Wednesday, June 2, 2010

'There's a place for mining short-term opportunities, but too many are doing this at the expense of building out their long-term strategy'

by John Hagel, Co-chairman, Deloitte LLP Center for the Edge

"It’s not just the economy that seems to be inching back into a recovery these days. Most of the executives I talk to lately are also in recovery mode, emerging from the bunker mentality that has marked their every working day for the last year or two. They’re looking at new opportunities and trying to make sense of the new reality that has emerged. A few are already in M&A mode, bolstered by the feeling that they are once again on firm financial footing for the long term. As a group, they’re focused on seizing short-term opportunities before they disappear.

"I understand that. There’s definitely a place for mining short-term opportunities to support future growth. But too many of the people I talk to are doing this at the expense of building out their long-term strategy. I don’t want to strike too grim a note, but it’s simply a fact that long-term trends are working against us.


"In our recent book, The Power of Pull, my coauthors (John Seely Brown and Lang Davison) and I summarize the metrics we developed for the Shift Index – the first attempt to quantify the longer-term trends that have been reshaping the business landscape over the past four decades. Of the 25 metrics in the Shift Index, one in particular stands out: return on assets for all public companies in the US. Since 1965, return on assets has collapsed by 75 percent - a sustained and substantial erosion in performance. Just as bad, there is no evidence of any flattening of this trend, much less turning it around.

"What does this mean? It provides strong evidence that any “recovery” is merely a short-term relaxation of pressure and that there will be no “back to normal.” We often hear executives talk about the “Red Queen” effect, where they feel they are running faster and faster to stay in the same place. ))The actual situation is far worse: we are running faster and faster and falling farther and farther behind. There is no reason to believe that the long-term performance erosion will not continue.

"The key question is what to do about it. Market economies are generally successful in spawning innovative new approaches to overcome existing performance pressures. That has not yet happened here. The fact that this trend has continued over such a long period suggests that the causes of the performance erosion are deeply embedded in our current management practices and institutions.

"Companies need to first recognize how the sources of value creation have shifted. In the past, economic value creation was built around a company’s ability to “own” knowledge. Today, the key to creating more value is rooted in the ability to participate in a growing number of diverse knowledge flows, to more rapidly replenish the company’s knowledge reserves. This is closely related to the pull approach, which seeks to develop scalable pull platforms that amplify a company’s ability to draw out the right people and resources – when they need them, where they need them.

"To be sure, for most companies these are very big steps that will require major changes in the areas of management and organization. But the option – ignoring long-term trends and hoping for the best – isn’t really an option at all for companies that want to come out on top in the long run."

Posted via email from The Future Café: People, Policy, Trends, Technology, Leadership, Foresight, Innovation, Design