides to putting eral, best-practice partners were more aggressive than
An Executive Primer: Five Steps Help Managers Get the Most From Leadership-Development Programs
Awareness — Make it a point to interview Be sure that current challenges don’t keep documents. Make sure they reflect a consis-
key executives about leadership development. you from focusing on the future of your com- tent set of terms, values and models. If they
Keep a record of your findings to use in pany. Define possible scenarios and how you don’t, work to align them more closely.
succession planning and human-resource- would respond.
development (HRD) initiatives. Insist that the Assessment — Evaluate whether your
head of HRD or your chief learning officer Action — Ask your HRD team members leadership-development activities have been
brief you on at least one conference per year which business results have originated from successful. Ask for evidence that programs
that reflects the latest thinking on leadership your company’s educational programs. Discuss reflect standards of success when you autho-
development. Ask other key members of HRD the strategic initiatives that need their imple- rize a budget. (Shell doesn’t consider a pro-
to prepare short summaries of events they mentation assistance. Explore how you can gram valuable unless its returns are 25 times
attend at corporate expense. use executive learning to make such initia- greater than its cost. Johnson & Johnson has
tives happen more quickly and effectively. used 360-degree feedback to assess observ-
Anticipation — Start your meetings (with able performance change in key leaders.)
managers at all levels) with a request for the Alignment — Look at your performance-
most significant trend or prediction that they management system (performance apprais- Overall — Think about how you want HRD, in
think will affect your business. Ask them to als), your succession-planning profiles, your general, and education, in particular, to support
summarize the most forward-thinking article, major education and development agendas your strategic efforts. How must you change
book or presentation to help you learn and to and possibly a “competency model.” Observe your human-resource profiles so that your
get colleagues thinking in anticipatory terms. the consistency and alignment among the company can become what you want it to be?
Fulmer • Gibbs • Goldsmith Sloan Management Review
Fall 2000
11. sponsors about measuring and evaluating program
effectiveness. When asked to rank the importance of
Of all the best-practice organizations, Arthur Andersen various criteria in selecting an outside
is probably the most dedicated to assessment — and
has reaped the benefits. The vast amounts of data
vendor, the companies put fees near the
the firm collects not only demonstrate the partner-
bottom of the list.
development program’s correlation with improved
business results, but also show where the organiza-
tion needs to head. To Shell’s LEAP staff, a program adds value only if
the team project generates revenues at least 25 times 57
Although measurement is expensive and sometimes greater than the project’s cost (a 25:1 ROI). During
tricky, its benefits cannot be discounted. Arthur the initial contracting process, a LEAP staff member
Andersen combines impact research with participants’ and the leader of the business unit determine the
course evaluations. Program attendees fill out evalua- desired project outcomes, including financial targets.
tion forms before they take the class, immediately The business leader expresses his or her objectives in
after the class is finished and three months later. The sending the candidate to the program; in many cases
forms contain questions about the knowledge partici- that defines the program and problem the team or
pants believe they have gained. individual will address.
The impact research consists of comparing, course by You get what you pay for. Best-practice companies
course, partners who have attended PDP with those do consider costs, but their main focus is on the value
who have not. The results show that attendance the program can provide. When asked to rank the
increases both client satisfaction and per-hour billings. importance of various criteria in selecting an outside
Impact research is done in a two-year cycle, with vendor, the companies put fees near the bottom of
information gathered on partners a year before the the list. Arthur Andersen invests approximately 6 per-
program and a year after. cent of total revenues in education (more than $30
million). If course offerings achieve their objective to
The use of both participant-satisfaction and impact- improve business results, support is likely to continue.
research measures helps provide a balanced set of
results. Arthur Andersen found that one of its pro- Cost for each participant in the executive-development
grams was not getting a high participant-satisfaction program at the World Bank is $22,000, which
rating, but an impact analysis showed that the pro- includes travel, lodging and business school fees for
gram was having a greater effect than any of PDP’s three modules and for the Grass-Roots Immersion
other courses. (But, PDP staff members prefer to see Program (which gives managers one-week stints in a
both strong satisfaction and strong impact, so if part- developing-country village or urban neighborhood so
ners have a low level of satisfaction the course will they can acquire a firsthand understanding of poverty).
not be recommended.) The cost is not charged back to the business groups
but funded centrally through the bank’s $12 million
Regression analysis shows that course duration is an annual executive-education budget.
important factor in how satisfied participants are. The
perception that a course is too long has a negative effect.
(However, a belief that the program length is appropri-
The New Strategic Reality of
ate does not by itself improve overall satisfaction.) Leadership Development
Globalization, deregulation, e-commerce and rapid
Another key factor in determining satisfaction is technological change are forcing companies to re-
whether program participants have similar levels of evaluate the way they operate. Approaches that have
familiarity with the topic. What may be an exciting worked for years are no longer effective. Development
concept for one person could be old news to another. of leaders who think strategically is increasingly a
Arthur Andersen believes that moving to a problem- source of sustainable competitive advantage. Hence
based course design will help it address different observations of companies known for excellent
levels of participant knowledge. leadership-development practices can be invaluable.
Sloan Management Review Fulmer • Gibbs • Goldsmith
Fall 2000
12. Senior-level support for Johnson & Johnson’s executive
Leadership development is now too conferences is evidenced by the fact that either the
chairman or a member of the company’s executive
specialized to relegate to human-resource committee participates in each session, articulating
J&J’s credo and values — and the program’s link to
departments. In best-practice companies, business success.
top-level managers get involved. Although the best-practice firms differ in their empha-
sis on making leadership development strategic, the
development program of each includes elements of
58 Leadership development has become too specialized the five critical steps:
to relegate to human-resource departments. In best-
practice companies, top-level managers get involved. • building awareness of external challenges, emerg-
Without their support, leadership-development ing strategies, organizational needs and what leading
processes would founder. Of course, corporate lead- firms do to meet the needs;
ers are more likely to offer support if programs are • employing anticipatory learning tools to recognize
producing business results. By monitoring the effec- potential external events, envision the future and
tiveness of the leadership-development processes, focus on action the organization can take to create its
capitalizing on quick wins and communicating suc- own future;
cesses throughout the organization, the best-practice • taking action by tying leadership-development pro-
companies sustain a virtuous cycle. grams to solving important, challenging business issues;
• aligning leadership development with performance
Development groups such as Arthur Andersen’s PDP assessment, feedback, coaching and succession plan-
and the one at GE’s Crotonville site emphasize diligent ning; and
crafting of programs, careful listening, constant moni- • assessing impact of the leadership-development
toring and frequent communication. That helps senior process on individual behavioral changes and organi-
executives understand how a leadership-development zational success.
process can shape and disseminate an organization’s
culture, overcome resistance to change and achieve Most people, even if they have heard of the specific
strategic goals. leadership-development practices of Johnson &
Johnson or GE, have not grasped how to manage an
At GE, the corporate leadership-development group integrated set of variables in order to achieve excel-
endeavors to maintain buy-in. It interviews company lence in developing executives. Increasing the budget
leaders around the world on a regular basis to gauge for education or changing the name of a training
future business needs and the characteristics future department to “corporate university” doesn’t guaran-
leaders should have. Additionally, the group at tee improved performance. Our study shows that,
Crotonville identifies early adopters of a given devel- despite the diversity of approaches to leadership
opment initiative and leverages their support. development in the best-practice companies, all share
common goals: anticipating, supporting and aligning
Hewlett-Packard has garnered support for its leader- the organization’s strategic initiatives with develop-
ship-development process by having both the CEO ment, as well as gaining and sustaining competitive
and senior managers participate in its programs. The advantage. And increasingly, those companies choose
executives serve as mentors, faculty and supporters in an action-oriented, ongoing learning process closely
leadership-development design and programs. linked to the strategic needs of the business.
Additional Resources by David Giber, Louis Carter and Marshall References
Concepts introduced in this article are developed in Goldsmith, called “Leadership Development I 1. “Industry Report 1998: Training Budgets,”
greater detail in Robert M. Fulmer and Marshall Handbook”; Jay A. Conger and Beth Benjamin’s Training, October 1998, 47. See also:
Goldsmith’s “The Leadership Investment: How The 1999 book, “Building Leaders,” published by J. Reingold, M. Schneider and K. Capell, “Learning
World’s Best Organizations Gain Strategic Jossey-Bass; and a 2000 book from the same To Lead,” Business Week, Oct. 18, 1999: 76.
Advantage Through Leadership Development,” pub- publisher, “Coaching for Leadership,” which I 2. John A. Byrne, “PepsiCo's New Formula,”
lished this year by AMACOM. Other useful Marshall Goldsmith, Laurence Lyons and Alyssa Business Week, Apr. 10, 2000, 172; and
resources include a 1999 Linkage, Inc. book edited Freas edited. T.A. Stewart, “How to Leave It All Behind,” Fortune,
Fulmer • Gibbs • Goldsmith Sloan Management Review
Fall 2000