Competition in organizations: good or bad?
Illustration: Pia Steinmann, www.pia-steinmann.de. From the Complexitools book by Niels Pflaeging & Silke Hermann

Competition in organizations: good or bad?

This question is wrong.

Competition within organizations is neither good, nor bad. Whether internal competition is useful, constructive and appropriate depends on the level on which we let it happen, or on which it is stimulated or suppressed. In other words: There is an organizational domain where competition is good, and where it makes sense. There is another domain in organizations, however, where competition will inevitably turn dysfunctional, toxic, vicious and destructive.

How to screw up just any company

In many organizations, as most of us are aware, competition on the level of the individual is actively stimulated and incentivized. This is usually done through performance management tools such as individual target setting ("MbO", "quotas", "goals"), individual incentives linked into these targets ("bonuses", "premiums"), and individual performance "appraisal". Often, techniques such as "feedback" and "coaching" are also thrown into the mix. We might call this the command-and-control type of competition, which more specifically is a form of steering, of fear-inducing individualization, or top-down-driven rivalry.

All of this is not only dreadful practice. It is also destructive. The fundamental reason why these tools and practices do not actually work is this: Individual performance, in organizations, does not even exist. The notion of individual performance is a crude over-simplification of organizational reality: Performance is not something that individuals within an organization can do, or create by themselves, individually. Instead, performance in organizations always happens in the space between people. It arises from interactions between individuals, or from "performing with-each-other-for each-other" - which is an expression we discovered at dm-drogerie markt a little more than a decade back.

"In organizations, individual performance does not even exist. Here, performance emerges in the space between people. That is the nature of the organization."

The collective, interdependent nature of work and value creation in companies as well as in not-for-profits is not an option. It is part of organizational physics. This becomes ever more obvious in complex, dynamic, and globalized markets.

"Given the interdependent nature of value creation, #individuals within an organization cannot actually #compete with each other. They can only be #rivals."

Competition: Natural for self-steering organizations

This insight about the nature of organizational performance leads us to the "good kind" of competition in organizations. It is competition (not: rivalry!) among teams, not individuals: When teams are set up as functionally integrated, highly autonomous, self-organized, self-steering, then they can actually compete for business results. This is a far cry, of course, from the misery that is usually instilled in today´s functionally differentiated command-and-control silos, such as "Sales". But this kind of competition works, as the long-running examples of companies such as Handelsbanken or dm-drogerie-markt have shown.

Healthy competition among self-steering teams capable of running themselves like mini-enterprises, and without the disadvantages of rivalry or centralized steering. depends on a set of principles natural to self-organization.

Illustration: Let self-steering, functionally integrated teams compete - not individuals!

But perhaps the most startling pre-requisite for healthy, constructive and empowering competition among self-steering teams within an organization may at this point be functional integration. This is because we have become incredibly used to functional division, or separation of functions into departments, areas, units and silos. Most of us think of functional division as "normal", and find it hard to imagine a structure in which groups of, say 4 to 10 people run a small, intra-company business together as a highly autonomous team that would perform most of the various functions of their business themselves, Functions that may be as diverse as marketing, proposing, selling, delivering, servicing, billing - with just the occasional service from the organizational center, as needed.

"Functional integration will make your silos, departments, business areas and matrix structures go away. And pave the way for team-based competition that works."

Functional integration not only allows organizations to induce healthy team competition in the absence of dysfunctional side-effects. It will also always lead to the elimination of functional silos such as Sales, or Operations. Or of conventional Business Units. In fact, functional integration always goes hand in hand with complexity-robustness in the shape of federative, decentralized, team-based organizational design. And this is worth achieving these days.

Let the competition begin!

***

Niels Pflaeging is an influencer, management exorcist, change curator, speaker, author, and globally working advisor on leadership. He is the author of Organize for Complexity, a visualized, dense book on thinking tools for organizational leadership, published in 2014. His new, forthcoming book in 2017 is Complexitools, co-authored with Silke Hermann. For more about the topic of complexity-robust organization and about Niels´ work, please join the newly re-launched BetaCodex Network here on LinkedIn Niels tweets at @NielsPflaeging. He will usually respond to your comments here.

Ludovic Urbain

I created Kanpeki to help companies be more productive thanks to custom made software.

5y

Individual performance - while tricky to calculate - is a fact, and ignoring it will only lose you your top talent. Sales teams everywhere are built on competition and attain results you and I could only dream of. What you're suggesting might work in a really soft world, such as a very sheltered IT team, but it just doesn't apply to the real / harsh world. If the best and biggest are all quite competitive, maybe competition cannot "screw up any company". That said, I've seen internal competition hurt companies, and that is something that should be understood and managed, it's important to prevent these things from hurting your bottom line.

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Why would you still want competition between teams when people in teams can do what they like best and can work in a way that maximises their individual contribution for the greater collective? When teams can work at their own pragmatic optimum, which is different for each team as each team comprises other individuals with other competencies and leadershipskills, competition becomes irrelevant.

Francis Offermann

Coach, Trainer, Mediator and Outplacement consultant

6y

Focussing on the "space in between..." always a worthwhile detour👌

Michael Paulus

Leitung Anwenderbetreuung

6y

Ich sehe hier zwei Fäden: der eine ist die Frage, ob und wie Menschen dazu veranlasst und unterstützt werden, miteinander und nicht gegeneinander zu agieren. Dass es keine individuelle Leistung gibt, sondern nur Beiträge zu einer Team-Leistung, unterschreibe ich insofern, als ich die klaren Vorteile dieser Denkweise seit Jahren in der Praxis meines Teams erlebe – und auf der anderen Seite mit den Schwierigkeiten derer konfrontiert bin, die es „anders“ sehen. Wenn ich Rahmenbedingungen wie „jemand hat meinen Computer installiert“ und „die Firma stellt mit Büroräume und ein Smartphone zur Verfügung“ außer Acht lasse, könnte ich durchaus behaupten, Einzelleistungen zu vollbringen. Vielleicht muss ich auch den Begriff Leistung überdenken. Wer außer mir trägt denn dazu bei, dass ich gerade diesen Kommentar schreibe? Natürlich all jene, deren Tun dazu geführt haben, dass ich gerade Zeit habe! Meine Antwort auf die obige Frage ist daher: Wenn es einmal soweit ist, dass die Denkweise/Unterstellung von X zu Y schwenkt, es eine gewisse Grundmenge von offen denkenden und handelnden Y-Akteuren gibt, wird es ein Selbstläufer. Unter solchen Gesichtspunkten macht Konkurrenz sogar Spaß und – auch schon erlebt – die konkurrierenden Teams helfen sich gegenseitig! Und so, wie heute mancher ‘rausfliegt, weil er die individuellen Zielvereinbarungen nicht gehalten hat (er – Giver – hat den anderen – Takern – zu sehr geholfen;-), werden dann die Karten neu gemischt. Achtung: Bitte Individualisten nicht mit Egoisten verwechseln. Individualisten können tolle Team-Player sein, wenn die Rollen geklärt sind. Klingt strange, gelle? Der zweite Faden heißt für mich „Butter bei die Fische, Wie denn jetzt?“ Schön, wenn alphas zu betas werden, indem die alte Hierarchie das fördert. Tut sie das nicht, geht es eben nur anders herum (ja, es kann auch gar nicht gehen, diese dümpeln dann oder schleckern sich aus, um Niels zu zitieren). Im Fall von anders herum reden wir zumeist von der Schattenorganisation oder Hinterbühne. Ich mag den Satz „Machen ist wie wollen, nur krasser.“ Er fordert Mut, aber was geht schon ohne? Ohne zu sehr in die Tiefe meiner Story einzusteigen, soviel: die erste Hürde ist der unmittelbare alpha-Vorgesetzte. Es braucht eine Bandscheibe, die c&c puffert und die beta-Ergebnisse als c&c-Ergebnis weitergibt. Ich habe das Glück, einen solchen zu haben und inzwischen sind wir auf der nächsten Stufe: Zuschauer, Nachmacher und positive Resonanz auf die Ergebnisse seitens der GF, obwohl(?) inzwischen klar ist, dass es Beta-Ergebnisse sind! Nebenbei, die Nachmacher begrüße ich ausdrücklich! Ja, Leute klaut! Alleine die Tatsache der Verbreitung ist Lohn genug. Denn das ist das Ziel!

Tobias Illig

Senior Consultant Digital Transformation / Cultural Change @ Cassini Consulting AG

6y

The transformation of rivalry into healthy competition begins and ends with the mindset and attitude of people. Often they want to stay on their Island and not want to cooperate, Communicate Or coordinate. Seems to be a constant challenge of leadership Or selfsteering groups? Are they intelligent enough Or altruistic enough or Even competent? Power distance has its impact- all the time. Let's overcome!

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