NAVIGATING THE SHANGHAI LOCKDOWN

The China subsidiary of Suttons International, the UK’s largest chemical logistics company specialising in moving chemicals, faced a severe challenge when Shanghai went through a two-month lockdown. For the China subsidiary both their international business, dependent on supply chains from overseas, and their domestic business had a sudden and potentially catastrophic shock.

They overcame the challenge by being agile and pro-active, with a high degree of disciplined self-organisation and a “can do” pro-active attitude. This was supported by an empowering approach to leadership. Whilst other logistics company effectively ground to a halt over the lockdown, Suttons China increased their revenue and market share, taking revenue away from their less agile, poorly led competitors.

It was late on the 27 March 2022 when Tommy Hu, the manager of the domestic logistics operation, was notified that Shanghai would be going into a short lockdown. He anticipated, however, that this lockdown would be longer and effectively stop operations due to drivers and trucks being largely in Shanghai. That very evening he called a team meeting on WeChat to discuss what to do. Two options emerged: wait and see to get further insight, or quickly redeploy all the trucks outside of Shanghai. The latter option would incur increased cost. Having heard all the arguments for each, it was decided to be pro-active and redeploy. Tommy recognised this would enable them to have the maximum flexibility, instead of having his drivers locked down at home and his operations grounded to a halt. That evening they arranged for a fast re-deployment. They also contacted key clients to see if they could pre-empt orders, so that as many chemical tanks as possible being moved the next day could be full rather than empty. In addition to redeployment, the satellite depot in Jinshan (2 hours away) had to be dramatically scaled up as, until then, it had only looked after a small amount of volume.

All of this needed the organisation to quickly change how it operated, with initiative being enabled at all levels. The fast decision making, and enablement of fast implementation, was a good example of Leadership 4.0, where leadership is a dynamic involving all rather than only depending on formal roles, titles or leadership from the top. Luckily Tommy and some of his key managers had been trained in such an approach, the CALAgility System of Complex Adaptive Leadership (CAL). The CAL approach uniquely blends modern western Complexity Science with ancient Chinese wisdom. So, for the Suttons managers this was an easy transition compared to their competitors who largely ground to a halt. The situation was very fluid and during the early stages even the authorities were not clear on what needed to be done. It was the drivers on the ground, crossing different local authority boundaries, who told the managers what needed to be done – a good example of Leadership 3.0, with followers taking the lead and leaders following those they lead.

With the redeployment of drivers and trucks out of Shanghai, and Jinshan made into a temporary depot, the challenges were far from over. To move anything during the period a variety of new issues needed to be managed.  This included arranging special passes needed by drivers moving between different areas, enabling daily PCR covid tests for the drivers, liaising with key clients regarding the various covid measures they had introduced, ensuring families and workers got enough food delivered to them and providing mental health support during such pressing times. All of these issues were delegated with full decision-making authority to individuals who looked after them in addition to their normal jobs.  Meanwhile, the Regional Director of North Asia, Karl Hudson, who was also an alumnus of the CAL approach, had delegated to Tommy in an effective way. He did not need to be on top of everything like leaders of some of his competitors felt they had to do, and only asked to be kept informed at the usual Heads of Departments weekly meeting.

With all of the covid related issues having to be managed, albeit in a distributed leadership way, the workload tripled. However, no extra staff were taken on and the team adapted to encompass the new demands. The Tai Chi Tu principles of CAL were well exemplified:

A team unifying implicit purpose: it was clear that they key was to both serve their customers and ensure staff well-being.

Clear individual objectives: It was clear for each team member who was responsible for what including the several new covid related issues which had to be managed in a distributed way.

A few simple rules: “Be pro-active and get it done”, “Communicate across boundaries frequently to share information” and “Take responsibility and authority” helped ensure team members remained focused

Skill/will: The key management had to be trained in the Complex Adaptive Leadership approach so found it easy to adapt quickly in a highly volatile, uncertain, complex and ambiguous (VUCA) circumstances

Ambiguity tolerance: There was a high degree of ambiguity and uncertainty especially when, for example, even the local authorities did not know how to advise companies (at the early stages of the two month lock down). The team navigated the uncertainty, continually adapting to new changes and government policies.

Clear feedback and transparency: Frequent communication and feedback within a fast-moving environment ensured all were fully aware of the fast changes which occurred.

Defined boundaries: The myriad of covid related issues were disaggregated with clear responsibilities and frequent cross-boundary communications.

Freedom to act: Individuals were free to take decisions within their defined boundaries, with authorities delegated to the lowest possible level.

Whilst many of their competitors saw their operation grind to a halt and revenue reduced to zero, Suttons China increased their revenue over the period by 30%.

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