Home Lifestyle WHEN SUCCESS BECOMES THE ENEMY – THISDAYLIVE
Lifestyle

WHEN SUCCESS BECOMES THE ENEMY – THISDAYLIVE

Share
Share


   Humility, discipline, curiosity, and commitment to truth are essential to continued success, contends LINUS OKORIE

Business history is filled with once-dominant companies that seemed invincible until they weren’t. Kodak owned digital photography patents but clung to film. Nokia controlled 40% of the global mobile phone market in 2007 before the smartphone revolution swept past them. Blockbuster had 9,000 stores at its peak and dismissed Netflix as a niche player. These failures weren’t caused by bad luck or disruptive technology alone; they were self-inflicted wounds that began at the top, in the executive suites where success had bred a dangerous form of arrogance.

Jim Collins refers to this phenomenon as the most dangerous stage of organizational decline. It is called Hubris Born of Success. Understanding this stage is essential for any leader who wants to sustain excellence across generations. Unbelievable yet true, that the very success that validates your decisions can become the poison that kills the organization you built. This is a paradox.

Success is intoxicating and very seducing. When strategies work, when markets respond, or when profits soar, leaders naturally feel validated. This validation becomes reinforcement, and reinforcement hardens into conviction. Over time, leaders begin to credit success primarily to their vision, their decisions, their leadership. Rather than humbly acknowledge that it is a mix of factors which includes timing, market conditions, talented teams, and sometimes simple luck.

Research shows that 70% of CEOs believe their company’s success is due to their unique capabilities rather than favorable market conditions. This fundamentally changes how leaders process information and make decisions. They begin to believe they have discovered permanent truths about their industry or possess special insights that others lack. The hunger that drove the organization to success gets replaced by the assumption that success is the natural order of things.

Hubris-filled leaders often lose sight of the core values and practices that made their organizations great in the first place. They start believing that practically anything they touch will turn to gold, that normal rules don’t apply to them, that they can succeed in areas far removed from what they actually know. The discipline that built the foundation of success gets abandoned for bold moves that feel innovative but are actually reckless.

The role of leadership cannot be overstated. Leaders set the tone, establish the culture, and make the critical strategic decisions that either sustain vitality or begin the descent. When leaders fall into hubris, several dangerous patterns emerge.

First, they surround themselves with people who confirm rather than challenge their views. Studies show that companies in decline have 50% less constructive conflict in their leadership teams compared to thriving organizations. The robust debate that once characterized leadership meetings gives way to choreographed agreement. Talented people who might question the prevailing wisdom either leave the organization or learn to stay quiet. The diversity of thought that serves as an early warning system gets systematically eliminated.

Second, hubristic leaders abandon the vigilance that keeps great leaders scanning the horizon for threats and opportunities. Instead of asking “What could go wrong?” or “What are we missing?”, they ask “How can we capitalize on our obvious superiority?” The watchfulness that success requires gets replaced by complacency that failure feeds upon.

Third, these leaders make increasingly bold decisions with decreasing rigor. Because previous big bets paid off, they assume future ones will too. They confuse confidence with competence and momentum with invincibility. Due diligence becomes a formality rather than a genuine inquiry. Data that contradicts their assumptions gets dismissed or explained away.

Finally, hubristic leaders often pursue growth for growth’s sake, expanding into markets or product lines where they lack expertise. They believe their success in one area transfers automatically to others. This overreach stretches resources, dilutes focus, and exposes the organization to risks it doesn’t fully understand. A McKinsey study found that companies that diversified beyond their core business had a 60% higher failure rate than those that maintained focus.

What makes hubris so dangerous is its stealth. Unlike a sudden market shock or competitive threat, hubris operates quietly, compounding over time. The organization may still be growing, and still making profits. Success metrics don’t immediately reveal the rot setting in. This is why decline is often well underway before it becomes visible. Research shows that the average company experiences 7-10 years of internal deterioration before external manifestations.

Leaders in this stage often interpret continued success as evidence that their approach is working, not recognizing that they are coasting on momentum generated by earlier, more disciplined efforts. They are living off accumulated goodwill, brand strength, and market position while eroding the foundations that created those advantages.

52% of Fortune 500 companies from 2000 have either gone bankrupt, been acquired, or ceased to exist. Many of these failures began not with obvious mistakes but with the subtle arrogance that success breeds.

If leadership creates the conditions for decline, leadership must also provide the cure. The good news is that hubris born of success is a choice, or more accurately, a series of choices that leaders make about how they interpret success and what they do with it.

The first and most crucial strategy is building genuine humility into your organization. Great leaders credit success to factors beyond themselves. They recognize the role of timing, market conditions, team contributions, and yes, luck. When leaders practice humility, they remain students of their business rather than presumed masters of it. They stay hungry, curious, and open to information that challenges their assumptions.

Effective leaders create systems that ensure they hear what they need to hear, not what they want to hear. This might mean creating a formal “devil’s advocate” role in strategic planning, conducting rigorous pre-mortems where teams identify what could cause a proposed initiative to fail, or establishing direct channels for employees at all levels to raise concerns. The key is making dissent not just safe but valued.

Leaders must maintain disciplined thinking and action, not bureaucratic rules, but disciplined people engaging in disciplined thought. This means being rigorous about staying within your core strengths. It means saying no to opportunities that don’t fit, regardless of how attractive they appear. It means keeping the same standards of analysis that applied when your organization was fighting for survival. 83% of successful strategic decisions involve saying no to seemingly attractive opportunities that don’t align with core competencies.

Great leaders make decisions based on evidence and fundamental principles rather than on what would validate their self-image or previous positions. They are willing to admit mistakes quickly and change course without viewing it as a personal defeat. This psychological flexibility is perhaps the most important defense against hubris.

After successes, the question shouldn’t just be “What did we do right?” but “What role did factors outside our control play?” and “What could we have done better?” This prevents your organization from drawing overly confident conclusions from positive outcomes.

Companies that conduct thorough post-mortems on both successes and failures are 2.5 times more likely to adapt successfully to market changes than those that only analyze failures.

Avoiding hubris born of success is an ongoing practice that requires constant attention. It means regularly examining your own assumptions, actively seeking perspectives that differ from your own, and maintaining the discipline that built success even when that discipline feels unnecessary.

The ultimate irony is that the leaders most at risk are often those who have been most successful. Their track record gives them credibility and authority, which makes it harder for others to challenge them and easier for them to dismiss challenges. Breaking this cycle requires conscious effort and institutional safeguards.

Organizations don’t fail because they lack talent, resources, or market position. They fail because success made them arrogant, and arrogance made them blind. Your role as a leader is to ensure that you create the conditions for sustained excellence that can weather whatever challenges emerge.

Success is not the enemy. But left unchecked, the arrogance it breeds certainly is. Therefore, the question every successful leader must ask is “How do I ensure our success doesn’t destroy us?” The answer lies in the same qualities that built success in the first place: humility, discipline, curiosity, and an unwavering commitment to truth over comfort.

 Okorie MFR is a leadership development expert spanning 30 years in the research, teaching and coaching of leadership in Africa and across the world. He is the CEO of the GOTNI Leadership Centre



Source link

Share

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Articles

WapTV Licences Fresh Batch of Nigerian Movies – THISDAYLIVE

Sunday Okobi Nigeria’s foremost family entertainment TV channel, WapTV, has concluded a...

Shettima extols virtues of Elumelu’s father-in-law at burial |

Vice President Kashim Shettima has extolled the virtues of late Sir Israel...

How Nigerian Breweries Lit Up Cities in   Nationwide Fiesta – THISDAYLIVE

To excite consumers during the Easter celebration, Nigerian Breweries recently explored a...

Prince Samuel Adedoyin Bags Independent Newspapers Lifetime Achievement Award, Set for Vanguard Honour – THISDAYLIVE

Prince Samuel Adedoyin, OFR, Founder and Executive Chairman of Doyin Group of...

news-1701

sabung ayam online

yakinjp

yakinjp

rtp yakinjp

slot thailand

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakin jp

yakinjp id

maujp

maujp

maujp

maujp

sabung ayam online

sabung ayam online

judi bola online

sabung ayam online

judi bola online

slot mahjong ways

slot mahjong

sabung ayam online

judi bola

live casino

sabung ayam online

judi bola

live casino

SGP Pools

slot mahjong

sabung ayam online

slot mahjong

SLOT THAILAND

cuaca 228000590

cuaca 228000591

cuaca 228000592

cuaca 228000593

cuaca 228000594

cuaca 228000595

cuaca 228000596

cuaca 228000597

cuaca 228000598

cuaca 228000599

cuaca 228000600

cuaca 228000601

cuaca 228000602

cuaca 228000603

cuaca 228000604

cuaca 228000605

cuaca 228000606

cuaca 228000607

cuaca 228000608

cuaca 228000609

cuaca 228000610

cuaca 228000611

cuaca 228000612

cuaca 228000613

cuaca 228000614

cuaca 228000615

cuaca 228000616

cuaca 228000617

cuaca 228000618

cuaca 228000619

cuaca 228000620

cuaca 228000621

cuaca 228000622

cuaca 228000623

cuaca 228000624

cuaca 228000625

cuaca 228000626

cuaca 228000627

cuaca 228000628

cuaca 228000629

cuaca 228000630

cuaca 228000631

cuaca 228000632

cuaca 228000633

cuaca 228000634

cuaca 228000635

cuaca 228000636

cuaca 228000637

cuaca 228000638

cuaca 228000639

cuaca 228000640

cuaca 228000641

cuaca 228000642

cuaca 228000643

cuaca 228000644

cuaca 228000645

cuaca 228000646

cuaca 228000647

cuaca 228000648

cuaca 228000649

cuaca 228000650

info 328000526

info 328000527

info 328000528

info 328000529

info 328000530

info 328000531

info 328000532

info 328000533

info 328000534

info 328000535

info 328000536

info 328000537

info 328000538

info 328000539

info 328000540

info 328000541

info 328000542

info 328000543

info 328000544

info 328000545

info 328000546

info 328000547

info 328000548

info 328000549

info 328000550

info 328000551

info 328000552

info 328000553

info 328000554

info 328000555

info 328000556

info 328000557

info 328000558

info 328000559

info 328000560

berita 428011421

berita 428011422

berita 428011423

berita 428011424

berita 428011425

berita 428011426

berita 428011427

berita 428011428

berita 428011429

berita 428011430

berita 428011431

berita 428011432

berita 428011433

berita 428011434

berita 428011435

berita 428011436

berita 428011437

berita 428011438

berita 428011439

berita 428011440

berita 428011441

berita 428011442

berita 428011443

berita 428011444

berita 428011445

berita 428011446

berita 428011447

berita 428011448

berita 428011449

berita 428011450

berita 428011451

berita 428011452

berita 428011453

berita 428011454

berita 428011455

berita 428011456

berita 428011457

berita 428011458

berita 428011459

berita 428011460

kajian 638000002

kajian 638000003

kajian 638000004

kajian 638000005

kajian 638000006

kajian 638000007

kajian 638000008

kajian 638000009

kajian 638000010

kajian 638000011

kajian 638000012

kajian 638000013

kajian 638000014

kajian 638000015

kajian 638000016

kajian 638000017

kajian 638000018

kajian 638000019

kajian 638000020

kajian 638000021

kajian 638000022

kajian 638000023

kajian 638000024

kajian 638000025

kajian 638000026

kajian 638000027

kajian 638000028

kajian 638000029

kajian 638000030

kajian 638000031

kajian 638000032

kajian 638000033

kajian 638000034

kajian 638000035

kajian 638000036

kajian 638000037

kajian 638000038

kajian 638000039

kajian 638000040

article 788000001

article 788000002

article 788000003

article 788000004

article 788000005

article 788000006

article 788000007

article 788000008

article 788000009

article 788000010

article 788000011

article 788000012

article 788000013

article 788000014

article 788000015

article 788000016

article 788000017

article 788000018

article 788000019

article 788000020

article 788000021

article 788000022

article 788000023

article 788000024

article 788000025

article 788000026

article 788000027

article 788000028

article 788000029

article 788000030

news-1701