Saskatoon StarPhoenix

SELF-MANAGEMENT A TOUGH UNDERTAKIN­G

- REBECCA GREENFIELD

After four years, Medium is giving up on Holacracy, the avant-garde management system it used as an alternativ­e to the traditiona­l office hierarchy.

Just a year ago, the blogging platform was all in on Holacracy. The company invested thousands of dollars in consultant­s and HolacracyO­ne’s proprietar­y software, Glass Frog. The employees spoke the language of a post-hierarchy organizati­on. There were no managers or bosses or job titles; people ‘energized’ roles within ‘circles.’ Teams held regimented ‘tactical’ and ‘governance’ meetings run by anointed facilitato­rs. So what happened? “For us, Holacracy was getting in the way of the work,” wrote Andy Doyle, who works in operations at Medium, in a blog post.

Forgoing hierarchy is supposed to set companies free from the tyranny of bureaucrac­y. Holacracy just created a new kind of organizati­onal red tape.

For decades, companies have craved an alternativ­e to top-down management. Traditiona­l hierarchy is increasing­ly seen as an outdated vestige from the Industrial Revolution and a recipe for failure at organizati­ons that operate within its framework. Yet moving beyond the corporate ladder has proved challengin­g. Most businesses don’t operate as pure hierarchie­s. Only 38 per cent of more than 7,000 companies recently surveyed by Deloitte said they were “functional­ly organized.” Yet, many offices are stuck in an awkward in-between phase.

Holacracy isn’t the first attempt to redraw the org chart, and it won’t be the last. Researcher­s have argued for alternativ­e organizati­onal structures going back to the 1960s. The contingenc­y theory of leadership from the late ’60s, for example, said there was no single way to structure all companies; form should follow function.

Since then, various management fads have gone in and out of style. In the ’70s and early ’80s, the matrix promised to cater to the new, more complex organizati­on with ‘parallel’ reporting structures. But in practice, the system “proved all but unmanageab­le,” according to a 1990 article in the Harvard Business Review.

By the early ’90s, ‘self-management,’ which gives autonomy to employees, became the organizati­onal system du jour. While there are some success stories — notably, at video game maker Valve and the tomato processing plant Morning Star — the flat, non-management approach has failed to go mainstream for the same reason the matrix didn’t work: It’s hard to implement. Valve and Morning Star spent years creating bespoke systems that don’t necessaril­y translate to other organizati­ons.

The chatter about Holacracy’s potential failures is familiar, said Ethan Bernstein, who studies organizati­onal behaviour at Harvard Business School.

“It seems like every 10 to 15 years, or so, we come up with a new word for it. There’s this cyclical aspect.”

Holacracy appeals because it offers an off-the-shelf solution for any company looking to evolve its org chart. Brian Robertson, creator of the Holacracy program, spent years developing his unfortunat­ely named system by experiment­ing on his own company, which made software. Medium chief executive officer Ev Williams, a startup veteran, was drawn to Holacracy because of its promise to help him run his latest company better.

Medium lists a series of “challenges” it faced while using Holacracy, all of which boil down to a familiar problem: It was too complicate­d. While operating as a holacracy, Medium found it “difficult to co-ordinate efforts at scale,” got bogged down in the record-keeping, and had challenges overcoming the public perception of holacracy as cultish and weird.

“The biggest pain point was, with a growing company, investment and teaching new people when they show up how to use Holacracy,” said Jason Stirman, who was Medium’s enthusiast­ic Holacracy Officer — in addition to his estimated 40 other roles — until he left to start his own app six months ago.

Shoe retailer Zappos, the biggest company to use Holacracy, has reportedly had similar struggles. About 18 per cent of the workforce has taken buyouts offered by CEO Tony Hsieh to anyone who doesn’t want to work within the management structure.

Medium failed because it didn’t fully commit to Holacracy, Robertson said.

“I’m not surprised it was getting in the way for them.”

The company wasn’t doing right, he said.

“If I have a screwdrive­r and I keep smashing nails with it, I’m going to think it’s a pretty sh---y tool. On the other hand, if you use it for what it’s designed for, you might end up with different results.” it

Committing to alt-management is expensive. HolacracyO­ne, the company that sells the branded system, charges US$50,000 to US$500,000 for its consulting services, another US$4,000 a seat for seminars and US$500 a month for its GlassFrog software, although there is also a free version. That doesn’t include the cost of spending time on something other than running a business.

“Teaching a mindset was a big investment,” Stirman said.

Hiring and orienting new employees, an already expensive process, was made even more difficult because of Holacracy.

“You could essentiall­y take a week off from work to get everyone trained profession­ally, which would be incredibly expensive.”

And he’s not even sure that would get everyone up to speed on the intricacie­s of Holacracy.

Robertson has said Holacracy is a five-year journey and admits that it involves some pain.

“It is an investment, and there is a productivi­ty hit in the beginning,” he said this week.

“This is something that takes years and years of experiment­ation and learning.”

Many companies can’t afford to spend the time and money working on the way they work, rather than on the work itself.

 ?? SCOTT OLSON/GETTY IMAGES ?? Traditiona­l hierarchy is increasing­ly seen as an outdated vestige from the Industrial Revolution and a recipe for failure at organizati­ons that operate within its framework. Yet moving beyond the corporate ladder has proved challengin­g.
SCOTT OLSON/GETTY IMAGES Traditiona­l hierarchy is increasing­ly seen as an outdated vestige from the Industrial Revolution and a recipe for failure at organizati­ons that operate within its framework. Yet moving beyond the corporate ladder has proved challengin­g.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada