Making Peer Groups Effective: Lessons from BP's Experiences

The formation of ‘peer groups’ within a company can bring together managers from different units for knowledge sharing and mutual learning. Yet such groups tend to deliver modest benefits rather than helping to transform the company's performance. BP, however, set up a system of peer groups and...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inLong range planning Vol. 38; no. 5; pp. 429 - 443
Main Author Goold, Michael
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Elsevier Ltd 01.10.2005
Pergamon Press Inc
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Summary:The formation of ‘peer groups’ within a company can bring together managers from different units for knowledge sharing and mutual learning. Yet such groups tend to deliver modest benefits rather than helping to transform the company's performance. BP, however, set up a system of peer groups and claims to have derived major benefits from them. This article attempts to find out why. Among the lessons learned are the importance of the composition of peer groups, the need for a performance culture with clear deliverables, the value of self-management processes, and the role of top management support. Peer groups are suitable for encouraging collaboration in companies that wish to preserve business unit autonomy and avoid strong corporate functions. But peer groups are less suitable for performance optimisation than for performance improvement, and are less able to bring about some types of collaboration. Therefore different sorts of peer processes may be needed by different companies and at different stages in their development.
ISSN:0024-6301
1873-1872
DOI:10.1016/j.lrp.2005.06.002