Strategic Leadership in The Media Industry
Strategic Leadership in The Media Industry
Strategic Leadership in The Media Industry
Autumn 2007
Email: lucy.kung@ashridge.org.uk
www.ashridge.org.uk/360
http://www.ashridge.org.uk
Autumn 2007
http://www.ashridge.org.uk
www.ashridge.org.uk/360
Autumn 2007
1. Encouragement. If creativity is
required from staff then this needs to made
clear. This involves more than paying lip
service to the idea of creativity: it must be
demonstrated through management action
(how priorities are set, which projects are
viewed as most important, what kinds of
behaviours are rewarded, etc) that creativity
is central to current operations and future
success. Creative contributions need to be
publicly celebrated. Feedback on new ideas
is also important. If these are disregarded
or handled clumsily staff can feel that the
interest in creativity is only cosmetic and
experimentation will be discouraged.
3.
www.ashridge.org.uk/360
http://www.ashridge.org.uk
Autumn 2007
http://www.ashridge.org.uk
www.ashridge.org.uk/360
Autumn 2007
www.ashridge.org.uk/360
6. Exit gracefully
Eisners is just one in a long procession
of clumsy exits by leaders in the media
industry: Gerald Levin, Thomas Middlehof,
Jean-Marie Messier, Steve Case, Greg
Dyke, Conrad Black, and of course, Robert
Maxwell all spring to mind, but the list could
be far longer. The ability to make a graceful
exit knowing when to move on and leaving
a good successor when you do might
be described as the ultimate leadership
skill. The issue of leadership exit has been
exhaustively studied, but diversity in terms
of research contexts, methodologies, basic
denitions and research elds make it hard
to draw general conclusions from this work
for the media sector.
What is clear is that entrepreneurs and
founders (both are prevalent in the media
sector) have particular difculty in giving
up what they have created, and that the
preparation for succession is psychologically
challenging for founder and successor21.
They may ofcially be grooming successors,
but unconsciously they may be preventing
powerful and competent people from
functioning in the successor role, or they
may designate successors but prevent
them from having enough responsibility to
learn how to do the job.
Conclusions
So what denes good leadership in
the media industry? Without doubt,
in view of the current climate of ongoing
turmoil, good leaders will be need to be
entrepreneurial and constantly attuned to
environmental change. They will provide
their organisations with a credible but
inspiring sense of direction. Their strategy
will synthesise intuition and experience and
expertise, involve an active search for new
opportunities and, in the current climate,
generate dramatic leaps forward in the face
of uncertainty22.
http://www.ashridge.org.uk
Autumn 2007
References
1. Schein, E.(1992) Organizational Culture and
Leadership, second edition, Jossey Bass,
San Francisco.
2. Tushman, M. L. and Anderson, P. (1986)
Technological Discontinuities and Organizational
Environments, Administrative Science Quarterly, 31:
439-465.
3. Spar. D. (2003). Ruling the Waves: Cycles of
Discovery, Chaos, and Wealth from the Compass
to the Internet, Harvard Business School Press,
Cambridge, Mass.
4. Vogel, H. L. (1999) Entertainment Industry
Economics: A Guide for Financial Analysis, fourth
edition, Cambridge University Press, New York.
5. Gunter, M. and Leonard, D. (2003) Murdochs Prime
Time, Fortune, February 17.
6. Bibb, P. (1993) It Aint as Easy as it Looks:
Ted Turners Amazing Story, Crown, New York.
7. Cited in Red Herring Online, 3 February, 1999.
8. Scase, R. (2002) Create Harmony, not Harnesses.
The Observer, 4 August.
9. Amabile T. M. (1998) How To Kill Creativity.
Harvard Business Review. September.
10. Kng, L. (2004) What Makes Media Firms Tick?
Exploring the Hidden Drivers of Firm Performance.
In Picard, R. G. (Ed.) Strategic Responses to Media
Market Changes, Jnkping International Business
School, Jnkping.
http://www.ashridge.org.uk
www.ashridge.org.uk/360