Press Release
Leadership report shows UK organisations "could do better"
2 June 2008
Efforts by UK businesses to improve leadership in their organisations are failing to deliver the outcomes necessary to grow and compete successfully according to the Global Leadership Forecast, a new survey by business leadership consultancy DDI and the CIPD (Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development).
The study examined the programmes used to develop leaders. Only 41% of UK HR managers rated their programmes high quality. Similarly, only 42% of UK leaders stated satisfaction with what their organisations’ offered.
Based on responses from human resource professionals and leaders in the UK, whose opinions were then compared to the total group of HR professionals and leaders from 76 countries worldwide, the report found less than half (44%) of UK executives rate other leaders within their organisations as very good or excellent. Although this figure is better than that found in the rest of the world, it clearly demonstrates there is room for improvement in the leadership of UK businesses.
Yet, the majority of UK HR leaders agree that within their companies there is a lot going right, with a strong emphasis on the alignment of leadership development with business priorities as well as performance management (67% and 65% respectively of HR managers agree that this is prevalent within their organisations).
The blame for poor leadership development in the UK according to HR can be placed firmly at the door of organisations failing to hold senior managers accountable for leadership development, with almost half (48%) agreeing that this was the top reason. Other problems identified were the failure of organisations to measure the results of leadership development and hence failing to learn from mistakes (21% agree) and a lack of consistency in the way programmes are deployed across locations (23% agree).
Vanessa Robinson, Organisation and Resourcing Adviser, CIPD, says: "HR professionals have a major role to play in helping leaders and senior managers realise the pivotal role they must play in proactively supporting leadership development activities. As well as acting as role models for those on high potential programmes, they must also play key roles in identifying future leaders. A lot of effort is going into developing leaders, and a lot is going right. But this report shows that when it comes to delivering outcomes from leadership development, UK organisations could do better."
Compared to the worldwide sample, UK HR managers fed back that a larger proportion of UK organisations (58% compared to 50% globally) had a process for identifying high-potential leaders.
Indeed, taken separately, those on high potential leadership programmes were far more satisfied (in the UK 66% reported back as satisfied compared to 34% on a regular leadership development programme). The UK high potentials were also notably more satisfied than the typical high potential in the global sample (55% compared to 37%). This points directly to the fact that UK high potential programmes are more likely to assess their strengths and development needs than were organisations elsewhere in the world (89% of leaders in the UK compared to 71% globally agreed that this was the main factor why the programmes succeeded).
Steve Newhall, European VP, DDI, says: "Identifying the future senior leaders and putting in place an effective programme to develop them is essential for the long term health of any organisation. This is the first stage. Effective measurement and accountability will then ensure programmers deliver the promised results. In the UK, the message seems to be that the effort is there, but we are not yet reaping the rewards".
Other survey results:
- Only 40% of UK leaders (40% also for global leaders) have a process in place to identify potential multinational leaders
- Only 32% of UK multinational organisations have a process to identify multinational leaders (compared to 29% worldwide)
Latest Press Releases
- Economic slowdown reduces impact of migrant worker drain
- New guide offers UK businesses the key to capturing talent through building stronger partnerships with recruitment agencies
- Now It’s Official – Job Vacancies Falling And Redundancies On The Rise As Credit Crunch Pushes Up Unemployment
- Impact of economic turbulence in the spotlight at this year’s CIPD annual conference
- Employer attitudes to the 'core jobless' is key to welfare reform agenda
- Jobs market continues to prop up UK economy
- Government welfare to work objectives undermined by low levels of rehabilitation support in the workplace
- Mediation, a practice still underutilised in workplace conflict resolution
- Government needs to add more weight to new Single Equality Bill by promoting the business case for diversity
- Lack of skills major factor in UK recruitment and retention difficulties

