In Phase 1 of the LFG, we examine the tensions and executive insights for each of our four themes (review the Insights for this theme here).
In Phase 1, leaders described how the role is expanding, with broader scope, greater complexity, and rising expectations across the enterprise.
This next phase focuses on a different challenge.
Not defining direction, but understanding what determines whether progress takes hold and where momentum builds or breaks.
This Phase 2 Reflection article for Theme 1 (Enterprise Leadership in an Era of Transformation) introduces a practical way to see how enterprise efforts gain traction and where they stall. It also offers a way to assess where you and your organization are today, and where alignment may be limiting progress.
The questions throughout are designed to help you take a clearer look at how things are playing out across your organization.
Most organizations are not short on ideas. They are short on movement.
Across organizations, strategy is clear. Priorities are set. Ambition is high.
But when the work begins, progress slows.
Decisions stall. Ownership blurs. Momentum fades.
That is the real challenge right now.
Across recent working sessions, including our recent Chicago Roundtable, one pattern came up repeatedly:
Work does not stall because leaders lack ideas.
It stalls because organizations are not aligned on how to move those ideas forward.
This reflects an evolution in the leadership challenge.
In addition to setting direction, leaders are increasingly responsible for creating the conditions where direction can move across functions, incentives, and systems.
As growth becomes more connected across marketing, product, data, technology, and finance, that responsibility expands.
Momentum becomes the clearest signal of whether progress is happening.
Enterprise momentum builds across a set of connected layers.
When these layers are aligned, work moves with speed, clarity, confidence, and scale.
When they are not, friction shows up quickly and momentum slows.
The sections that follow break down where momentum tends to stall, what helps it build, and how to recognize it early.
Friction tends to show up in consistent ways:
Many organizations experience a gap between how alignment is described and how work unfolds once it begins.
Fragmentation often appears across incentives, metrics, and ownership.
Questions to ask:
When work gains momentum, several conditions tend to be present:
Trust plays a role.
Clarity and operating discipline help translate that trust into consistent movement.
Questions to ask:
In organizations where progress is more consistent, momentum shows up in how work is structured and carried forward:
Momentum is sustained through rhythm, visibility, and follow through.
Over time, the focus expands from aligning people to shaping how work moves across the system.
Questions to ask:
Early signals often indicate whether work is gaining momentum or encountering friction.
When work is moving:
When work slows:
Questions to ask:
For CMOs, this creates a distinct opportunity and responsibility.
As growth becomes more interconnected across functions, the role increasingly sits at the center of how priorities come together. This is not about owning every lever, but about orchestrating how they connect.
The work is less about driving within a function and more about shaping how the enterprise performs and delivers results.
The question many leaders are working through is:
Can this move across the organization in a sustained way?
That question is reshaping how leaders operate.
What changes is not just what leaders are responsible for, but how they operate across these layers.
|
PAST / LEGACY |
TRANSITION |
FUTURE / REQUIRED |
|
Influence |
Orchestration |
Infrastructure |
|
Aligning people |
Aligning decisions |
Aligning systems |
|
Advocating ideas |
Connecting functions |
Designing how work happens |
|
Navigating politics |
Managing dependencies |
Building operating models |
|
Earning buy-in |
Driving momentum |
Enabling execution at scale |
Leaders who move things forward shape how work moves across the organization, not just the outcomes themselves.
Taken together, these patterns and questions provide a way to gauge how you and your organization are operating today.
Across organizations, a few patterns tend to appear:
Level 1 - Fragmented
Reactive, siloed, inconsistent
Level 2 - Emerging
Some alignment, inconsistent execution
Level 3 - Integrated
Clear structures, repeatable progress
Level 4 - Adaptive
Fast learning, system evolves continuously
Most organizations show a mix of these patterns across different areas.
The value comes from seeing more clearly where momentum is breaking down and where it can be strengthened.
This phase 2 of the Leadership Field Guide focuses on what makes progress possible.
You now have:
Across organizations, the pattern is consistent.
Strategy is rarely the constraint.
Momentum is.
And momentum is shaped by how well alignment holds across teams, decisions, incentives, and systems.
The leaders who move fastest are not waiting for perfect clarity.
They are shaping the conditions that allow work to move, even when alignment is still forming.
That is the shift.
From setting direction to building momentum.
And over time, from influencing outcomes to shaping how the enterprise wins.
Review the Insights for Theme 1: Enterprise Leadership in an Era of Transformation