“On the other hand, we are going to open up a new problem of development at the middle-management level. It isn’t difficult for us to get people into middle management today. But it is going to be, because we shall need thinking people in the middle, not just at the top. The point at which we teach people to think will have to be moved further and further down the line.” (emphasis mine)
Organizations today face the same challenge. Relying on a few experienced “thinkers” at the top of the organization to make business decisions may have worked in the past; it doesn’t today. There is just too much data for a small group of individuals to comb through in order to adjust and adapt their organization quickly enough to remain competitive.
Leaders who have accepted that front-line workers may be better suited for these decisions, and are able to train and empower a workforce to make decisions about their work in real time, are those hospital and health system boards should be seeking out.
If only we would have listened to Peter Drucker back in 1967, our healthcare delivery system might look a lot different than it does today.