Executive teams face unique challenges. The organization’s business strategy and architecture (structure, processes, and culture) are both shaped by them and shape them. Team members have large individual jobs, with accountability for significant amounts of financial and organizational impact; they also tend to have big ambitions and are often in implicit (or explicit) competition for the top job.
When executive teams perform well, they significantly accelerate organizational performance: in fact, they are an under-leveraged source of strategic advantage. They’re also an under-leveraged source of development—there are few better ways to develop enterprise mindset than being a member of a high-performing executive team. My colleagues and I work with executive teams across the world to unleash this potential. Lately, though, we’re seeing an additional self-imposed challenge: executive teams are getting too big.
CEOs often tell us that they need a large team because the increased complexity in the world requires more voices, representing diverse perspectives, to wrestle with the big issues. That’s true. Ironically though, the larger the team, the harder it is to hear those voices in a meaningful way: diversity without inclusion is meaningless. Our own and others’ research has consistently shown that outstanding executive teams are small—ideally, no more than nine people. Once you get above that number, it is exponentially harder to create the conditions that enable good decision making about the paradoxes that organizations face today.
A core characteristic in high-performing teams is trust, which goes far beyond professional respect. Trust emerges when you really care about the other person, their goals, and their constraints—even when you’re diametrically opposed to their views on the issue at hand. Trust means you bring their voice into the room when they’re absent, representing their perspective even though you may not agree with it. And trust enables you to engage in robust and vigorous conflict on business-critical issues, looking to understand others’ views deeply while sharing your own perspective—and thereby unlocking new possibilities that none of you would have dreamed of alone.
That kind of trust requires relationship—really knowing each other’s strengths and weaknesses, styles and preferences, backgrounds and dreams. What leaders often overlook is that team size is linear, but team relationships are exponential: for example, a team with 8 people on it has 28 active relationships, but a team of 14 people has 91 relationships.[1] Finding time for 14 people to state their perspective in a meeting is hard enough; managing 91 relationships in a way that creates trust is simply not realistic.
So what’s a CEO to do?
1. Clarify team purpose: why the team exists and what, specifically, you need the team to do.
2. Let team purpose drive the team(s) size and membership.
3. Be ruthless about process, an under-appreciated aspect of team performance.
4. Lead inclusively to reap the benefits of diverse perspectives.
Your executive team should be one of your biggest assets, and a source of strength for you and your stakeholders. Set it, yourself, and your organization up for success by making it fit for purpose.
[1] In any group of people, the number of possible relationships is [N x (N-1) / 2] where N = the number of people in the group.
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