Executive growth constraints within modern enterprises are increasingly traced back to internal leadership capacity rather than macro market forces. According to corporate governance researchers at Harde Business School, corporate expansion typically stalls not because of a sudden loss of consumer demand or revenue, but because foundational management systems fail to keep pace with the operational complexities of scaling up.
To address this structural management gap, the institution has launched its Business Leadership Executive Programme (BLEP) in Lagos. The specialized curriculum is engineered to help business owners, C-suite executives, and senior managers transition away from survival-driven, informal operations toward disciplined, institutional corporate governance.
1. Decoding the “Leadership Gap” in Scaling Firms
Speaking to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), the Chief Executive Officer of Harde Business School, Mr. Dami Oguntunde, explained that a business often outgrows its founder’s early habits. When an enterprise reaches its secondary growth phase, relying on hard work and founder passion alone is no longer enough to sustain performance in fast-moving, unpredictable markets.
The program addresses several key warning signs that indicate a company’s operations are starting to break down under the pressure of scaling:
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Systemic Stagnation: Revenue and consumer demand remain steady, but operational output stalls due to disorganized workflow systems.
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Decision-Making Bottlenecks: Growth slows down because all choices are centralized around a single founder, leaving teams waiting for constant direction.
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Execution Friction: Internal teams struggle to execute goals due to unclear corporate strategies, low accountability, and weak performance metrics.
2. The Multidisciplinary BLEP Curriculum
To help executives move past these organizational hurdles, the executive program moves away from purely theoretical business lessons. Instead, it utilizes an interactive, case-study-driven learning approach that places participants directly inside complex, real-world business scenarios.
The curriculum covers six core corporate disciplines designed to strengthen operational performance and long-term business sustainability:
| Core Corporate Discipline | Strategic Executive Delivery Target |
| Corporate Strategy & Agility | Formulating data-driven plans to maintain market share during economic volatility. |
| Financial Engineering | Optimizing working capital cycles, managing cash flows, and refining capital allocation. |
| Operational Efficiency | Designing automated, repeatable workflow systems to reduce overhead expenses. |
| Disruptive Innovation | Developing new business models and leveraging modern technology to enter fresh markets. |
| Corporate Governance | Building independent board structures, ensuring compliance, and setting up ethical controls. |
| Strategic People Management | Aligning team performance with corporate targets and designing succession plans. |
3. Building Resilient B2B Professional Networks
Oguntunde noted that many professionals are forced to shoulder massive corporate responsibilities before receiving formal training on how to lead effectively. The executive program is structured to provide that needed guidance, helping managers lead with greater confidence, structural discipline, and a clearer view of risk management.
Beyond the formal coursework, the program serves as a high-level peer network. By connecting corporate leaders across different industries, the platform allows executives to share practical operational solutions, explore cross-sector partnerships, and build more resilient, structured organizations capable of driving long-term economic impact.
