136 Marvel’s Blockbuster Machine 94 Digital Doesn’t HBR.ORG Have to Be Disruptive July–August 2019 116 When a Colleague Is Grieving The AI-Powered Organization The main challenge isn’t technology. It’s culture. 62 Contents July–August 2019 41 42 ETHICS How to Scandal- Proof Your Company SPOTLIGHT A rigorous compliance system is not enough. WHITE-COLLAR Paul Healy and George Serafeim CRIME 51 AUDIT Where Is Your Company Most Prone to Lapses in Integrity? A simple survey to identify the danger zones Eugene Soltes 54 Q&A “W e Were Coming Up Against Everything from Organized Crime to Angry Employees” A conversation with Erik Osmundsen, CEO of Norsk Gjenvinning 58 BUSINESS LAW What I’ve Learned About White- s e g ma Collar Crime y I ett G p/ Insights from a o hp former prosecutor s a Fl Mary Jo White er: v o c n o COVER ILLUSTRATION ot b Brobel Design o R 5 Harvard Business Review Photograph by SAM KAPLAN July–August 2019 July– August 2019 61 FEATURES 62 TECHNOLOGY Building the AI-Powered Organization Technology isn’t the biggest challenge. Culture is. Tim Fountaine, Brian McCarthy, and Tamim Saleh 74 INNOVATION Nimble Leadership Walking the line between creativity and chaos Deborah Ancona, Elaine Backman, and Kate Isaacs 84 ENTREPRENEURSHIP The Soul of a Start-Up 124 Companies can sustain their entrepreneurial energy even as they grow. Ranjay Gulati 104 OPERATIONS 116 MANAGING PEOPLE 124 CUSTOMERS 136 INNOVATION The One Thing When a The Elusive Green Marvel’s 94 STRATEGY Digital Doesn’t You Need to Know Colleague Consumer Blockbuster Have to Be About Managing Is Grieving Machine People say they want Disruptive Functions sustainable products, How to provide the How the studio balances but they don’t tend to The best results can right kind of support buy them. Here’s how continuity and renewal They require their own come from adaptation Gianpiero Petriglieri to change that. Spencer Harrison, strategies. rather than reinvention. and Sally Maitlis Arne Carlsen, and Katherine White, Roger L. Martin and Nathan Furr and David J. Hardisty, and Miha Škerlavaj Jennifer Riel Andrew Shipilov Rishad Habib 6 Harvard Business Review July–August 2019 Illustration by LLOYD MILLER July–August 2019 21 147 IDEA WATCH EXPERIENCE New Research and Advice and Emerging Insights Inspiration 21 ORGANIZATIONS 147 MANAGING The Wrong Ways YOURSELF A Working to Strengthen Parent’s Culture Survival Guide The three missteps that thwart many efforts The five big challenges— PLUS The kind of network and how to deal with them women need, the futility Daisy Wademan Dowling of venting about the boss, 152 CASE STUDY and more When One Division 32 DEFEND YOUR Makes All the RESEARCH Instant Feedback Money but the Hurts Our Other Gets All Performance the Attention A new study shows that it A CEO considers changes our behavior—but whether to invest in not for the better. innovation or focus 35 on the core. 35 HOW I DID IT Richard G. Hamermesh Match Group’s 158 SYNTHESIS CEO on Innovating Fixing the Internet DEPARTMENTS EDITOR’S NOTE: The original version of the article “Your in a Fast-Changing Approach to Hiring Is All Wrong,” in the May–June issue, Where it went wrong named three recruitment outsourcing companies and stated Industry and how to improve it 12 FROM THE EDITOR that they use subcontractors in India and the Philippines. Walter Frick 16 CONTRIBUTORS The three company names have been removed because the Acquisitions were specifics of their subcontracting practices were unverified. an important driver 160 EXECUTIVE 164 LIFE’S WORK SUMMARIES of growth. Vera Wang Mandy Ginsberg 10 Harvard Business Review July–August 2019 Photograph by JUSTIN CLEMONS From the Editor Connect with HBR JOIN US ON SOCIAL MEDIA CONTACT HBR WWW.HBR.ORG PHONE 800.988.0886 TWITTER @HarvardBiz EMAIL [email protected] FACEBOOK HBR, Harvard Business Review [email protected] LINKEDIN Harvard Business Review [email protected] INSTAGRAM harvard_business_review [email protected] The Thing About Integrity LATELY, THE NEWS has been filled with stories of embezzlement, bribery, and other kinds of corporate corruption. In a 2018 survey, PwC found that nearly half the 7,228 participating organizations had experienced economic crimes or fraud in the previous year—up from 30% in 2009. So it’s no exaggeration to say that white-collar crime is a growing problem. And it’s one that has considerable costs: It destroys shareholder value, drains management resources, and tarnishes brands, sometimes irredeemably. The same PwC survey also found that more than half the white- collar criminals were “internal actors”—a phenomenon that Paul Healy and George Serafeim of Harvard Business School explore in “How to Scandal-Proof Your Company” (page 42). They argue that the cause isn’t weak regulations or compliance systems. At firms hit by scandals, they say, “a culture of making the numbers at all costs HBR’s editor, Amy Bernstein, with Adi Ignatius trumped any concerns about how the targets were being met.” The root of all this is leadership: “Senior executives at most companies that suffered highly publicized transgressions didn’t see these incidents as their personal responsibility to address or as evidence that something was fundamentally amiss in their organi- zations,” say Serafeim and Healy. While these leaders accepted the importance of compliance, they placed greater emphasis on beating competitors and wowing investors—a message that can foster a culture of wrongdoing. It shouldn’t come as a surprise, then, that the opposite is also true: The leaders who prioritize integrity themselves tend to run organizations that discourage winning at any cost and, in the process, cultivate higher employee engagement and more-profitable growth. ADI IGNATIUS Editor in chief n e y u g N w e dr n A 12 Harvard Business Review July–August 2019 Contributors Paul Healy’s interest Daisy Wademan When he was young, Deborah Ancona loves “Electronics are in corporate crime Dowling first noticed Spencer Harrison doing research: “You becoming objects was sparked by the the struggles working had a box of “very get your arms around of worship,” says scandals at Enron parents face while she important papers”— an interesting problem Leonardo Ulian, a and Worldcom in the was running global cutouts of his drawings and then go into an London-based artist early 2000s. “I was talent-development of superheroes, movie organization to learn whose work is featured intrigued,” says Healy, efforts at two Fortune monsters, and other from practice.” For her in this issue. “I want a professor at Harvard 500 companies. She is invented characters. article in this issue, to show what’s hidden Business School. “I now the founder and Although he never Ancona, a professor inside the devices we wanted to understand CEO of Workparent, bought comic books as at MIT’s Sloan School, use all the time.” Ulian why such seemingly a training, coaching, a child, he was deeply and her coauthors builds his delicate successful companies and advisory firm for interested in that style gathered data from sculptures by welding and executives had working parents and of art and wanted to be meetings, interviews, together hundreds become embroiled the organizations that an animator for Disney. and team observations of symmetrically in wrongdoing.” The employ them. And Today he is a professor and categorized their patterned electronic result was years of as the mother of two at INSEAD, where findings. Done well, components. He’s research—much of it young children, she’s much of his research qualitative, structured inspired by mandalas, conducted with his HBS no stranger to working- focuses on how serially research can be used to the Indian and colleague and coauthor parent life herself. “I creative organizations— shift theory as well as Tibetan geometric George Serafeim—on founded this company including Marvel practice, she says, but religious symbols. the causes of corporate because I needed its Studios, the subject it doesn’t deliver easy- “In mandalas,” Ulian wrongdoing and how services,” she jokes. of his article in this to-digest takeaways. says, “everything grows leaders can combat In this article, she issue—balance novelty “Our biggest ‘aha’ from a center, and it’s them. Their article in provides a framework and continuity. He was that you had to the same in my work— this issue shares their for men and women continues to draw and understand the whole everything starts with findings. facing the demands of still sees his drawings system.” The challenge a central microchip children and careers. as “very important is to distill insights and builds out.” 42 How to Scandal-Proof papers.” but not oversimplify Your Company 147 A Working Parent’s a complicated reality. 62 Building the AI-Powered Survival Guide 136 Marvel’s Blockbuster Organization Machine 74 Nimble Leadership 16 Harvard Business Review July–August 2019 EDITOR IN CHIEF Adi Ignatius EDITOR, HBR CREATIVE DIRECTOR Amy Bernstein John Korpics EDITOR, HBR.ORG EDITORIAL DIRECTOR, Maureen Hoch HBR PRESS Melinda Merino EDITORIAL DIRECTOR Sarah Cliffe EXECUTIVE EDITOR Ania G. 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New Research and Emerging Insights IN THEORY THE WRONG WAYS TO STRENGTHEN CULTURE COMPARED WITH SOME other activities of business leaders, such as hiring the right talent and setting strategy, changing The three missteps that corporate culture can be especially challenging. Culture is amorphous; there are no direct levers for shifting it in one thwart many efforts direction or another. Indications are that CEOs are putting a higher priority on this aspect of leadership than in the past. According to a study by the research and advisory firm 21 Harvard Business Review Illustrations by LARS LEETARU July–August 2019 Gartner, CEOs mentioned culture 7% more often during earnings conference calls in 2016 than in 2010. In surveys both CEOs and CHROs say that “man- aging and improving the culture” is the top priority for talent management. But the data suggests that there’s lots of room for improvement: Each year companies spend $2,200 per employee, on average, on efforts to improve the culture (much of the money goes to consultants, surveys, and workshops)— but only 30% of CHROs report a good return on that investment. When trying to spearhead culture change, many leaders use the wrong tools. Having surveyed more than 7,500 employees and nearly 200 HR leaders at global companies and conducted in-depth interviews with 100 HR leaders, Gartner has written a report identifying the most- (and the least-) effective ways leaders try to transform culture. To increase their odds of success, the report advises, they should avoid three mistakes. Don’t use simple adjectives to Gartner’s managing vice president for culture of innovation while continuing describe culture. Because culture feels research, calls a say/do gap: Employees to seek growth and profits from legacy “squishy” and hard to describe, leaders see leaders’ cultural aspirations as businesses.” tend to resort to a generic, overused hypocritical. Other tensions evident in most set of adjectives: Cultures are said to Instead of using a single adjective businesses include the need to achieve be high-performing, collaborative, to describe the culture you aspire to, both short- and long-term goals and an innovative, customer-focused, entrepre- illustrate it by acknowledging an import- emphasis on results and accountability neurial, results-oriented, transparent, or ant tension. “The tension is about the while also caring about employees’ trusting. Gartner studied how compa- intersection of the ideal and prese nt well-being and work/life balance. nies using these various buzzwords realities and how those play out day to Explicitly recognizing such tensions compared with one another on prog ress day,” Kurey says. Talk about wanting avoids the disillusionment that can toward revenue goals and found no sig- to create a “culture of innovation” might result when employees see leaders nificant differences—meaning that none sound fanciful and out of touch if the espouse one set of behaviors but live of the labels creates an advantage. One business currently devotes 80% of its by another. reason: Often the chosen buzzword is resources and personnel to existing Don’t measure culture with data at odds with how the company actually product lines. The CEO should instead alone. Because culture feels intangible, operates. That causes what Bryan Kurey, speak to the tension: “We support a many companies depend on employee 22 Harvard Business Review July–August 2019