Profitable Growth: Release Internal Growth Brakes and Bring Your Company to the Next Level
By Guido Quelle and Alan Weiss
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Profitable Growth - Guido Quelle
Guido QuelleManagement for ProfessionalsProfitable Growth2013Release Internal Growth Brakes and Bring Your Company to the Next Level10.1007/978-3-642-32787-2_1© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2012
1. How Long Do You Want to Tolerate That Your Organization is Hindering Growth?
Guido Quelle¹
(1)
Mandat Managementberatung GmbH, Dortmund, Germany
Guido Quelle
Email: [email protected]
Abstract
Do you ever wake up in the morning and think Now let’s do everything we can to make sure nothing changes for a while
? If you did, you wouldn’t be reading this book. If we want to talk about how profitable growth can be achieved, an essential prerequisite is that we agree that growth is indispensable to securing progress, prosperity and fulfillment. Of course from time to time the media puts out grim scenarios implying that growth is bad per se, that we have nearly reached the limits of growth, and that all those who make growth a priority are automatically ruthless neo-capitalists; and of course it’s true that there will always be some people who jump on board and use theories on the alleged limits of growth for their own purposes.
Let’s be clear: Those who don’t grow, die. Those who call for putting growth on hold for a while underestimate the internal drive human beings feel when they pursue a new idea. Championing stasis equates to negligence; calling for a global hold on growth is paramount to calling for the world to hold its breath—and both approaches, if pursued long enough, end in the same way: in death.
In Chap. 1 you will learn why profitable growth doesn’t just focus on the last line of you balance sheet, why innovations are the motors of growth, what the lethargy of the individual means to growth, and you will finally get to know archetypical brakes to growth.
1.1 Grow or Get Out of the Way: Those Who Don’t Grow Die
Do you ever wake up in the morning and think Now let’s do everything we can to make sure nothing changes for a while
? If you did, you wouldn’t be reading this book. If we want to talk about how profitable growth can be achieved, an essential prerequisite is that we agree that growth is indispensable to securing progress, prosperity and fulfillment. Of course from time to time the media puts out grim scenarios implying that growth is bad per se, that we have nearly reached the limits of growth, and that all those who make growth a priority are automatically ruthless neo-capitalists; and of course it’s true that there will always be some people who jump on board and use theories on the alleged limits of growth for their own purposes.
Let’s be clear: Those who don’t grow, die. Those who call for putting growth on hold for a while underestimate the internal drive human beings feel when they pursue a new idea. Championing stasis equates to negligence; calling for a global hold on growth is paramount to calling for the world to hold its breath—and both approaches, if pursued long enough, end in the same way: in death.
Growth is indispensable. There will always be someone somewhere on our planet who falls in love with a new idea, who discovers a new goal, who wants to try something new, someone who wants to prove something, and who’s willing to do whatever it takes to do so. As such the call for a stop to growth falls on deaf ears, at both the corporate level (between companies) and the macroeconomic level (between countries). When a company, a nation or an individual ceases to grow, it is nearly 100 % certain that another company, country or person will seize the chance to overtake them.
What underlies nearly every demand for a break in growth, and nearly all attacks on growth in general, is an erroneous assumption about the meaning of growth
and its characteristics. In order to truly grasp what growth means and comprehensively use it to support the positive development of a prospering company—and ultimately a prospering country—we must bear in mind the following:
Growth is a process; it cannot be reduced to a microscopically small timeframe. Even at the corporate level, it is hardly enough to reduce growth to a comparison of different fiscal years. It can be thoroughly sensible for a company to massively invest in the expansion of its product or service range for a number of (consecutive) years even if this means no positive results, provided it is done in the well-founded hope that the new products and/or services will contribute to much higher profitability in the future. For example, if a company makes major investments and lives off of its reserves or even external capital, basing our assessment on the individual fiscal years will invariably lead us to conclude that the company is making serious losses. In contrast, if we look at the fiscal year in which the new products and services were successfully brought to market, we might see enormous growth. But it is more important to consider the process that generated that growth. Instead of the individual fiscal years, we need to focus on the process, which is based on a carefully considered strategy and yields success for years to come. Growth is not a snapshot; it is a movie. As such, optimizing individual fiscal years—let alone individual quarters—from a financial perspective will not greatly help a company.
Growth is not more of the same.
The assumption that growth equates to doing more of the same
is the essential mistake that critics of growth often make, as they argue that growth consumes resources, that it produces surplus, that every product eventually reaches market saturation, etc. The fact of the matter is that growth, when it is correctly understood, has little to do with unthinking repetition and far more to do with active innovation. True growth means recognizing when it is the right time to innovate and stop repeating your old practices. Companies that pursue growth through repetition are operating on very shaky ground, and their shareholders would be well advised to either initiate fundamental changes or to at least make sure they get out in time. Growth means innovating and listening, it means offering a benefit for the consumers of your products or services and time and again demonstrating that benefit to them. Understanding growth in this way takes the wind out of many critics’ sails.
Profitable growth does not have exclusively financial aspects, and concentrating on this dimension alone is another common error. When we talk about profitable growth, of course better economic performance is part of the equation. But it is not the only relevant factor. Profitable growth also encompasses a company’s growth in quality, its creation of more value, its becoming more valuable and more attractive to customers. Further, customer quality, employee quality, and the quality of goods and services must be improved. Lastly, growth means higher quality in processes, organization and working methods (Fig. 1.1).
A307556_1_En_1_Fig1_HTML.gifFig. 1.1
The foundations of profitable growth—correctly understood
Your organization needs to understand what you mean by growth. These three general differentiating criteria alone offer plenty of material for reflection and discussion. What is important is that you take the time to discuss these aspects in your organization thoroughly and in detail; otherwise you will fail to use all of the resources at your disposal to push forward profitable growth in your company. At the core of successful companies lies the desire to implement improvements of benefit to customers and company alike. One of our client companies has established the internal motto It’s never enough.
Admittedly companies don’t necessarily need to go so far as to make this principle the basis of their conduct—after all, an It’s-never-enough
attitude can spark a great deal of dissatisfaction. On the other hand, said company has made it clear that stagnation, let alone setbacks, will not be tolerated. Employees who can identify with the company’s values exemplify its culture of constant improvement, both internally and externally—and the company is one of the most profitable and successful enterprises in its industry worldwide.
If you want to achieve sustainable, profitable growth, there is one thing you can’t lose sight of: In addition to the concrete/factual level—or better said, above it—there is the psychological level. Do you currently have the feeling that you have more ideas than you could implement in your organization? Are you coming to realize that it is your own organization that is hindering growth—and that you’re standing in your own way? How long do you want to tolerate this? In order to generate growth, and to firmly anchor it in a sustainable, sensible basis, it is essential that you reach your employees, and not just intellectually, but also emotionally. Win them over to your vision of growth and make sure that they not only understand it as a sound concept, but also see that it means tangible benefits for them. Who wouldn’t want to be part of a growing, flourishing and respected company that, instead of solely basing its success on optimal financial performance, defines growth comprehensively?
1.2 Innovations as Motors of Growth
Once we have recognized that growth is far more than just doing more of the same,
it means we must pay special attention to innovations. In doing so, we should not limit ourselves to considering only product-related innovations, whether innovations in current ones or the development of wholly new ones; service innovations are certainly also worth our time. This is especially true for companies that offer a service to complement their products, and those that use a service to better sell their products.
An automaker’s choices during the 2009 crisis in the automotive industry provide us an excellent example of a service innovation that promoted sales:
In January 2009, the American automakers GM, Ford and Chrysler had to face drops in sales of up to 55 % compared to the previous year for the US market; their Japanese counterparts recorded a 34 % drop. Some German automakers were comparably well off—Volkswagen showed losses of only
12 %—, while others weren’t so lucky, as Mercedes’ 53 % plummet attests.
Yet one automaker remained fairly unimpressed by all of these disastrous figures, as it succeeded in boosting sales by nine percent over the previous year. The company in question was one no one would have expected such performance from at the time, namely Hyundai. Hyundai had accomplished something that put its competitors to shame, and it did so using a service innovation; its products weren’t changed a bit.
How? Hyundai had recognized growing unemployment and/or the risk of its customers becoming unemployed as a serious obstacle to growth, and offered an insurance policy together with its leasing program that covered cases of unemployment for a certain length of time, so that any Hyundai customer who lost their job through no fault of their own could continue to drive their leased vehicle without incurring additional costs. If they failed to find a new job within the term of the policy, they had to return the vehicle; but if they managed to find new work, their contract continued as if nothing had happened. The result: Nine percent higher sales than the year before.
I once cited this example in a speech, and a member of the audience complained that it wasn’t a fair one, as Hyundai had grown upon a much smaller basis and the other automakers cited all sold far more vehicles on the US market. I don’t know their precise sales figures, but I don’t find them relevant, either, as the fact remains that, in a field of competition that was in terrible shape, Hyundai succeeded in creating the same growth its competitors could have—or they could have at least used the innovation to significantly counteract their enormous losses. By the way, the Hyundai‐Kia Group has since made such strides that it is now considered the Volkswagen Group’s chief rival, a position once held by Toyota.
This example shows us a service that helped to more effectively sell the company’s current product range. Product innovations can be evolutionary in nature or quantum leaps. Evolutionary innovations are e.g. the development from televisions with cathode ray tubes to their modern LED offspring. The principle remains unchanged: Moving images are transmitted and displayed. The technology has advanced: the images are sharper, the screen is larger, and the unit itself is flatter and more stylish. But the principle is the same as it always was: Television signals are received and processed. True, televisions can now also project signals from other sources like computers, gaming systems, digital cameras, etc. But for customers the principle hasn’t changed, even if the technology is now dramatically superior.
In contrast, the advances in digital telephones are a good example of a quantum leap. Whereas initially you could only telephone with them—and later, could also send text messages—, actual telephoning is becoming increasingly overshadowed in today’s smartphones. Manufacturers have identified young people—who know all the ins and outs of their smartphone, use different communications channels, and make the device the center of their day-to-day life—as a target group with great potential for growth.
At the same time, telephoning is falling by the wayside. Social networks, GPS and location services, the telephone as remote control, gaming system, or digital memory—consumers simply use their mobile devices in a wholly new way, as a result of which the telephone has mutated into our constant companion in every situation.
The Internet, too, holds a wealth of further quantum leaps in store for us. Walt Mossberg, the Wall Street Journal’s IT guru, once stated at an informal gathering in Naples, Florida, that in a few years’ time no one will still say: I’m going online now,
just like no one says I’m plugging in the toaster now.
Numerous quantum leaps, which will in turn serve as powerful motors of growth, still await us.
The question that presents itself is why there are so many innovations at some companies, and so few at others. As is so often the case, the answer is manifold. One thing we can be sure of, however, is that innovation-intensive companies carry within them a sense of renewal that is exemplified by their leaders. These innovation cultures are often the product of an exceptionally long process that started with someone’s realization that their established behavior and policies no longer contributed to prosperity. From time to time these cultures are also the result of random innovations, which then provided a solid basis for the research into and development of new products and solutions. However, successful companies have understood that it is essential that we predominantly give innovation a chance, and do not leave it up to chance.
Just the word innovation
intimidates some companies and their employees. They read so much into it that they ultimately assume innovation must be far too great in scope to ever be integrated into day-to-day business. What they’re forgetting is that innovation doesn’t have to mean a revolution; it can be evolutionary instead. But, nevertheless, some companies, entrepreneurs, managers and employees dislike change of any kind, as it means changing their comfortable, familiar status. We will return to this point, along with innovation,
in the course of the book (Fig. 1.2).
Fig. 1.2
Typical lifecycle curve Cf.: Quelle, Guido et al., Plan Lead Grow—Systematic Approaches to Success, Münster, p. 106, Ill. 27
The lifecycle curve above is very well known. Why, then, is it so often ignored? Why do companies falsely assume that their products, services, or policies will continue to function unchanged in perpetuity? That which must not, can not be,
is one possible answer. Inductive reasoning is often a hindrance, as it rarely leads to the right conclusions. Just because business is going well today is no reason to assume that the same will be true tomorrow. Someone who’s never had to take their car to the mechanic has no reason to believe this will always be the case. Someone who’s never been to the dentist would be unwise to assume his teeth will always stay healthy. Likewise, a company that has always delivered good financial performance has no guarantee that its future will be equally rosy. Inductive reasoning, i.e., projecting today’s status onto the future without any justification beyond past experience, can create a false sense of security that has been the downfall of many companies and individuals alike.
The fact is that many companies and the people leading them are unaware of where in the lifecycle curve their products and services currently are. Day-to-day business dominates their thinking too much for them to be able to observe from a distance where innovation might be advisable and where it is urgently needed. When drops in sales are recognized, when services aren’t requested as often as before and there are no new products or services in the pipeline to replace them, it’s often far too late.
Figure 1.3 shows the importance of timing. If we assume that developing a product takes a certain amount of time, then logically we need to ensure that this development takes place when products and services are still performing very well. The ideal time for the conceptual start of an innovation is when a product or service has reached a turning point in the S‐curve. Mathematics teaches us that the turning point is the point with the greatest rise, and this momentum must be used and translated into innovative power. In this way, new innovations can be brought to market while a company’s current products and services are still generating growth, and the product/service pipeline is always well stocked.
A307556_1_En_1_Fig3_HTML.gifFig. 1.3
Innovation sequences Cf.: Quelle, Guido et al., Plan Lead Grow—Systematic Approaches to Success, Münster, p. 109, Ill. 28
Of course it’s very easy to agree with this theoretical consideration, but it’s easier said than done. How can we translate theory into practice? We will return to this point later on, when we take a closer look at the character of the R&D department and the characteristics of a growth process.
But there’s one thing we can already say at this point: Crisis situations—even if it may not seem that way at first blush—are excellent opportunities for innovation. The greatest winners in periods of economic recovery are those companies that made targeted innovations and investments during the crisis. While most companies are wholly focused on themselves in order to overcome the (felt or real) crisis, forward-thinking companies make targeted investments to produce an enormous growth boost in the next recovery phase. Of course, this can only work if two conditions are met:
Prior to the crisis, a corporate culture of innovation and renewal was introduced and actively embraced.
Prior to the crisis, available financial resources were used conservatively.
Once the crisis has struck, it can be extremely difficult to quickly undo the mistakes of the past. Companies that are unaccustomed to change, those that only change in response to external pressure or are too afraid of making mistakes, as well as those companies that practice short-sighted financial exploitation, whether in the form of careless management of their financial resources or shareholders lacking in capital, will not be able to lay foundations during the crisis so that they can profit once it’s passed; they will be too focused on securing their own existence, taking short-term measures to do so.
1.3 The Lethargy of the Individual
No one intentionally does bad work. All right, let’s make that almost no one. Almost no one gets up in the morning and says: Today I’ll make sure that my laziness or poor conduct does my company serious damage.
But that does nothing to change the fact that some employees’ work is simply bad. So we need to differentiate between performance and intention. Needless to say, there are various reasons for poor performance. In this section we will concentrate on the lethargy of the individual and the deceptive sense of security generated by groups.
One of the greatest brakes to growth is success. Yes, you read that right: Success makes us tired. Success makes us (feel) secure. Success makes us feel satiated.
The worst thing about goals is when we reach them and have no new ones to pursue; this is equally true for business and personal goals. Growth is only possible when achieving a goal is soon followed by the next goal. Especially in companies, success can be the most important brake to change: The company’s doing fine, turnover is solid, paychecks are issued on time, vendor invoices are paid punctually, and there is a loyal customer base. Until suddenly a competitor offers a more attractive service or product, threatening to erode the customer base. Profits dip slightly, then more seriously, the company starts cutting costs, vendor invoices are paid a bit later, commissions and bonuses are put on hold, there’s a frantic dash to optimize processes, employees are laid off and their positions are not refilled, profits start to crumble, it’s time for serious talks with the bank—a downward spiral.
More often than not, the reason for this type of downward spiral is a satisfaction with what has already been achieved. In phases marked by transitions, by a struggle to grow, and by positive change, many workers are intent on delivering top performance, behavior that can also often be seen in times of crisis. It makes a difference whether they put out good or just mediocre performance; it makes a difference whether they make a deadline or not; and it makes a difference whether they reach their common goal or not.
But once that goal has been reached, many tend to rest on their laurels. Performance sags, there are no attractive new goals, errors start cropping up, and lethargy starts to creep in.
I have made this observation in numerous companies I’ve consulted. Though I don’t want to go so far as to claim this is a perfectly representative observation, it’s safe to say there is a pattern of behavior that is worthy of closer investigation.
The status described above of trusting in your current success is also the result of inductive reasoning. It is rarely due to individual employees, but is instead a question of leadership and an error in leadership, as a result of which the big picture
is not adequately communicated. Leaders who content themselves with having reached a major goal not only waste resources; they endanger their company’s future. After all, what happens after the big goal? It is important to maintain perspective and to look at goals within the overall context of the company’s development. Of course it’s great to be the market leader. But it is far more difficult to stay the market leader—and to do so profitably. Yes, we have to overcome crises. But what’s next? How does the journey continue? Leaders have to communicate perspectives in a timely manner to avoid unwittingly conditioning their staff to simply reach individual goals.
Further, even though changes are constantly demanded of your staff, almost no one is ever taught how deal with them. And many companies fail to make it clear that it does indeed come down to the individual employee—and each and every one—if changes are to be successfully implemented. Here we should bear in mind that leadership means a one-on-one relationship. Those leaders who limit their efforts to leading groups, departments or teams, neglecting the one-on-one relationship in the process, simply do too little.
Making matters worse, a certain size of group tends to generate a false sense of security. Especially in unfamiliar situations, people tend to rely on their colleagues, whom they assume to have a better grip on things. Growth-oriented projects are there to lead employees through precisely these unfamiliar situations. They are change projects, all of which are characterized by the fact that there are zones of insecurity,
which must be traversed. If in such situations everyone counts on the rest of the team to get them through these zones without ever stopping to make sure they know the way, it can threaten the existence of the company (Fig. 1.4).
Fig. 1.4
Growth means overcoming uncertainties
Anyone who has spent any serious time with mountain climbing knows that a rope team can only work if each member is able to master uncertain situations. If the team is walking on a glacier and suddenly one member slips into a crevasse, the others have to work quickly to save them. This calls for mental discipline and knowledge of a learnable technique, the so-called crevasse rescue.
If everyone assumes his or her teammates not only know this technique but can also teach it to them in an emergency, the consequences can be fatal.
As an entrepreneur, chairperson or CEO, you should always demand proof that your managers are actually capable of effectively dealing with uncertain situations. Don’t just trust blindly that everything will more or less
work out. As a manager, ask your staff to demonstrate that they possess at least the expertise, and preferably the mental strength as well, to successfully overcome a lengthy situation dominated by uncertainty—and do so for every member of staff; don’t take your chances that someone
will fix the problem.
How are employees rewarded for changes at your company? To be clear: We’re not necessarily talking about monetary rewards. What is particularly valued at your company? What is especially emphasized? Who is especially praised, and for what? Which topics are especially long, intensively and heatedly discussed at your company? Is everything a problem
and difficult,
is every new idea (whether internal and external) seen as a threat?
How does your company talk about its customers? Are they all mentioned respectfully, regardless of whether they are individual customers or groups of customers, in B2B or B2C business? Or are your customers seen as getting in the way of your real
work? Try focusing your attention on the content and focus of conversations at your company, both in formal situations like meetings, conferences and one-on-one talks, and in informal ones, in the office kitchen, in the cafeteria, or in the hallway. What is talked about in these conversations? Do you get