Daily Telegraph: Fifty lessons: build up a diverse team:
"...I was given the job of managing Shell's global
downstream business, the customer-facing business in
refining and marketing, which was a very large business
operating in about 140 countries.": Thursday 20 October
2005
(Filed:
20/10/2005)
Senior international business
figures have agreed to share their experience in a
series of filmed interviews with Fifty Lessons. This
week: Paul Skinner, chairman of Rio Tinto
It was pretty late in my life as a
business leader and manager that I began to realise just
how important investing in people is.
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Paul Skinner
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I say that with a little shock and
regret, but it really is critically important for
anybody leading a major organisation that they are
constantly thinking about the way their business teams
are structured and resourced.
It was brought home to me when I was
given the job of managing Shell's global downstream
business, the customer-facing business in refining and
marketing, which was a very large business operating in
about 140 countries. In the late 1990s, our structure
for managing that business - which until that time had
rested on individual national operating units - started
to evolve in a way that recognised the global reality of
our business. With help from some very good colleagues I
therefore spent a lot of time designing a new
organisation and putting together its leadership team.
It's very important in a team to
ensure that you have the complete range of skills and
talent that you need, and you should spend a lot of time
thinking about how people are going to complement each
other. You need diversity.
Sometimes we think of diversity in
terms of gender and nationality; perhaps one dimension
we don't think about enough is diversity of thinking. A
team of people who all have the same thinking pattern is
not necessarily as productive as a team that thinks in
different ways. So you need to cover the skills; you
need to make sure the people you've got are going to be
ready to produce new ideas and innovations.
This organisation proved pretty
early on that it had the capability to be effective.
But, as the leader of that team, it was clear that part
of my role was going to be in spending a lot of time
with the individuals themselves, to make sure that they
were contributing the best they could to the efforts of
the team. That started to take an increasing amount of
my time but the return on that investment was very
worthwhile.
It applied particularly in the case
of people who joined Shell from other companies at very
senior levels. When you have people entering a large
mature organisation, making sure they are given the
right level of support took a lot of time.
But again it was absolutely worth
doing because the last thing we wanted for these people
who joined us with a very different line of thinking was
to turn them into people who fitted a mould, who
reproduced the Shell thinking pattern. That's not why we
hired them.
A good team of people is a terrific
asset. One can almost think of it in terms of any other
asset that one might own corporately, or even
personally. If something is that important to you, you'd
better spend an appropriate amount of time, effort and
resource on maintaining it.
Biography
1944 Born
1963 Joined Shell
1966 Chemical business UK, Greece,
Nigeria
1979 Head, crude oil supply, Shell
International Trading Company
1984 Chairman Shell Companies in New
Zealand
1991-95 President, Shell
International Trading
1998-99 President, Shell Europe Oil
Companies
2000-03 Managing director, The
'Shell' Transport & Trading Company
2003-present Chairman of Rio Tinto |