The idea that relational capital may be more important than human capital (for building long-term competitive advantage in an organization) spurred the research in the most recent Leadership Pulse study. Basically, this suggests that it is not the 'humans' or people you hire that are the asset but the relationships those people have that bring your company real value. It also suggests that relational capital comes from unusual places.. partners, suppliers, investors, and even the people who were at the bottom of the hierarchy in the research -- temporary and outsourced employees.
Do you think there is anything to this idea? Does industry make a difference, or size of the firm? So maybe in manufacturing relational capital is not so important but in retail it is.
Another implication is that you contract with humans; you constantly negotiate and renegotiate relationships. Relationships take more time to develop, and you must nurture them to keep them positive.
What does it mean for us as leaders? What would you do differently tomorrow if you were measuring relational capital with all the stakeholders who surround you, and if you were accountable for improving all of those relationships. Which ones would you have to work on first?
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