I moved to Beijing just over three years
ago after living my entire life in the UK.
Living in a different country not only
gives you a different perspective on life but also exposes you to different
ways of thinking. On a grand scale you can see the difference between how a
society based on Judeo-Christian values approaches a problem versus one based
on Buddhist or Confucian ideals.
On a smaller scale it can just be the
difference between what types of books and films are popular in one country
versus another country.
“Gray Rhinos” are one such example – in
China you cannot go to a business meeting without someone bringing them up.
Yes you read that right. China is obsessed
with “Gray Rhinos”.
China’s President Xi Jinping warned against
“Gray Rhinos” in January 2019 and China’s central bank are worried they will destabilize
the whole country!
They are not worried that herds of wild animals
from Africa will stampede across Asia though.
Rather they are worried about a term first
coined by policy analyst
Michele Wucker. She uses the “Gray Rhino” is a metaphor for a problem
that we know is coming - we can see the dust cloud on the horizon long before
the charging animal comes into view - but all too often we don’t take the
necessary actions to avert the disaster until we see the actual rhino, by which
time it is far too late!
Even though Michele Wucker is American the
idea has really struck a chord in China with slowing economic growth, an aging
demographic and the signs of other social and economic problems which have yet
to come to fruition.
Obvious examples of “Gray Rhinos” in the UK
are issues such as climate change, the state pensions’ black hole and of course
the funding of the NHS. Everyone can see the growing dust clouds associated
with the problem but we don’t seem to be taking the necessary steps to solve
the problem while we still have the chance.
For me diversity is possibly the biggest “Gray
Rhino” facing British broadcasters today.
The demography of the UK is changing. By
2031 one in five Britons will be BAME (Black Asian and Minority Ethnic) and by
2051 it is forecast
that almost one third of the population will be BAME.
All the research shows this growing segment
of the population prefers streaming services more than their white counterparts
and feels that services like Netflix do a better job at representing their lives
than programmes produced by broadcasters such as the BBC.
Anyone who knows anything about the UK
television industry, diversity and the UK’s changing demographic can see the
dust clouds of the charging “Gray Rhino” coming.
So if everyone can see a problem coming why
are people so bad at dealing with “Gray Rhinos”?
Here are a few theories:
First, many “Gray Rhinos” are often created
by our own existing working practices and biases. Admitting that we are the
problem requires us to challenge ourselves and change everything that has
brought us success in the past. That is no easy exercise.
Second, politicians and executives are far
more likely to focus on the short-term, trying to muddle through and hoping to
push any hard decisions on to the next person in charge.
Which brings us to the third, and possibly the
most important reason we fail to deal with “Gray Rhinos”. Solving them is hard
and fraught with danger. If leaders make the wrong the decisions they can
actually make matters worse. As Michele
Wucker writes; “choosing the wrong response to a problem can hurt a leader
more than doing nothing.” (Take the example of global warming; should we invest
in wind, solar or wave energy? Making the wrong decision could cost a leader his
job – doing nothing but leaving it to you successor might be the easier
course of action)
We can see examples of all three problems
in broadcasters trying to deal with the oncoming diversity “Gray Rhino”
First most television executives in the UK
have become successful by NOT properly embracing diversity. It is incredibly
hard to change everything that has brought you success so far in your life and
career for a problem you hope is still way off.
Second, you can see how broadcasters are
continuing to muddle through. For example all the broadcasters place their Heads
of Diversity within their HR departments and do not give them a seat at the executive
board level. Considering this could be the issue that could make or break UK
broadcasting seeing the job as just a case of increasing diversity statistics
rather than a more strategic role with real power is a classic case of muddling
through.
And third dealing with diversity requires
some very hard leadership decisions. It may require adopting completely new
business models more in line with Netflix and streaming services rather than
the traditional broadcasting model for example. Or it may require a completely
new way of measuring success and justifying that to shareholders (in the case
of ITV and Channel 5) or politicians and the public (in the case of Channel 4
and BBC). And it will almost definitely require serious experimentation of the
type of programmes broadcasters produce and the type of people who make them.
But while we might understand the reasons
why large organisations do not tackle massive “Gray Rhinos”, experience has
shown that invariably inaction is far worse and costlier than taking action. And
the cost of not tackling this “Gray Rhino” is British broadcasters run the risk
of totally losing large parts of their audience. So maybe it is time for all
the British broadcasters to look at the example of China and confront the Gray Rhino
racing towards them before it is too late.
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