When solving problems becomes the problem

The CEO said, with conviction, “I solve problems.”

At first glance, this sounds like effective leadership. Decisive. Action-oriented. In control. At CEO level, however, this focus often comes at a cost.

Problem solving creates relief. Something broken is fixed, tension drops, the organisation moves on. Yet what is solved in the present can quietly preserve the dynamics that will generate the next issue. From a multi horizon perspective, this is the risk. Horizon 1 dominates. Optimization and continuity crowd out signals from Horizon 2 and 3. Emerging shifts in value, customers or context remain untouched because they are not yet urgent.

Over time, organizations become excellent at fixing and weak at anticipating. The CEO stays busy, effective even, while the underlying system remains unchanged.

Leadership here is not about fixing faster. It is about guiding attention. Choosing the horizon that matters now. Shaping conditions so problems lose their ground. That is where future value is created.

Dit bericht hoort bij een serie coachingvignetten waarin de ‘ruthless compassion’ van NGL verschillende facetten van leiderschap belicht.

Je kunt deze gesprekken ook volgen op onze LinkedIn pagina.

Latest news items

 

You don’t have a stakeholder problem

A newly appointed Managing Director of the largest business unit of a listed company came to us with a clear request. He had a strategy, yet he could not create buy-in with the Board. He framed it as “I have a stakeholder management problem.”During the intake,...

When a CFO realized the future was already knocking

A CFO hosted a strategic offsite with our facilitation. Strategy, markets, forecasts. All familiar. All safe. She mentioned a few small incidents. Usual noise, according to her team. Yet, one detail caught our ear. A quiet deviation. We carefully asked to unpack it....

What strategic thinking really is

In gesprekken met CxO’s valt steeds hetzelfde op: iedereen gebruikt het woord strategisch, maar bijna niemand benoemt wat het werkelijk vraagt.Het boek The Six Disciplines of Strategic Thinking van Michael D. Watkins geeft daar een verhelderende inzichten...