Archive for the ‘Strategy’ Category

Business Models Rule

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

Michael Rappa has a great article summarizing the various types of business models. It is a concise way of analyzing various possible models for a startup idea. The same service or product may be adopted to offline and online business models and have an impact on the overall success of the business.

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He categorizes all business models into the following groups: Brokerage, Advertising, Infomediary, Merchant, Manufacturer (Direct), Affiliate, Community, Subscription, Utility A similar study from MIT classifies it differently and also points out that the selection of the model fundamentally determines the success of the venture as much as the product or service:

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Alex Osterwalder is one of the consultants focused on business model creation vs product idea creation. For many great companies business model was much more important than product idea (Dell, Toyota). These companies realized that well executed business models are much harder to imitate than products.

Technorati Tags: business ideas, business models, Enterprise 2.0

Growth and Efficiency Cycles

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

It is interesting to watch how companies go through growth and efficiency cycles and how that changes behavior internally. In many companies big ticket projects have a lot of financial scrutiny in times where efficiency (cost reduction) is king and secondary when the company is in a growth mode and many initiatives become "strategic". Most managers tend to hold off on their pet projects until growth times instead of facing the scrutiny of the CFO when all spend is being monitored. In recent years many industries experienced great growth, massive investment in infrastructure is taking place and huge structure changes are shaping up from industry consolidation to international expansion. The economy is on a tear. This was visible in metals, oil & gas, real estate, telecom and others. Many of these projects have the strategic intent of the CEO behind them as their main fuel. Most will not be great investments. As this holds true in entire economies and it certainly is visible in companies. Corrections will happen and tough questions get asked about value of past investments, returns or lack thereof. And the cycle continues. In my work I see companies in different industries co-exist where one is in a growth mode and one is in cost containment. Going from one meeting to another is like crossing some wormhole between parallel universes where each company would find the other's management totally out of touch with reality. One group launching projects one after another, integrating acquisitions while the other group is shutting down factories and downsizing. All in the same day. The same year. The same country.

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Technorati Tags: Acquisitions, Boom cycles, business growth, investments, business cycles, Strategic Planning

Magic Quadrant for Teams

Thursday, March 22nd, 2007

Early in the year most companies go through performance evaluations and the necessary rating systems. They typically answer the question of who is an “A”, “B” and “C” player with the inherent assumption that every person can become an idealized “A” player and in fact organizations can be built with all-A teams. I’m not going to argue the statistical futility of this effort, rather point to what is really important in an organization:

Build a world class team with a mix of A/B/C players, that is a high diversity high performance team.

A client friend of mine asked a similar question during the performance season. He had some great thinkers and some outstanding doers in his team. Sometime both. He started plotting them on the magic quadrant, a matrix that compares ability to execute and the ability to formulate and articulate a vision or a plan.

The (simplified) result is below. What is interesting is what he did with all of that. He ended up with 4 categories of people:

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  • Leaders - who can define a vision / outcome and have the energy, commitment to follow-through till the results are there
  • Innovators - who come up with awesome ideas, plans, goals but never actually deliver the results
  • Performers - who will climb any mountain, break down any wall to reach an objective but have a hard time plotting strategy
  • Apprentice - who need a lot of direction in both planning and execution of the tasks

He had A/B/C players in all these categories but decided to team up his Innovators and Performers on projects so they have a great plan and they execute on them. He also made sure his well-rounded leaders were put in charge of mentoring the Followers.

The jury is still out on the experiment but the team loves the clarity around the roles much better than being given a “B” again. Now they can all be “A” players in their own game without having to become something they are not.

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The Future That Has Happened

Monday, December 11th, 2006

A visionary presentation by Jeremy Seigel is always a treat if you like to guess where your money is going.
In our latest Greater Philadelphia Venture Group Luncheon he presented findings from his latest book, the Future for Investors.

Siegel, notorious for calling market tops and bottoms far in advance dedicated his speech less to the market but to wealth management. His insights were useful regardless what level your investments are.

A couple of highlights from Siegel:

  • Over the next 25-30 years there will be a tectonic shift in the ratio of working vs retired people in the US. The ratio will move from 5:1 to 2.5:1 in only 20 years. This will cause a massive shift in liquidity of assets. The relative diminishing income earning part of society will have less and less current income (in relative terms) to buy the assets of the increasing retiring baby boomer group.
  • Retiring baby boomers “cannot eat” their wealth - i.e. you have to sell your appreciated assets (real estate, securities, etc) in order to get current income for consumption. Unless there are sufficient buyers of these appreciated assets there can be a very significant correction (30-50%) of the value of these assets to find supply/demand equilibrium if only US buyers can buy these assets.
  • To dispose appreciated assets (real estate, businesses, investments) at highest value the buyers need to come from outside the US economy - primarily from large non-aging societies - India and China. A large majority of these assets will be acquired by Asian and Eastern European consumers and investors.
  • As a result there will be a shift in economic contribution with India, China controlling more of productive assets and over time eclipsing the size of the US economy. Today 7% of the capital is in the developing world, by 2050 67% of capital will be controlled by the current developing countries.
  • Unless these transfer of assets are enabled the baby boomers cannot dispose of their assets and will have to retire at a much higher age (if at all) probably pushing their mid-to late 70s.

So as a society either we work into old age or we yield our global capital leadership to the less demographically challenged emerging economies.

He also pointed out that currently stocks are better investments than debt or real estate - but the audience was already reallocating their portfolios to distant relatives in Beijing…

There is little for policy to influence these trends. As Siegel put it: “Demographics is the future that has happened”.

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Salesforce.com the SAP of the Saas World?

Friday, October 20th, 2006

Controversial as usual, Nick Carr’s insight into Salesforce.com’s Apex strategy is still definitely worth pondering. Almost all enterprise technology vendors are fighting for the Ultimate Platform or Infrastructure Utility position. Carr writes:

Now, I understand the rationale for the [salesforce.com's] decision: the infrastructure is the product. While Salesforce’s move opens up new opportunities for the firm, it also dramatically widens the competition it will face. Everyone from Microsoft to Google to Amazon is moving into the business of being an infrastructure utility. And, in an age of standardization, it will be interesting to see how customers react to the idea of running their enterprise applications in a private language. Is Salesforce the SAP of the SaaS world - and is that a good or a bad thing?

So the on-premise world has the choice of IBM’s Websphere, SAP’s Netweaver, Oracle’s Fusion MW and Microsoft .net as the unifying architecture. Of these SAP, Oracle and Microsoft command a dizzying array of 3rd party applications to “plug-in” to the platform and provide both functional richness and flexibility to the offering.

While Oracle and SAP have both on-demand and on-premise offerings Salesforce.com has the entire architecture based on SaaS and therefore did not have platform-play aspirations until this last week. With Apex it is now offering a “Platform through the Web” proposition which will broaden the platform wars that raged primarily on premise.

Maybe winning in Enterprise 2.0 will ultimately be about creating a standard platform that unifies on-premise and on-demand.

Communicating the revolutionary platform change in non-techno speak to the board rooms has been challenging for most CIOs.
Now that we are back in the growth (innovation) stage of the economic cycle in most industries and technology innovation dollars are still consumed by maintaining unwieldy infrastructure in most IT shops, the promise of the Platform, the liberation of process and technology innovation is bigger pressure than ever. Technology and process complexity is the ultimate barrier to growth so most companies will ultimately move to an infrastructure utility and this transition will be very interesting to watch over the next decade being fought out between the on-premise giants and the SaaS challengers.

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Strategic Creativity Killers

Wednesday, October 18th, 2006

It’s the season for strategic planning for most companies. Despite what I stated in my earlier post I still believe that business model changes are happening at an increasing rate. If you are like most companies, strategic planning takes place at some offsite in a reasonable climate with the leadership brainstorming away.

Dave Dafour’s list reminds us that this one time in a year we really, really need to think outside the box.

Here is his partial list of Creativity Killers: (please avoid them at all costs…)

  • Our place is different
  • We tried that before.
  • It costs too much.
  • That’s not my job.
  • They’re too busy to do that.
  • We don’t have the time.
  • Not enough help.
  • Not that again.

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Complexity as Growth Killer

Wednesday, October 18th, 2006

All of us technology professionals were supposed to make business simpler. Well, we failed. As I am working with companies with hundreds if not thousands of enterprise applications and multiple competing business models and processes in the same company it makes you wonder where this is all going.

The new buzzword in business improvement is complexity management. Most companies still do not understand the correlation between increased complexity (products, technologies, organizations) and the resulting growth or lack thereof.

Harvard Business Review had a great article on this topic titled Innovation vs Complexity:

As a company increases the pace of innovation, its profitability often begins to stagnate or even erode. The reason can be summed up in one word: complexity. The continual launch of new products and line extensions adds complexity throughout a company’s operations, and, as the costs of managing that complexity multiply, margins shrink.

They also point out that business wealth is created in the simplification of interactions between systems, processes and organizations.

That is where most studies are going. Internal complexity becomes the number one prohibitor of growth. It is not lack of customers, lack of talent, lack of products. in fact it is due to too many products, services, channels and talent. All major strategy shops are exploring this topic in recent articles from ATKearney, Bain, and Booz-Allen and McKinsey.

Complexity comes in many forms from product portfolio proliferation through diverging technologies to non-standard processes.

If you can afford the top strategy firms they could send you back to the drawing board and ask you to design your business from scratch as if your were selling one product to one customer. Then keep adding product lines and channels without adding unnecessary organizations or processes. It is amazing how an exercise like that paints a real best-in-class view of your business.

In my research complexity and uncertainty feed on each other. When businesses face uncertainty (and who doesn’t) they tend to create what I call safety buffers by adding people, procedures and technologies. Depending on the business it may be

  • excess inventory or capacity because the management does not trust the planning process or technology
  • excess people because the human glue is needed to ensure information flow in divergent processes
  • excess process and technology solutions because divergent organizations need more procedures and technology
  • excess innovation to meet unspecified customer needs

Complexity management may one day give us some guidelines on how to simplify and standardize businesses and show us companies that did go back to the proverbial drawing board. Until then new technologies will need to focus on simplicity, standardization and thereby making a small contribution to that elusive concept: sustainable growth.

As the Booz-Allen study so aptly stated when describing the role of technology providers:

Process complexity is one of the silent killers of profitability. Any time a new product is added or changed or a service level is increased without addressing complexity the result is a process that is a little more cumbersome and a little more costly. Over the long haul, many good strategies go wrong simply because of the drag created by all those incrementally increasing costs.

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On Demand and Process Optimization

Monday, October 16th, 2006

Zoli had a great insight of a potential “Blue Ocean” emerging from the Saas/On Demand space. Saas vendors hold customer data and could develop the ability to offer statistical services ranging from benchmarking through process management to process optimization.
Today these offerings have not taken hold but I can imagine selective opt-in by businesses for higher value-add services like:

  • Process benchmarking - based on transaction data available voluntary participants could receive real-time comparison of their performance against their peers. These would be for areas not considered competitive edge, most notably finance (headcount allocation, transaction costs, cost of service, billing cycles, DSO), human resources (rev per employee, retention metrics, training metrics, etc), procurement (supplier performance, DPO, etc).
  • Process management and optimization - develop systematic recommendations on how to tweak workflow, process steps to have a more streamlined, lower cost process. The system can monitor everything from dispute management (DSO) through supplier performance and recommend corrective actions (replace suppliers with a better one).

If we couple low user cost of on-demand with process optimization typically provided only by large-scale business process reengineering with ERP/CRM enablement then we have real value proposition. Low cost is important but as most companies move to growth mode from efficiency optimization we need more than cost savings to make on demand stick.

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The Strategic Plan That Isn’t

Friday, October 6th, 2006

It is the season of corporate planning in most companies with various senior leadership teams moving to offsite locations reflecting on their strategic vision. Nowadays not only the CEO’s leadership team develops strategic plans but almost any function.

In fact I was asked to comment on a “Strat Plan” of an IT department at a client and I had to point out that their most important project “retiring AS400 servers” really had no strategic value.

Strategy is the most overused business term and most people forget that in business it means competitive advantage or as Michael Porter defined it:

It means deliberately choosing a different set of activities to deliver a unique mix of value.

I have to agree with Tom Peters when he argues that most strategic planning efforts really aren’t strategic at all and he quotes various strategy gurus to prove the point. Henry Mintzberg (former chairman of Strategic Planning Society) in his classic book warned about the decline of strategic planning 12 years ago and it came to roost.

You know you are working on something strategic if the knowledge of your strategic plan would have directors breaking out in sweat in boardrooms at your competition.

Let’s just call most of the annual planning efforts operating plans. I do not think it is a derogatory word and while it may take away some of the sense of significance of the drafters of such plan it does remind us that gaining competitive ground needs something extra to happen.

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The notion that operating plans are strategic plans build on various favorite myths (and probably many more):

Senior management role makes you strategic. You need to think about it. Unless you are brought on board from a strategy firm or your company’s corporate development or M&A team you have not spent any time thinking about strategy. This is not a skill you grow on the day of your promotion. Many organizations (typically sales and product development) naturally have competitive streaks but they hardly dominate.

Long term plans are strategic. No. Plans that edge out competition are strategic. Everything else is tactical. Well, long term plans are long term with broader margins of error and lower accuracy. Unless they focus on what gives you practical advantage in the market they have no strategic relevance.

We are clear on our competitive advantage. You can ask various groups in the same company about their competitive advantage and you will get answers ranging from “we hire the best”, “we are lowest cost operation”, “we have the best channels”, “best products” and almost always “great service”. Almost never the same answer. Therefore it will not add up to a plan.

Strategy happens at the top. Well, no. Strategy happens in the trenches and while strategic thinking should happen on the top most often only the governance (metrics, targets) are established by the CxO team. Very often the line organizations are left to their own devices on figuring out how they are going to reach those targets and by doing so actually formulate strategy (which is about beating the competition).

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Strategic Advantage and Strategic Rewards

Thursday, October 5th, 2006

Even companies that understand what their strategic advantage is have the hardest time aligning reward structures to match the strategy.

In many cases a firm may break away from the pack in manufacturing with superior customer service but maintain higher rewards for engineers and backoffice functions due to industry conventions. Similarly a service company shifting to productize its offerings may still reward their professional services staff better than their newfound development or engineering staff.

Many of the same companies believe that they are paying market rates but that may not be enough. If they are pursuing a differentiation strategy than they will have to attract and reward the most differentiated (best) employees and suppliers in that category to maintain competitive advantage.

It means that in areas where you want to have competitive advantage you will have to pay top dollar and in other areas you will pay the “going market rate”.

Jack Welch in the book Winning pointed out time after time that companies have a hardest type assessing talent and retain the highest performers and get rid of the lowest performers. In this sense it is true of employees and suppliers.

I have yet to meet a company that does not believe that they hire only A-players... Who is hiring the B and C players? It is an unfortunate and inefficient myth. As a motivational speaker told us in our first partner meeting in my E&Y days: “Half the people in this room are below average”. It is true and not necessarily a bad thing. You will not be able to reward and motivate the A-players in non-strategic areas and similarly you have to create great opportunities and rewards for A-players in strategic areas.

Companies that under-reward players in strategic areas will eventually erode their competitive advantage which holds true for most companies with one size fits all compensation structures and procurement procedures.

To win, you have to reward the real A players in your areas of strategic advantage and happily hire and retain the B and C players everywhere else and keep those motivated with specific performance metrics.

The following table may serve as a strategy guide for building the right teams. My earlier post also describes characteristics of A-players in any successful environments.

Strategy Reward

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