Self-Management: The Most Overlooked Impactful Business Strategy in the Modern Workplace

Self-Management: The Most Overlooked Impactful Business Strategy in the Modern Workplace

Self-Management: The Most Overlooked Impactful Business Strategy in the Modern Workplace

Business Innovation Brief Best Article

What if we’ve been getting work wrong for the past century?

That’s the question Pim de Morree and his team at Corporate Rebels set out to answer nearly a decade ago. Frustrated by outdated corporate structures, Pim left his traditional job and began traveling the globe to learn from the world’s most progressive organizations. What he discovered is something few leaders are ever taught: self-management isn’t just a cultural choice, it’s a strategic business model.

And yet, most MBA programs never mention it. Which is why only a small group of people around the world know how to design and implement it successfully. That knowledge gap is costing companies more than they realize.

Why Self-Management Isn’t Just Boss-Free Anarchy

One of the biggest myths about self-management is that it’s leaderless chaos. The assumption is that without formal managers, people won’t know what to do. But as Pim explained, the opposite is true. These companies often have more structure than traditional ones. It’s just structured differently.

Authority doesn’t disappear. It’s redistributed. Decision-making happens at the team level. Roles are clearly defined. Accountability is built into peer agreements and transparent systems. It’s not a free-for-all. It’s a rethinking of how work gets done, and who gets to decide.

But because this isn’t taught in most business schools, even the most well-meaning executives often miss the point or fail to implement it effectively.

Freedom Only Works With Responsibility

Self-management is not about giving everyone total freedom. It’s about giving people the autonomy to own their work, paired with the responsibility to deliver on shared outcomes. Pim emphasized that when teams have both freedom and accountability, something powerful happens: they engage.

The numbers support this. Self-managed companies consistently report higher productivity, lower turnover, and better financial performance. This isn’t just good for culture. It’s good for the bottom line.

But again, you won’t find this in your average management textbook. That’s why only a small number of leaders and advisors globally have the skills to help organizations make this transition effectively.

Solving the Global Engagement Crisis

Right now, only about 15 percent of the global workforce is actively engaged. That’s a staggering statistic. Most employees are either coasting through their workday or feeling actively disconnected.

This is more than a business problem. It’s a human one. People want more than a paycheck. They want agency. They want to matter. And traditional management systems often strip that away.

Pim’s message is clear: we already know what works. But too few leaders have been trained in how to implement it.

There Is No One Model — But There Must Be a Model

Pim highlighted that self-management isn’t one-size-fits-all. He outlined several proven models that work across industries:

  • Marketplace Model: Teams operate like internal entrepreneurs, offering services to other teams within the company.
  • Partnership Model: Collaboration is based on mutual agreements, not authority.
  • Community Model: Shared values and collective purpose drive decision-making.

Each of these models provides clarity, but they still require skillful implementation. And because these ideas aren’t covered in most executive education programs, companies often try to piece it together without the proper blueprint or guidance.

That’s why the few who’ve lived this work, who’ve led or advised self-managed companies, are in a unique position to help others catch up.

Metrics Still Matter — Even Without Managers

One of the biggest fears leaders have about self-management is the idea of losing control or visibility. But as Pim shared, the best self-managed companies are actually more transparent. They rely on real-time dashboards, open performance data, and shared goals.

Buurtzorg, a Dutch healthcare company with more than a thousand self-managed teams, tracks metrics like time spent with patients, satisfaction scores, and peer benchmarks, all without traditional managers. Teams use the data to guide their own improvement.

This is not management by hope. It’s management by trust and visibility.

Purpose Emerges When People Are Trusted

Interestingly, many companies that embrace self-management don’t start out as purpose-driven. But once people feel empowered and connected, purpose tends to rise naturally.

And that matters, especially to the next generation. Studies show that younger workers increasingly prioritize meaning over money. If organizations want to attract and retain top talent, they’ll need to offer more than perks. They’ll need to offer purpose.

The irony is that many leaders are desperate to create more purposeful, human-centered workplaces. But they haven’t been given the tools to do so. Self-management, when implemented with clarity and intention, is one of the most effective tools available. Yet it’s still missing from mainstream leadership education.

Speaking as a Practitioner

I enjoy writing about our guests on the show, but as someone who co-founded RadicalPurpose.org, I personally know how important this work is. For years, we were seen as idealists, some even called us “crazy” for believing business could be built on purpose, autonomy, and trust. But the world is catching up. And today, we’re among the few who know how to operate, guide, and scale these kinds of organizations with real impact.

That’s why I want to see initiatives like Corporate Rebels thrive. Because this isn’t just about reforming work, it’s about unlocking human potential and proving that business can be both deeply human and highly successful.

Final Thought

At the close of the episode, Pim answered a question we ask every guest: does love belong in business?

His answer: absolutely.

Self-management creates room for love, trust, care, and collaboration to flourish. And it works, not just emotionally, but economically.

It’s time this model stopped living in the margins. It belongs in boardrooms, in business schools, and in the minds of the next generation of leaders.

Until then, it will be up to those of us who’ve been building this way for years to keep leading the way.

Because the future of work isn’t coming. It’s already here.

Check out our full conversation with Pim de Morree on The Bliss Business Podcast.

Originally Featured on The Bliss Business Podcast Blog

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Why Doing Good Is No Longer Optional in Business

Why Doing Good Is No Longer Optional in Business

Why Doing Good Is No Longer Optional in Business

Business Innovation Brief Best Article

For decades, the default setting in business was clear: prioritize profit. Social responsibility, if mentioned at all, was usually a side note or a holiday donation. But as Bea Boccalandro shared on a recent episode of The Bliss Business Podcast, that era is over. “It’s just time,” she said. And she’s right.

We’re living through a shift that is pushing leaders, employees, and entire organizations to rethink what it means to be successful. Social impact is no longer a trade-off. It is quickly becoming a competitive edge.

The Expanding Role of Business

In the 1930s, offering hard hats on a construction site was considered radical. Today, it is the law. That same kind of evolution is happening again, this time around issues like climate responsibility, equity, and community well-being. The role of business is expanding to meet modern expectations.

Bea pointed out that more than 90 percent of S&P 500 companies now publish ESG or CSR reports. These are no longer optional or symbolic. They reflect a new baseline of accountability.

What made Bea’s insights stand out was that she didn’t just make a moral argument for social responsibility. She made a strategic one.

Purpose-driven companies grow faster. They keep employees longer. They earn stronger customer loyalty. And the data backs it up.

Purpose Without the Platitudes

One of the most refreshing parts of the conversation was Bea’s take on what purpose really looks like in action. It’s not always a sweeping corporate declaration or a life-changing mission statement.

She introduced a concept called “job purposing.” It is about small, meaningful acts that give employees a sense of contribution, right in the flow of their daily work.

She shared stories like Luz, a housekeeper at Caesars Palace who collects used soap that is recycled and donated to families in need. Or Leroy, a parking attendant who checks tire tread to help guests stay safe on the road.

These moments might seem small, but they are deeply human. They give people a reason to care about their work. And they make a measurable difference in engagement, retention, and even physical health. Bea cited studies showing that people involved in job purposing have up to a 24 percent lower risk of cardiac events.

“Purpose-driven companies grow faster. They retain employees longer. They generate stronger customer loyalty. The numbers back it up.”

The Risk of Getting It Wrong

Of course, purpose can’t just be layered on top. When it is not authentic, it backfires. The episode touched on examples like the infamous Pepsi ad during the early Black Lives Matter movement. Campaigns like that fail when they don’t reflect real values or internal alignment.

Bea suggested a helpful test. Before you launch a purpose-driven message, ask yourself if your employees would believe it. If not, the outside world probably won’t either.

Marketing That Builds Trust

At The Bliss Business Podcast, we often talk about building love into scalable systems. This episode brought that idea to life.

Bea referenced a fascinating study comparing emotional responses to socially conscious ads versus traditional product ads. The former activated the same part of the brain that lights up when people gaze into the eyes of a loved one.

That’s not just marketing. That’s connection.

The takeaway for brands is clear. Speak to the heart. Be consistent with your values. Build trust from the inside out.

The Case for Doing Good

There is plenty of hard evidence supporting this approach. One study found that even a modest increase in a brand’s perceived social responsibility led to an eight percent rise in revenue.

These results are not just feel-good outcomes. They are indicators of a growing business strategy that aligns people, purpose, and performance.

A Simple but Powerful Message

Bea closed the conversation with a quote that captures the spirit of her work.

“If your job doesn’t improve the world, improve your job.”

In a time when many people feel overwhelmed and disconnected, that message offers a clear and hopeful call to action. Whether you lead a team, run a business, or simply show up every day with good intentions, doing good is no longer a detour from success.

It is the path forward.

Check out our full conversation with Bea Boccalandro on The Bliss Business Podcast.

Originally Featured on The Bliss Business Podcast Blog

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