
Most organizations in Bangladesh are at a critical crossroads. As our economy climbs the global ladder, the old playbook—think globally, act locally—is obsolete. Today’s reality demands that we think globally, act globally, think forward, and act now.
Yet, a silent crisis is brewing inside many of our most reputed organizations.
We are witnessing a fierce internal tug-of-war between the core “base business”—the traditional cash cow—and new strategic business development ventures. Because the base business faces stiffening global and local competition, it acts like a resource magnet. It sucks in the best talent, the majority of funding, and the lion’s share of leadership attention.
Consequently, senior leaders find themselves trapped in a relentless cycle of firefighting. They focus on managing a business that is striving rather than thriving.
The Cost of the “Cooling Engine” Mentality
When crisis management consumes leadership, the first casualty is future growth. Funding for new ventures dries up. The business development team receives a subtle but dangerous signal: shift from future-forward opportunity seeking to defensive posturing. Responsibility shrinks into mere survival-mode accountability.
The warning signs of this shift are distinct and painful:
- A marathon of unscheduled crisis meetings and repetitive policy reviews.
- More internal alignment meetings than customer-facing engagements.
- Delayed, shifted, or permanently postponed strategic projects.
- Severe burnout across the entire hierarchy, leaving the organization dependent on just one or two individuals who become the system.
This approach treats the organization like an old car engine. When we pushed it too hard and it overheated, we would pull over, open the hood, pour water, and wait for it to cool down before moving again. But modern organizations are not simple mechanical engines; they are complex, interconnected systems. You cannot drive forward by just pushing the engine block. You rely on sensors, software, and real-time data.
Shifting from Authority to Alignment
To survive an unpredictable global market, organizations must completely revisit and realign their purpose, vision, and mission based on current truths, not past accolades.
Alignment is now more critical than instruction. Trust is more potent than policy. Empowerment and true accountability hold far greater value than rigid discipline and top-down authority.
Bold leadership requires admitting that the tools that built the empire cannot be the tools that expand it. Senior management must learn to trust their organizational “sensors”—their strategic talent and future leaders.
Redefining Roles for Tomorrow
Unlocking the next wave of growth requires leaders to focus deeply on human potential. It means making a clear, strategic distinction: Who should lead the future, and who should manage the base?
This decision cannot be based on historical seniority or past trophies. It must be driven by unique expertise, forward-thinking capacity, strong external ecosystems, and rapid digital adaptation.
The fuel for our future isn’t just the revenue from the core business; it is the human strength and resourcefulness of our people. It is time to close the hood on yesterday’s firefighting and empower the architects of tomorrow.
#Leadership #BusinessDevelopment #Strategy #OrganizationalTransformation #FutureOfWork #BangladeshBusiness