Organisational agility is a major factor in driving financial performance, according to new research from PA Consulting, the global innovation and transformation consultancy.
PA’s research found that organisational agility is the single most important factor in responding to rapid technology, customer and societal change. The top 10 per cent of businesses by financial performance are almost 30 per cent more likely to display characteristics of agility. Organisational agility enables large-scale companies to thrive, delivering higher all-round performance, with positive benefits for customers, shareholders and employees.
However real and lasting organisational agility remains elusive for many. Three in five business leaders know they need to change yet are struggling to act. PA’s research found that:
Conrad Thompson, a business transformation expert at PA Consulting, says: “Businesses around the world face unprecedented disruption but also unprecedented opportunities. As radical change transforms the world we live in, organisations must evolve at pace. One in six of the companies we surveyed acknowledged that unless they evolve, they risk failure within five years. Yet we see organisational agility efforts transforming well-established financial institutions, household names, and industry stalwarts, establishing the conditions that have made them fit for the future. This research, and our experience, proves that embracing organisational agility is the most effective way to get ahead of the competition, and ensure your organisation thrives, today and tomorrow.”
What it takes to achieve organisational agility
PA has identified five attributes key to organisational agility and common to the high performing companies we surveyed:
Sam Bunting, an organisational agility expert at PA Consulting says: “At PA we believe in the power of ingenuity to build a positive human future in a technology-driven world. As a business leader right now, we’ve never been afforded a better opportunity to adapt and transform – to truly understand our customers’ motivations, to harness the power of technology to create ingenious products and services and to find creative and effective ways to engage and empower our people. We’ve seen first-hand how organisations can beat their numbers and deliver higher all-round performance as a result of taking these five perfectly achievable steps.”