Rosabeth Moss Kanter’s
Zoom In / Zoom Out Metaphor
“The zoom framework offers a dynamic model that can help current and aspiring leaders increase their own range of vision and establish conditions that enable others’ success,” argues Rosabeth Moss Kanter in a new article.
In the March issue of Harvard Business Review, the Harvard Business School professor writes that:
The lens through which leaders view the world can help or hinder their ability to make good strategic decisions, especially during crises. Zoom in, and get a close look at select details — perhaps too close to make sense of them. Zoom out, and see the big picture — but perhaps miss some subtleties and nuances.
Zoom buttons on digital devices let us examine images from many viewpoints. They also provide an apt metaphor for modes of strategic thinking. Some people prefer to see things up close, others from afar. Both perspectives — worm’s-eye and bird’s-eye — have virtues and pathologies. But they should be vantage points, not fixed positions. Leaders need multiple perspectives to get a complete picture. Effective leaders zoom in and zoom out.
Kanter’s examples in “Managing Yourself: Zoom In, Zoom Out” include former BP CEO Tony Hayward, whose “zoom button seemed to be stuck on the closest setting” while dealing with the deaths of 11 people and the biggest oil spill in U.S. history. “Even though BP deployed thousands of engineers to contain the spill, he could not, in public, rise above a 10-foot view; it was as though the crisis were his own personal devil.”
On the flip side, Kanter commends Indra Noovi, PepsiCo’s CEO, for being able to blend “a big-picture view of principles guiding the company” with “an ability to zoom in on the details of budget allocations for current business lines.” Kanter also lauds The Procter & Gamble Company:
Effective leaders encourage others to expand their zooming range. For example, P&G, like most companies in the consumer packaged goods industry, is a heavy user of large-sample survey market research, which maps territories through statistical abstractions, a form of zooming out. Though P&G’s leaders don’t disregard these data, they also send employees into the field to live with families, zooming in on their needs and experiences. The closely observed details of individual household behaviors ultimately influence P&G’s investment decisions.
Comments (2)
Neeraj Kumar
Mark Andrew Higgins