Published: April 2008 in Management Online REview, www.morexpertise.com ISSN 1996-3300 1
Copyright © ESCP-EAP European School of Management 2008
The Secret of High Performance Organizations
André A. de Waal
Abstract
In the past few decades organizations all over the world have been searching for the
elements that constitute continuous organizational success. Fuelled by bestsellers such as
‘In Search Of Excellence’ and ‘Good to Great’, managers have been trying out many different
improvement concepts, often with mixed results. The aim of this study was to identify factors
that determine the continuous success of a high performance organization (HPO). A meta
analysis of 280 research studies into high performance initially identified 35 characteristics of
a HPO. These were subsequently used in a case study of a large financial service provider,
to identify its HPO status and the improvements needed to become a really excellent
organization. The results of the study show that it is possible to identify factors that determine
continuous organizational success, and that managers can be offered a framework that adds
focus to improvement.
Keywords: High performance organizations, HPO, Management quality
Introduction
Ever increasing demands of stakeholders force organizations to adapt faster to growing
international competition and to compete simultaneously on the basis of price, quality,
flexibility, delivery times, and after-sales support (Kasarda and Rondinelli, 1998). They are
pressured into defining the elements that make up high performance, as there is a growing
consensus that effective approaches to management offer organizations competitive
advantage (Lawler, 2003). In the wake of the landmark book ‘In Search of Excellence’
(Peters and Waterman, 1982) and the more recent bestsellers Built to Last (Collins and
Porras, 1994) and ‘Good to Great’ (Collins, 2001), managers have developed a strong
interest in learning the characteristics of high performance to help them in their quest for
excellence. Identifying these characteristics is of paramount importance because clients of
organizations are becoming more demanding and at the same time more dissatisfied with the
performance of the organizations. In this day and age of increased importance of tailoring to
consumers’ needs, organizations cannot afford bad interactions with their clients. In addition,
organizations not only need to become better but even more difficult … stay better for a long
period of time. As every sportsperson can tell you: “It ain’t that difficult to get to the top,
staying there is the hard part.” So the search is on for the factors that do not cause a one-
time good result but stress sustainable high performance. For this, I took a long and in-depth
look at the so-called high performance organizations (HPOs).
Until now there has been no generally accepted name or definition of HPOs, and in the
literature the HPO is often referred to as the accountable organization, the adaptive
enterprise, the agile corporation, the flexible organization, the high performance work