As organizations become more matrixed, employees are sharing more responsibilities, authority, and accountability than ever before.
While informal working relationships and networks have always been important, getting work done today requires more collaboration among a broader and more diverse set of people who may also be working across geographic locations.
Work is now done through a web of collaborating knowledge where employees have more ambiguous objectives, and their work is interconnected with a growing, more dispersed network. Employees must navigate across different structures, cultures, and processes to perform, but they struggle to understand whom to work with and how to work with them.
Yet if collaboration is to occur, companies need to enable and encourage broader employee networks — connecting employees as needed and providing clear direction, aligned incentives, integrated workflow, and better technology.
The new high performers are immune to the complexities of change, are willing to collaborate, and are able to apply judgment in an increasingly knowledge-based role. Unfortunately, while most knowledge workers know how to manage work processes and use technology and tools in their work, the Corporate Executive Board (CEB), finds that less than 40 percent have the analytical skills and business judgment needed to use the tools effectively in decision making.
Organizations need to create opportunities for employees to learn essential collaboration and analytic skills by reengineering the work environment to better promote learning on the job.
While this is a challenging task, the CEB suggests focusing on specific steps to increase on-the-job development:
This was originally published on the OC Tanner blog.