Companies are increasingly optimistic about growth, according to new research from Right Management. That’s the good news.
The bad? “Only 6% of companies in the Americas say, ‘We have an ample leadership pipeline that will cover most of our needs.’” (“Trends in Talent Management: Employers Optimistic on Growth but Lack of 'Ready Now' Leaders will Impede Success,” Right Management)
Coming out of the layoffs and restructurings of recent years, organizations are starting to see better results, but now they’re dealing with another issue: a talent gap. This talent gap is colliding with a changing business landscape—one that will place new demands on the leaders of the future.
So what can organizations do to start “growing their own” to step up to leadership?
The first task is to recognize that thinking, as Ned Herrmann would say, has everything to do with management.
In his book, The Creative Brain, he spoke of the need for managers to be able to engage all modes of thinking, depending on the demands of the situation, explaining, "When designing and implementing responses to business issues and challenges, the human brain functions at its most innovative, productive best only when all four quadrants [of thinking styles as depicted in the Whole Brain® Model] engage situationally and iteratively in the process…"
This description—a call for Whole Brain® Thinking as a way to be more agile in leadership—has never been more relevant than today. Consider:
What are you doing to make sure Whole Brain® Thinking is part of your high-potential development strategies?