Leading Corporate Turnaround
eBook - ePub

Leading Corporate Turnaround

How Leaders Fix Troubled Companies

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Leading Corporate Turnaround

How Leaders Fix Troubled Companies

Book details
Book preview
Table of contents
Citations

About This Book

Leadership is never more crucial than when corporate survival is at stake. But the days of the tough guys are over. The leaders who are driving todays sustainable turnarounds understand that the answers to a distressed companys problems lie almost always within the firm itself usually at middle manager level and below. The secret is cooperation. Drawing on interviews with top company doctors and advisers, as well as on the authors own experience, Leading Corporate Turnarounds explores seven key leadership and management skills required for successful turnaround, and shows why quickly gaining the buy-in and trust of all stakeholders is the key to ultimate success. Written by the founding directors of the Society of Turnaround Professionals (STP), with a proposed Foreword by the Societys Patron Sir John Harvey-Jones Considers the different drivers of turnaround, the alternatives to it, and the restructuring processes required to move beyond crisis stabilization to sustainable change Features international case studies from leading companies including BT, Virgin Express, Arthur Andersen, Parmalat, GE, Lee Cooper, New Look and IBM

Frequently asked questions

Simply head over to the account section in settings and click on ā€œCancel Subscriptionā€ - itā€™s as simple as that. After you cancel, your membership will stay active for the remainder of the time youā€™ve paid for. Learn more here.
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
Both plans give you full access to the library and all of Perlegoā€™s features. The only differences are the price and subscription period: With the annual plan youā€™ll save around 30% compared to 12 months on the monthly plan.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, weā€™ve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes, you can access Leading Corporate Turnaround by Stuart Slatter, David Lovett, Laura Barlow, David Lovett, Laura Barlow, David Lovett, Laura Barlow in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Business & Leadership. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Wiley
Year
2011
ISBN
9781119995296
Subtopic
Leadership
1
The Leadership Challenge
TURNAROUND PRACTITIONERS ARE MORE OFTEN ASSOCIATED with ruthless ā€œdownsizingā€ rather than the more inspiring concept of leadership. Yet leadership is never more important than when survival is at stake, and corporate turnarounds are no exception. Management skills are a critical ingredient but exceptional leadership is required at nearly all stages of the turnaround process if a sustainable turnaround is to be achieved.

There are many difficult leadership challenges facing the turnaround practitioner, particularly the turnaround executive (usually a new chairman or CEO) who has the ultimate responsibility for achieving the turnaround of a distressed corporate. He or she faces all or most of the following challenges:
ā€¢ Convincing the key stakeholders that turnaround is the best option for recovering value in the distressed company.
ā€¢ ā€œGrabbing holdā€ or taking control of the company so that all stakeholders and particularly the staff realise that new leadership is in place.
ā€¢ Changing management as appropriate and building a new management team to support the turnaround.
ā€¢ Instilling an immediate sense of urgency and performance orientation into the distressed company.
ā€¢ Implementing tight management and financial controls.
ā€¢ Developing and communicating a vision for the business and obtaining ownership and buy-in to the vision by managers and employees.
ā€¢ Prioritising what needs to be done to fix the business, and ensuring that the necessary actions are implemented.
ā€¢ Rebuilding the organisationā€™s effectiveness which is likely to involve embedding a new culture into the business.
ā€¢ Providing ongoing stakeholder management, including leading a financial restructuring of the corporate entity.

Turnaround Practioners

We find that leadership is provided in turnaround situations by turnaround executives, financial stakeholders (both equity owners and creditors), advisers and occasionally by interim managers. Recently a new category of turnaround leader has emerged, the Chief Restructuring Officer (CRO), who is usually an adviser but will assume line management and Board level responsibility for specific aspects of the turnaround. We will look at each briefly in turn.

Turnaround Executives

Popularly known by journalists as company doctors, these individuals take executive responsibility in the distressed company. They usually come in as chairman or chief executive officer, and have full authority to take decisions within the limits imposed or agreed by the controlling stakeholder(s), who are either the debtors (the equity owners) or the creditors (usually the bankers or increasingly specialist funds that hold debt in distressed companies). Sometimes the turnaround professional is brought in as deputy chairman or chief operating officer ā€“ as in a family-owned business for example ā€“ but if he or she is to do the job, then that individual is de facto the chief executive.

Financial Stakeholders

Although shareholders and in particular banks almost never have or want executive responsibility (except perhaps in an owner-managed business where the shareholders are also executives), they often play a key leadership role in triggering the start of a successful turnaround process. The reader will see examples of this in Chapter 3, when we talk about the decision to undertake a turnaround; and again in Chapter 10 on financial restructuring. Private equity houses, mezzanine funders, banks and specialist recovery funds play bigger leadership roles in turnarounds than many observers realise, particularly given the rapid growth in secondary debt trading and distressed asset investment in recent years.

Advisers

Until recently corporate recovery departments of accounting firms often played a leadership role in galvanising incumbent management to take action ā€“ usually when there was a leadership void and occasionally they provided leadership in a specific area such as cash management or financial restructuring where they had specialist expertise that did not exist within the incumbent management team. The increased regulation of accounting firms following the corporate governance failures predominantly in the USA has resulted in these firms reconsidering their service offering with the result that the number of specialist advisory firms who perform this work has grown considerably. Specialist teams within certain investment banks are increasingly involved with the balance sheet restructuring work that was once the preserve of the corporate recovery departments.

Chief Restructuring Officer

This is a relatively new corporate role which first emerged in the USA and is now gaining popularity in Europe. The Chief Restructuring Officer (CRO) is always an experienced recovery professional who focuses on crisis stabilisation, stakeholder management and financial restructuring.

The CRO usually acts as a special adviser to the chairman, CEO or Board with responsibility for leading whatever financial restructuring is necessary ā€“ first, to allow a turnaround to take place and, second, to ensure that there is an appropriate financial structure for the longer term. The demand for the services of a CRO reflects the increasing complexity of capital structures even in mid-sized corporates, and therefore of the financial restructuring process. It is also a recognition that many turnaround executives, while capable chairmen or CEOs, lack the expertise ā€“ and indeed the time ā€“ to lead a complex financial restructuring in parallel with an operational turnaround. The CRO is not a permanent position, but while working with the company he or she becomes central to everything that is occuring.

The appointment of a CRO is increasingly a precondition of support by financial stakeholders who need this aspect of the turnaround to be led by an experienced restructuring practitioner.

Interim Managers

Short-term management resources are sometimes introduced by the turnaround executive to deal with immediate business problems, particularly if radical changes are immediately required in the senior management layer. Sometimes these interim managers are part of a ā€œcommandoā€ team who move around with a turnaround executive. They sometimes provide functional leadership but their role is primarily to bring experience to the management of critical tasks.

Turnaround Executives: What they Do and Who they Are

There is a wide spectrum of capabilities among turnaround executives. While we advocate that the complete turnaround leader should be able to lead and manage all the critical ingredients that make up a good turnaround, the reality is that many do not have the desire or capability (or both) to lead all aspects of the process. This is not in itself a bad thing. They are all experienced, confident individuals who know their limitations which in itself is an attribute of good leadership.

What we see in practice is a spectrum of turnaround executives ranging from those who specialise in crisis stabilisation to those who undertake the complete turnaround and are prepared to stay on after the turnaround is complete to lead future growth and organisational transformation. All turnaround professionals undertake crisis stabilisation, but relatively few have the desire or capability to continue once the company has been returned to a stable condition. The particular skills and attributes of the typical turnaround executive (as discussed in the next section) do not fit with the needs of steady-state or growing organisations.

We see a sharp distinction between the turnaround executive who only does crisis stabilisation work and is rarely in a company for more than 6 to 12 months (and many for as little as three months), and the turnaround executive who does the stabilisation and also fixes the critical underlying problems of the business. This takes longer and is likely to involve leadership over at least a 12- to 24-month period.

The crisis stabilisation specialists will take management control, implement strict cash and cost controls, negotiate with the key stakeholders and change a few key managers at the top. Their aim is to ensure not only the short-term survival of the business but also that there is a management team in place who can fix the business problems that caused the crisis in the first place. These turnaround executives often have a financial background, and many have worked in their early careers in the insolvency profession. They stick to what they are good at ā€“ managing financial crises ā€“ and believe that the business should be fixed by managers who know the industry and are going to be responsible for its future performance.

The complete turnaround executive, as we like to call that person, believes that a turnaround is not complete unless and until the underlying causes of distress have been dealt with. He or she believes ā€“ and we agree ā€“ that an effective turnaround usually requires strategic refocusing, critical process improvements and some degree of organisational change if the business is not to revert into a turnaround situation. Not surprisingly many turnaround executives fall somewhere between the two ā€œtypesā€ we have described ā€“ they initiate and lead strategic change and critical business process improvements to rectify the business problems, but do not participate too deeply in all the detailed management activities that are necessary to effect a complete turnaround.

In a large organisation, particularly one with many diversified business units, the turnaround leader operating at the corporate level would not be expected to be involved in detailed competitive strategy analysis and process improvements (although many do in practice). However, in smaller companies, where it is more difficult to have good-quality senior managers, it is extremely risky to delegate responsibility for making decisions that are critical to the success of the turnaround. Although the senior managers may know their industry, their analytical and decision-making skills may be woefully inadequate. Furthermore, their capability to implement change throughout the organisation is still likely to be weak, unless a sufficient critical mass of new high-quality middle managers has been brought in. This is particularly the case where the previous leader or CEO was highly autocratic and senior management are not accustomed to managing change.

Who are the individuals that work as turnaround executives or company doctors? They are a relatively small group of experienced executives who at some stage in their career ā€“ out of choice or serendipity (but usually the latter) ā€“ became involved in managing a company in financial distress. Having done it once they become hooked on the buzz, the challenge and the adrenalin rush that comes from turning a company around. Anecdotal evidence suggests that many turnaround executives are unemployable in a large company environment, since they are quickly frustrated by what they see as bureaucracy and slow decision making. They are tough, competitive individuals with enormous will power, who ā€œcall a spade a spadeā€ and ā€œare happy to take on anybody who wants a fightā€. They are also ā€œlonersā€ who do not need or want social relationships in the workplace. As one executive put it:
ā€œI donā€™t need friends at work... respect will do very nicely thank you.ā€
This is at the heart of leadership. Leadership is not about being loved by everyone: it is about being understood and respected by enough people to get the job done.

We have been fortunate to have had access to a piece of proprietary research carried out to look at the psychological characteristics of leading turnaround executives in the UK. It shows remarkable consistency with the anecdotal evidence in that the vast majority of turnaround executives are logical, objective decision makers, who are very task focused and want to control their external environments. Very few individuals show a tolerance for flexibility and ambiguity. Most want to exert a great deal of control over othersā€™ actions and decisions, but do not want anyone else to have control over them! They will happily accept a lot of responsibility ā€“ perhaps even overextending themselves ā€“ and are very competitive with both themselves and others. They thrive on authority, responsibility, predictability, stability and consistency. Ambiguity and change are tolerated only to the extent that this is necessary while they return the organisation to a stable state.

Turnaround practitioners are detached and logical, and seen as tough and uncompromising. They like clear objectives, and when they are convinced of something they make it happen. They push people hard to achieve deadlines, can be extremely impatient and do not hesitate to ā€œruffle feathersā€ in the process. They do not show much empathy and have a low need to be included in social activities. They prefer not to socialise with work colleagues and are highly selective with whom they choose to interact. They are self-sufficient and exhibit healthy levels of confidence, although most are not charismatic leaders. Another characteristic of turnaround executives is their stamina. Turning a company around is a ā€œ24/7 jobā€; it requires long hours, the ability to work under (often quite extreme) stress and, of course, total commitment. ā€œI was breathing, living and dreaming about the company for months... in a quest for the best solution,ā€ said one turnaround executive.

Box 1.1 provides a glimpse of how turnaround executives describe themselves.
Box 1.1 How Turnaround Executives Describe Themselves
ā€¢ ā€œTough, fair and above all decisive.ā€
ā€¢ ā€œHighly communicative, fast acting, trustworthy, inclusive, tough but fair.ā€
ā€¢ ā€œ...

Table of contents

  1. Title Page
  2. Copyright Page
  3. About the Authors
  4. Acknowledgements
  5. Introduction
  6. Chapter 1 - The Leadership Challenge
  7. Chapter 2 - The Turnaround Framework
  8. Chapter 3 - Before the Turnaround Begins
  9. Chapter 4 - New Leadership
  10. Chapter 5 - Crisis Stabilisation
  11. Chapter 6 - Stakeholder Management
  12. Chapter 7 - Strategic Focus
  13. Chapter 8 - Changing Critical Business Processes
  14. Chapter 9 - Leading Organisational Change
  15. Chapter 10 - Financial Restructuring
  16. Appendix - Society of Turnaround Professionals
  17. Index