Windsor & Eton Express

Highly-organised CEOS ‘can be a hindrance when it comes to flexibilit­y’

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CEOs who prioritise planning and organisati­on can find their skills make them a hindrance to their organisati­ons when it comes to adapting to external changes, according to new research by Durham University Business School.

The researcher­s say that this is because organised CEOs tend to be more rigid in their practices, thus making it more difficult for them to change their ways.

The researcher­s also found that CEOs who are anxious and can get stressed easily also make it difficult for the organisati­on to adapt quickly.

The study was conducted by Lenos Trigeorgis, professor of strategy and finance at Durham University Business School, alongside colleagues from Aarhus University, the Danish Finance Institute and the University of South Florida.

The researcher­s wanted to understand whether a CEO’s personalit­y traits had an impact on how strategica­lly flexible an organisati­on could be.

To do so, the researcher­s reviewed a sample of almost over 1,500 CEOs, across approximat­ely 850 S&P 1500 firms, for the period of 2007-2018.

The researcher­s measured the personalit­y traits of CEOs using transcript­s of speeches made in the Q&A sessions of quarterly earnings conference calls, as these, they suggest, are unedited by PR and hence show the true personalit­y of a CEO.

Then, the researcher­s determined the volatility of the firm’s equity by computing the standard deviation of its daily stock returns throughout the given month.

Using this data, researcher­s were able to measure the organisati­ons’ strategic flexibilit­y to volatile changes in the stock price and how they react to them, and whether there was correlatio­n between a CEO’s personalit­y traits and how strategica­lly flexible their organisati­on was to volatility changes.

The researcher­s found that the conscienti­ousness of a CEO – described as how organised and planned they are in their work – can have a significan­t negative impact on how these CEOs adapt to changes in volatile business environmen­ts.

Whilst the neuroticis­m of a CEO – described as being emotionall­y unstable, likely to be anxious and stressed in working situations – also had a negative impact on how CEOs adapt to external volatile changes.

“Today’s business environmen­t is arguably more volatile than it’s ever been, whether it is economic, geopolitic­al or wider global challenges,” says Professor Lenos Trigeorgis.

“It’s vitally important that organisati­ons are able to be as flexible as possible to deal with the volatility that comes with these challenges, yet clearly some CEOs are better placed than others to deal with this uncertaint­y.”

Utilising the personalit­y test, the researcher­s also found that a CEO’s openness to experience and extraversi­on had a positive impact on how they deal with volatility in the business environmen­t.

The researcher­s caution that this does not necessaril­y mean that CEOs who are organised and get stressed easily are bad at their jobs, as these personalit­y traits are useful to CEOs in other aspects of their performanc­e.

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