Business Leaders – Review, Change, Upgrade Like Technology – Asrar Qureshi’s Blog Post #1115
Business Leaders – Review, Change, Upgrade Like Technology – Asrar Qureshi’s Blog Post #1115
Dear Colleagues! This is Asrar Qureshi’s Blog Post #1115 for Pharma Veterans. Pharma Veterans Blogs are published by Asrar Qureshi on its dedicated site https://pharmaveterans.com. Please email to pharmaveterans2017@gmail.com for publishing your contributions here.
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Credit: Fernando Cortes |
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Credit: ROMAN ODINTSOV |
Preamble
In the digital era, where change is the only constant, technology has adopted a natural rhythm: review, change, upgrade. Every day, we witness software updates, new app versions, and breakthrough innovations that redefine how we live and work. Behind each of these developments is a relentless commitment to improvement. The question that arises is: Are business leaders evolving with the same urgency?
Many organizations invest millions in digital transformation, but often the leadership mindset remains stuck in legacy models. As technology reinvents itself constantly, leadership must follow suit. The businesses that survive and thrive are those where leaders mirror the adaptive, agile behavior of the technologies they deploy.
Technology as the Benchmark for Change
Technology development is built on three key principles: continuous feedback, iterative improvement, and proactive adaptation. Developers constantly monitor usage patterns, gather user feedback, release patches, and upgrade functionalities. It's a dynamic process driven by data and a forward-looking mindset.
Compare this with many leadership environments. In several companies, the strategic playbook remains unchanged for years. Decisions are made based on past performance, and many leaders operate in silos, unaware or unwilling to evolve. This rigidity is increasingly incompatible with today’s fast-evolving markets and workforce expectations.
Why Leaders Must Embrace the "Review, Change, Upgrade" Cycle
Constant Market Evolution
The business landscape is in flux. Consumer expectations, competitor strategies, regulatory frameworks, and geopolitical influences are changing rapidly. What worked yesterday may not work today.
Leaders need to constantly review whether their strategies are still effective. Are they addressing current market needs? Are they leveraging modern tools effectively? Netflix, for instance, didn't rest on its DVD rental model. It moved to streaming, then to content creation, and now to gaming. These shifts were driven by leadership that embraced change at every step.
The Modern Workforce Demands More
Today's workforce, especially millennials and Gen Z, seek purpose, flexibility, feedback, and inclusivity. The traditional command-and-control leadership style no longer motivates or retains top talent.
Leaders must revisit their management style. Are they empowering their teams? Are they cultivating a culture of innovation? Employee engagement must be viewed through a new lens. Failure to adapt can lead to low morale, high turnover, and reduced productivity.
Technological Change Requires Strategic Realignment
The rise of AI, automation, data analytics, and cloud computing has redefined roles and operations. But many leaders remain unaware of the implications or fail to reskill themselves. They rely on experts to implement tools without understanding the strategic value these tools bring.
Leadership in the digital age requires not just delegation but participation. Understanding the technology landscape is now a core component of strategic thinking.
The Leadership Lifecycle: A Three-Stage Model
Borrowing from the technology world, leadership must follow a lifecycle approach:
Review
This phase involves self-reflection, feedback gathering, and honest assessment:
- Are my leadership approaches aligned with the current business environment?
- Am I encouraging innovation or blocking it?
- What feedback am I receiving from my team, peers, and stakeholders?
- Are my goals still relevant?
Tools like 360-degree reviews, executive coaching, anonymous feedback mechanisms, and external advisory boards are helpful here. Regular introspection keeps leaders grounded and open to evolution.
Change
Once gaps are identified, leaders must act. This phase requires courage:
- Replacing outdated strategies with more agile frameworks.
- Letting go of micromanagement in favor of trust and accountability.
- Shifting from profit-only focus to long-term sustainability and stakeholder value.
- Learning new skills (digital literacy, emotional intelligence, design thinking, etc.)
Change is uncomfortable, but it is the bridge to future relevance.
Upgrade
This is where transformation is institutionalized. Leaders embed new behaviors and capabilities into their daily actions:
- Commit to lifelong learning and encourage the same in teams.
- Build resilient teams capable of rapid innovation.
- Create structures and policies that reflect modern values and realities.
- Champion diversity, inclusion, sustainability, and ethics.
Just as software gets regular upgrades, leadership must go through periodic refreshes. This cycle should be ongoing, not reactive.
Common Barriers to Leadership Evolution
If the benefits are clear, why do so many leaders resist change?
- Comfort with the status quo: Success in the past creates a false sense of security.
- Fear of failure: Change carries risk. Many leaders fear it might backfire.
- Ego: Admitting the need to change can feel like admitting weakness.
- Lack of feedback: In insulated environments, leaders often hear only what they want to.
- Short-term pressures: Quarterly targets can discourage long-term strategic shifts.
Overcoming these barriers requires humility, openness, and a commitment to personal growth.
Building a Culture of Iteration
Leaders who embrace the review-change-upgrade cycle build cultures that mirror this mindset. Their organizations:
- Encourage experimentation and learning from failure.
- Recognize and reward adaptability.
- Prioritize continuous improvement over perfection.
- Embrace cross-functional collaboration and diverse viewpoints.
Such cultures are inherently more resilient, innovative, and aligned with the demands of the modern economy.
Sum Up
In a world where algorithms learn and adapt daily, leaders cannot afford to remain static. The shelf life of strategies, skills, and assumptions is shorter than ever.
Review. Change. Upgrade.
This isn’t just a mantra for technology companies. It’s the blueprint for sustainable leadership in the 21st century. The leaders who internalize this mindset will not only keep up with change—they will shape it.
Concluded.
Disclaimers: Pictures in these blogs are taken from free resources at Pexels, Pixabay, Unsplash, and Google. Credit is given where available. If a copyright claim is lodged, we shall remove the picture with appropriate regrets.
For most blogs, I research from several sources which are open to public. Their links are mentioned under references. There is no intent to infringe upon anyone’s copyrights. If, any claim is lodged, it will be acknowledged and recognized duly.
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