Fuente: National Association of Corporate Directors
Autor: Jim DeLoach
The unprecedented nature of the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has set in motion one of the most abrupt disruptions in decades, leaving organizations reeling. For that reason, it could present the ultimate test of resiliency for everyone leading companies in every industry—including the board. How well companies pivot in this environment and in the aftermath could have a lasting effect on their reputations and brands. More importantly, as organizations focus on transitioning their people to a remote workplace, opportunities may come about to learn new ways of doing business for the long-term. This is a time when the board can prove its mettle as a strategic advisor to the CEO.
As the pandemic brings many businesses to a halt, the effects of quarantine, isolation, and travel restriction strategies are having a brutal impact on the economy and multiple industries, with the financial markets punishing investors with steep declines. Up to this point, new and total infections, fatality rates, reductions in economic activity, and massive fiscal and monetary measures by the public sector have overshadowed the impact on people in the workplace and what companies must do to sustain operations as best they can under the most extenuating of circumstances. But that is fast changing.
Now that countries, provinces, states, and cities are instituting lockdowns, shelter-in-place directives, or similar requirements to limit the spread of this highly contagious virus, companies are focused on transitioning their organizations and workforces to environments where their managers and employees will be working remotely for an indeterminable period of time. Given these optics, what role should the board play as their organizations transition to a distributed workplace?
There are a number of items boards should consider acting on as CEOs and organizations grapple with the people-related challenges of the COVID-19 crisis. Ten suggestions for boards are offered below, some of which relate to the basics found in any crisis management playbook. Rather than addressing the decisions associated with navigating an economic slowdown (e.g., downsizing headcount; compensation adjustments; asset divestitures; selling, general, and administrative expense cuts; and other options) the focus is on managing the effects of transitioning to a distributed workplace, including the impact on organizational culture.
1. Know the board’s place at the table. The board’s role should be delineated from management’s role. Management is responsible for developing and implementing the overall strategy to protect the health of the workforce while putting it in a position to continue to work productively. The board is responsible for advising the management team as it executes the company’s response and monitors progress. Directors need to resist getting too hands-on. The CEO’s job is tough enough at the moment.
2. Understand management’s internal communications plan. Communications are vital during any crisis. While disclosing the impact of the crisis is important, the most important communications are to the organization’s employees. What is the plan, its objectives, and its tone? Is there an appropriate cadence of communications from various leaders so that employees know when to expect messages, as opposed to feeling left in the dark? Do internal communications convey empathy to employees? Are they forward-looking to give everyone an idea as to what’s happening around the company? In lieu of droning on in negativity, offering something grounding and trustworthy can be valuable in these difficult times.
3. Ask management how the company’s transition to a remote work environment is going. Highly mobile organizations can make the transition to a remote, work-from-home workplace relatively seamless—that is, among employees who can work remotely. But this transition can present formidable challenges to organizations that are anchored to their offices and physical facilities. During check-ins with management on crisis response, ask what the company is doing to support the technology, tools, and cultural challenges created by the sudden shift to virtual work, if applicable.
4. Encourage a watchful eye for new leaders who emerge from the fire. These are extraordinary times. Everyone in the organization from top to bottom will be battle-tested. Boards should encourage management to watch for those who flourish in this environment and to support them as they provide leadership. History teaches us about many generations of leaders who have been steeled by extraordinary events. This fluid environment creates a unique opportunity for team members to shine and show what they are made of.
5. When the sun rises, request management to conduct a post-crisis assessment in the cool of day. For companies unprepared for this crisis, a process should be put in place to capture the lessons learned in real time.Before memories fade, company plans and procedures for navigating abrupt business disruptions—including a global pandemic—should be updated using these lessons. And, as stated above, the employees who took the initiative to lead should be noted.
6. Ensure that the organization focuses on its customers. The crisis may present opportunities to deepen relationships with customers. Now is the time for out-of-the-box thinking on how to help customers, particularly for those companies that may be struggling to survive. This will help to differentiate the companies that are flexible and agile from those who are not.
7. Point out the opportunity to improve remote work policies and procedures.Whether deployed selectively or mandated outright, decisions to work remotely—beyond present remote arrangements—offer an opportunity to learn how to ensure that such arrangements work effectively and efficiently into the future. These lessons may be invaluable for companies as the trend toward telework continues to evolve, worker flexibility programs expand, and the volume is turned up on improving quality of life.
8. Suggest that management make it a priority to regroup on a regular basis.Keeping everyone on the same page in a remote environment requires special attention. The unique stresses, pressures, and concerns the COVID-19 crisis presents to employees create a difficult environment for preserving morale. Whether as a small group, the whole team, or even through one-on-one interactions, remote workers should meet at least weekly to stay in touch and ensure that everyone is on the same page about specific expectations, project deliverables, and timelines using the tools the organization has available. It is especially helpful when those tools allow for face-to-face meetings as nonverbal cues and body language are an important part of human interactions.
As the “touch” in the workplace is removed, the “trust” between colleagues and senior leadership becomes even more important. Through appropriate electronic tools, leaders should spread awareness of successes in order to build motivation and develop social involvement among employees. In uncertain times, employees can be motivated by seeing positive actions recognized and a strong focus on the future from their leaders.
9. Ask the question: When the crisis passes, what will we have learned about how we do business? Two years from now when the CEO and executive team look back on this crisis, what will they observe? Will they recognize that what they learned from temporary transitions, as discussed above, served as a catalyst for accelerated shifts in workplace design? Will what they learned inform ways of altering company strategy, including the way the company does business and goes to market? Will the lessons from the crisis alter management’s views regarding the organization’s real estate needs? These important questions point to the power of technology to transform how and where people work.
10. Ask another question: Will our people be more or less loyal based on how we managed the crisis? The crisis presents an opportunity for leaders to let their people know that the company truly cares about them and their well-being. Their actions in both word and deed carry the possibility of strengthening culture. Does the company’s response to the crisis meet this test?
The COVID-19 crisis is a new test of resiliency for directors, managers, and employees alike and everyone must learn how to meet it together, with a focus on continuous improvement, shared values, and mutual trust. It also presents a test of leadership. Prioritizing and reprioritizing tasks and activities is going to be a necessary art for most organizations over the next several weeks. Keeping teams focused on the greatest issues and risks, avoiding needless distractions, positioning themselves to ramp back up to normal operations, and building a culture of trust and empathy is the name of the game.