The New Managers and the legacy of the Old-A Managerial Conflict in Nigeria
I am not
going to use the liberty that my blog provides me to claim that I am a top
notch professional in business dynamics neither am I going to pretend that I have
perfect understanding of the way business works from a 360 degree approach. However, I know something for sure, time has
changed, just like weather, an era has gone.
Having established
that I am not a CEO, just yet I must add, I have understood that the landscapes
have changed. No longer will I tilt towards the thought that ‘Innovation is
over, adaptation is all that is needed’.
Contrarily
to that school of thought, Adaptation is over; Innovation is all that is needed.
This I strongly support.
I changed.
Several
books have thought these two diverse views, in my opinion, several authors have
created best sellers from existing modules that either obey the Principle of competitive
adaptation of existing ideologies or compilations that preach the Creation of
non-existing opportunities.
Before I take
you on this journey with words, I want you to keep in mind that a dollar
exchanges at a minimum 0f 155naira(s). News from Europe, America all clearly
establish the death of an era, no longer are these places ‘Lands of immense
promise’ that they used to be.
Now the
philosophy is: THE TALENTED SURVIVE. Talent in this case is deep rooted
understanding.
If you agree
that the saying above is indeed true, then, existing modules now fail, not
because they lacked sound financial logic nor were they backward in execution
excellence, but TOPE’s law of Opportunities has to be satisfied: For one
opportunity, 2 existing routes close, For several, multiples will get erased,
but in the new, the wise finds the existence of multiples of what was closed.
As true as
that is, in my view, MANY are blind.
Staying true
to the topic, when legislative rights 'unfavoured' importation, industries sprung
up, CEOs, trained by founding fathers of Business Dynamics emerged, and monies
were made, Stars created, Super Stars celebrated.
The field
was new, opportunities abound, the landscape was green, and the climate reading
just began. Predictions were limited, facts were established and for business,
competition was little.
The pie was
big enough.
As
prosperity showed its face on balance sheets, School of thoughts were formed.
Business successes were attributed to wits, boardrooms were filled with claps,
few thought of the day: that day the pie will shrink and some other bakers will
offer variants, palates are always curious senses.
The damage
was not in the modules that almost became biblical guidelines in companies,
politics was groomed, and corruption in the nation supported the malignant
growth.
Progression
became a factor of replacing me with me, CEOs unfortunately followed same
patterns, made same mistakes, achieved same results and boom, 2012 came. The
pie was gone, a new flavour was offered, but access code has been changed. Just
like the new weather, climate readings didn’t count anymore, a new compilation is about to start.
However,
just like a typical household, the father overseas the dealing, elders speak
first, the old hands or those who were schooled by the first set or perhaps the
second generation of 'successfuls' found it hard to embrace change.
To them, the
modules of old, created the pie; they were there when the boardroom echoed with
claps. They received bonuses, schooled their kids(from the lot the New Managers are evolving) with dividends and returns
from outside investments, investments made possible by the money made from an
age-long trusted module.
But the pie
was never created by them, it existed, they fed from it and never thought of
baking.
Now the
challenge is business sustainability, my thinking is the old hands are wanted,
but the new hands are needed. The balance has to be perfect.
The problem,
that conflict I refer to, exist in the process of bonding. It’s most times a
stormy reaction, why take this risk? Why expose us this much? the old hands say. Why not? the new ones
reply.
My candid
opinion, both are wrong. The blend is
what is too much and what is little and slow? That perfect blend is What will do us good!
As long as
the a dollar exchanges for over 150naira(s), ideas should have a propellant
factor of at least half that figure, the old don’t have it because they
practised successfully when it was far less. The new think they understand
better because they saw the tilted growth.
Believe me,
most New Generation managers want to make fortune for business at a 155Naira/Dollar
rate but a few of us, will recognise that what we ideally need is to grow a fortune at 155Naira/75Dollars
ratio. The difference is clear!
In our
aspiration, we need the Old hands just as the fortune of post 2013 business
needs us, the CONFLICT exists.
Not more
than ever, today, we need middle men who understand both hands but there are
a FEW GOOD MEN!
True we need old hands in today's business/world, but they also need to be innovative, dynamic, as the world is not static. Things/events changes, hence they have to consistenly move with the trend, so they wont be left behind.......
ReplyDeleteWhen redundancy exists stagnation abounds: OUT WITH THE OLD! This 'old-hands' factor is clearly evident in our government today!
ReplyDeleteThe 'Ancient lords'-still laden with their knowlege by an OLD text book- have become 'clueless' on the best way to drastically progress in this fast changing times and yet they call the new breed, who are attune to this dynamic era: Over Zealous. You are right, it is obvious that they don't want the New Gen. to take their Super shine and so they twart changes!...refusing to agree that there are always fresh ways to do things.(I have a boss who believes he's never wrong;u can guess the rest!)
I recommend: Do not read a 'success' book if it was published over 7years back...everything has changed since then.
'What will go us good' is just the right phrase!!!