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A Pioneer at A1: Being Agile at Austria's Leading Communications Provider

Michaela Huber-Kroneisl introduced agile structures and new feedback cultures at A1 to foster greater self-organization.

New Feedback Culture, New Roles, a New Understanding of Leadership

Michaela Huber-Kroneisl has adopted a completely new attitude towards leadership, and she has given strategic purchasing at A1 a thorough shake-up together with her colleagues. The WU Executive Academy's “Pioneers of the 21st Century” program has provided her with a wealth of significant input for transforming herself and her organization.

Ein großes Blatt an der Wand mit dem Titel „Ihre Gedanken zum Thema Führung“ zeigt verschiedene Haftnotizen. Die Zettel enthalten Wörter wie „Wertschätzung“, „Vernetzung“, „Leidenschaft“ und „Bestärken“. Das Blatt ist mit Klebeband auf einer Holzoberfläche befestigt.-WU Executive Academy ©WU Executive Academy

Michaela Huber-Kroneisl's professional track record is a textbook example of an executive career. After having earned a degree in business administration with special emphasis on controlling, she started working as a junior controller at mobilkom austria, which, at the time, was a newly founded company that had a start-up feeling to it. She was soon promoted to the position of area controller, moved on to become the head of cost accounting and, aged less than 30, took over responsibility for CMO board controlling and thus the controlling affairs of important business areas. When the previously hived-off mobilkom and its parent company, Telekom Austria, re‑merged in 2010, Michaela Huber-Kroneisl made yet another career move to become the head of a department dealing with financial matters in customer service, a role that also involved leading a team of some 70 employees - classic executive jobs in a classic hierarchy. Following an internal restructuring, she decided to change jobs within A1 and joined the strategic-purchasing team, again in an executive capacity.

Much has changed in over a year. In strategic purchasing - and in many other areas of the A1 group - no stone has been left unturned when it comes to New Work. Michaela Huber-Kroneisl and her colleague Andreas Hofer have set up an agile unit: The five departments responsible for strategic purchasing have been merged, and roles and responsibilities have been re-distributed among employees in order to reduce redundancies and overlaps. Employees now make many decisions on their own in their respective fields of activity. Today, Michaela Huber-Kroneisl and Andreas Hofer are the only executives with personnel responsibility and act as Heads of People & Resource Management.

Have-to-Know-It-All Turned Learner

Michaela Huber-Kroneisl has seen her role as an executive change fundamentally. In addition to her executive role, she also has operative roles.

As an executive, she no longer delegates tasks or gives orders, but: “I foster my relationships with employees, make sure they do work that suits them and support them as a kind of coach. It's much better when team members make their own decisions.” Many one-to-one meetings, reports, approvals and briefings that used to be required when there was a traditional hierarchy are no longer needed today; things are discussed in the different project teams if and when necessary. This has made life a lot easier for Michaela Huber-Kroneisl: “I no longer have to know all the subject-matter details but can focus my attention on managing people”. Hence, she has more time to address the needs of the individuals behind the roles. Her understanding of leadership has also changed on a personal level: “Today, I treat those whom I lead much more as equal partners. Time and again, I am a learner who asks employees for information - they are the subject-matter experts.” According to Michaela Huber-Kroneisl, agile working is still a rarity when it comes to cross-functional roles: “But we see that it really works.”

Feedback with a Difference

Michaela Huber-Kroneisl also established a new feedback culture. “It is important to show appreciation for what people do. But as executives, we are workwise no longer as close to employees as we used to be. What we have realized is that the feedback given to the individual employee needs to come much more from the team. The program has been tremendously helpful in this context,” she says. This approach has proved hugely successful: The peer feedback that people have received by talking to their colleagues has been highly appreciative. Her training has also encouraged Michaela Huber-Kroneisl to let go even more as an executive and “to convey to employees even more why we implement certain concepts”. The program ended a short while ago; the agile transformation continues. “We, Andreas and I, have many more ideas,” she laughs.

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