Monday, October 29, 2012

As A Leader You Feel Ready, But Ready For What? - Leadership and Change

One of my favorite quotes is from an executive in Europe who said, “You feel ready, but ready for what?” 

His question addressed the angst of increasingly more leaders. Many leaders and small business owners tell me that they feel ill-prepared for today’s complex environment. With increased connectivity come strong and too often unknown interdependencies. For this reason, the ultimate result of these decisions has been poorly understood. 

Nevertheless, decisions must be made. 

As leaders turn their attention to growth strategies many have told us their success depends on doubling their revenue over the next five years. The services that contribute to the lion’s share of their revenue today will be the second largest source of revenue in five years. Finding new growth strategies is not easy in a complex and uncertain environment.

This means leaders must shake up their business models, old ways of thinking, and long held assumptions. They have to address what customers now care about and reassess engagement with employees to create optimal value. 

Leaders must learn to be comfortable with complexity and uncertainty. They have to see disruption in one form or another as an opportunity. 

Another leader said, “The Great recession has been a wakeup call. It felt like looking in the dark with no light at the end of the tunnel.” 

So, what can you do? Create a nimble and adaptive organization. One not disrupted by complexity. Innovate your management and leadership styles for an unconventional new normal. Create new approaches to better understand customers and engage employees. 

 

 

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Steve Jobs: Innovation, Capitalism, and the American Dream

The Apple Inc. CEO embodied all that this nation is supposed to stand for - ingenuity and innovation; endless opportunity in a free market; and the ability for anyone willing to sacrifice blood, sweat, and tears to achieve the American Dream.
At his core, Jobs was an inventor. He can rightfully be aligned with Thomas Edison, Henry Ford, and Alexander Graham Bell.

He was a pioneer who created products - new and groundbreaking products - that would change the world.
Jobs is to thank for a new way of thinking (the first computer for public use, Apple II); for a new age of film (Pixar); for a new way to love music (iTunes); and for a totally new way of life (iPad, iPhone, everything).
Without a free market within which to work and develop, none of this would have been possible. And we would all be using PCs.
His company has created thousands of jobs worldwide since it was founded in 1977 and has inspired other companies along the way.
Of course Jobs operated with a desire to invent and build for the greater good; but he also wanted to make money. He understood the current markets and he envisioned future markets. He utilized very carefully detailed marketing plans and packaging designs to create not just a product but an accessory almost as necessary and useful as a bodily appendage.

Most of all, he had eager and willing consumers who were - and still are - excited about these new innovations. Demand is the root of Apple's success.
Profits are not deductions from the sum of the public good, but the real measure of the social value a firm creates. Those who talk about the horror of putting profits over people make no sense at all, writes Kevin D. Williamson for the National Review Online.
With investments from Wall Street and shareholders alike, Jobs was able to transform the downtrodden Apple Computer Inc. into the powerhouse that we know as Apple Inc.
Hey, Occupy Wall Streeters, if Steve Jobs represents capitalism that makes it not so bad after all, right? With an iPhone in hand, it is hard to deny that simple fact.
Capitalism is a system of give and take, but everyone profits. Some may have more pennies in their pockets than others but this is immaterial. The collective benefits overall.
A free market allows individuals to dream, to build, to create. Without it, the Steve Jobs of the world would surely cease to exist.
There is no need for a painter in a world of gray.
So what has Steve Job left behind? A company whose shares have risen more than 6,000 percent? Yes. Products that have changed the way the entire world connects and communicates? Yes.
Jobs is the pioneer of Manifest Destiny for the digital era.
More importantly, though, Jobs has inspired people to inspire others. In a time of vast uncertainty, economic turmoil, unemployment and hardship, Jobs' legacy is a beacon of hope.
The American Dream is not dead.
The American Dream is, of course, better categorized as a generic term that does not solely apply to one geographic region but rather an entire global community. It represents one principal notion - possibility.
Yesterday, Oct. 11, the winners of the Wendy Schmidt Oil Clean-Up X Challenge were announced. The contest was launched in July 2010 and asked inventors worldwide to develop innovative, rapidly deployable, and highly efficient methods of capturing crude oil from ocean surfaces writes PR Newswire. The contest developed in the wake of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
The grand prize winner of $1.4 million, selected from 350 applicants from around the world, was Elastec/American Marine from Illinois.
Elastec/American Marine developed a system that recovered 4670 gallons per minute, compared to the average 1100, with an average ORE of 89.5 percent oil to water recovered.
The company is described in the PR Newswire report as: A manufacturer of oil spill and environmental equipment known for innovation in machinery design, is a self-funded, privately held Midwest Corporation that has grown to become one of the largest manufacturers of oil spill equipment in North America. The company, which started over 20 years ago as just an idea, has grown into a 100+ workforce.
That was a long-winded approach to getting to the point. To make a long story short, this company is just one of many that displays astounding advancement. Elastec/American Marine aspired to improve, to make the world just a little bit better of a place.
Or take the two 17-year-old whiz kids who got over 250,000 unique hits to their website during their coverage of the Apple keynote event simply because of keen intellect and self-promotion.
In 2007, at 13-years-old these two boys developed a jailbreak iPhone app that generated more than one million downloads.
They may become the next Apple CEOs, or scientists, or Nobel Prize winners. Millions of others will likely, hopefully, follow suit.
Stay hungry. Stay foolish, is a motto that may have fallen to the wayside of the American lexis. But it is a phrase that needs to be said again and again. It is probably the most valuable four words anyone could ever be told.
Jobs' most renowned brainchild will not go down in the history books as the iPhone or the iOS 5 or even Apple itself.
Jobs' brainchild is the reestablishment of the power of innovation, the asset of capitalism, and the endless possibilities of the American Dream just on the horizon. via ibtimes.com
Follow me on Twitter @innothinkgroup, Facebook https://www.facebook.com/pages/Center-for-Creative-Leadership-and-Strategy, or check out my website http://innothinkgroup.com for more tips and strategies effective leadership, engaged employees, increase growth, and customer effectiveness through innovation.

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

These 8 Steps to Authentic Leadership Leads to Growth

Sooner or later every leader realizes that 99% of the people he depends on for success don’t report to him.  Authentic leadership relies on persuasion and persuasion relies on trust. Trust is the most important asset that any organization, brand, product, leader, or individual can have.  Most importantly, trust is not a scarce resource. We can all have more than we need.  However, trust is fragile: Once squandered it is often impossible to regain.  Here are 8 ways to guarantee that you, your product, your brand, and your company will always be trusted.
*     *     *
Several months after taking a new job as head of sales and marketing for a software company, the head of another department came into my office and said, “I think you have a commitment problem.”  She said she had given me several suggestions yet there was no evidence that I was acting on any of them.
“I do have a commitment problem,” I replied. “I am fanatical about keeping them.” I told her that I never commit to more than ten things at a time, and showed her a document containing her suggestions as well as my ten top priorities. I said that if she could make a case for replacing one of my priorities with one of hers I would gladly listen.  She ended up agreeing with my priorities, and this rocky start actually led to a deep personal friendship and the most trusting and productive relationship of my entire career.
Love may make the world go round, but even love depends on trust.  Trust between the United States and Canada produced the longest unguarded border in the history of mankind saving untold billions in defense expenditures and economic friction.  I was in Russia recently and a woman summed up Russia’s tragic and enduring problems with, “There is no trust in Russia.” We accept bits of valueless paper called currency in exchange for goods and services because we trust others to do the same, and I wouldn’t dare climb into my car if I didn’t trust you to obey traffic laws.  Without trust the world quickly descends into William James’ “Bloomin’, buzzin’, confusion.”
The first secret to trust is keeping promises. Trust depends on promise and fulfillment or what lawyers call contracts.  Few realize that corporate profit and loss statements consist of promises not money.  There is no cash or “real money” on the P&L; instead the meat is accounts receivable and accounts payable which are merely promises to pay for goods and services already rendered or received.  In my own company we considered keeping promises so mission critical that we implemented formal internal and external processes for making, tracking, and fulfilling promises.  For example, despite being a perpetually cash starved startup we paid our vendors on time simply because this is what we had promised to do even if it meant I didn’t get a pay check.
To build trust we also must be willing to make promises and this is the second step.  One of the most difficult management challenges I ever encountered was getting others to use goal language. We often assume that if we don’t make promises we will never have to worry about breaking them.  So we hide behind “I’ll try” rather than “I’ll do” in an attempt to side step accountability through ambiguity, equivalence, obfuscation, or even downright double talk.  Unfortunately this stratagem merely signals a person who can’t trust himself, and someone who can’t trust himself is never trusted by others.  We all want solid commitments from others and this means we must be willing to offer accountability ourselves.
The third secret to establishing trust is to under commit and over deliver.  Over promising is the flip side to under promising and just as damaging. Negotiating up front is far more effective in creating and maintaining trust than the inevitable excuses that arise when a promise is not fulfilled. We overcommit because we want others to like us, but the best way to ruin a relationship is by not following through on our promises.
The fourth secret to trust is proactive communication. I recently read an article in the Wall Street Journal (don’t ask why!) evaluating various firms that clean and preserve bridal dresses.  An expensive process that takes months, one firm dazzled the article’s author by sending weekly progress reports. As fallible human beings we will never keep all our promises, but no matter how compelling our excuses may be for failing to deliver on time and on budget there is no excuse for not giving others a heads up.   Keeping everyone in the loop is not just common courtesy it is essential.  If the news is good people can relax, and if the news is bad there is plenty of time to go to plan B. In the story I related above, my mistake was in not communicating therefore forcing my colleague to confront me in the first place about her suggestions.
The fifth secret is don’t cut corners. We are far better off doing a few critical things to the nth degree than a lot of things with a “good enough” attitude. Cutting corners assumes that no one will notice, and this adds insult to injury because it implicitly treats others as if they were too damn stupid to notice.
The sixth key to trust is never hide mistakes.  Inevitably some of our mistakes will be discovered and when they are any rational observer will assume that where there is one there are others yet to be discovered.  Autonomy or being our own boss is what turns work into fun, and hiding mistakes is the quickest way to trade hands off autonomy for a hands on boss or regulatory agency anxiously monitoring our every move.  Also beware of excuses; a simple apology is far more effective in maintaining trust than a box car full of trumped up excuses and finger pointing.
The seventh trust building secret is purifying motivations.  Putting our own agenda first always dooms trust.  Others rapidly see through the smoke screen, and from then on every move we make is screened for ulterior motivations real or imagined.  Conversely, team players who put the interests of others ahead of their own accrue the incredible power that only trust can bestow.
The final secret to trust is never make people ask.  When you repay a debt or fulfill an obligation without being reminded you get ten times the trust building credit that you would otherwise.   Nobody likes hounding a company or an individual to fulfill a promise, and when you add this emotional cost it is always subtracted from your treasury of trust.  For example, when your friends must remind you to pick up the check once in a while you end up picking up more than your share of the checks while getting little or no credit for the gesture.  When I forced my colleague to come to me about her suggestions I was guilty of violating this simple rule which put me on the defensive.
Louis R. Mobley my mentor and the founder of the IBM Executive School said that what makes business possible is trust.  In our own company, for example, our commitment to building trust meant going from a tiny start up to eventual acquisition without ever suing or being sued while collecting over 99% of our receivables without ever running a credit check. A society, company, brand, product or individual can never have too much trust, and if you follow the simple steps outlined above I guarantee you will always have all the trust you need to be successful. via forbes.com
Follow me on Twitter @innothinkgroup, Facebook https://www.facebook.com/pages/Center-for-Creative-Leadership-and-Strategy, or check out my website http://innothinkgroup.com for more tips and strategies effective leadership, engaged employees, increase growth, and customer effectiveness through innovation.

Saturday, October 20, 2012

The Innovation Masters - Michael G. Winston

Innovation is the lifeblood of any business. Whether it is a groundbreaking invention or an incremental change in process, innovation is about generating new ideas that will give the company's products and services a competitive edge. Business must constantly renew, reinvent and reinvigorate. In today's challenging economic environment, it may be tempting to scale back but it is actually more important than ever to innovate.

Innovation. You tell yourself it's a top priority, but between emails, meetings and fending off the crisis of the day, somehow you never get to it. How do you break the cycle? First, streamline business processes -- identifying and fixing what has you running around in circles, what doesn't work, what distracts (and costs you) every day. Then, reduce or eliminate non-value added initiatives. In every organization there are legacy initiatives that no longer fit the strategic direction of the organization. They should be axed. Tackle those two issues and you'll uncover a leaner, nimbler, more flexible organization that is free to innovate-on-demand.

It is one thing to recognize the value of innovation but quite another to make it happen. Effecting change necessarily means turning established business practices on their heads, being open to experimentation and the possibility of failure. It demands creative thinkers, fearless leaders and a corporate culture that embraces change combined with the capability to turn new ideas into winning products and services. No small challenge.

So how is your company doing? Is your firm leading, managing and creating a culture for innovation success and business breakthroughs? To stay ahead of the curve, organizations need to redefine the rules and build a culture for innovation. What is the secret sauce that allows some companies to distinguish themselves in the way they create a climate in which new ideas are encouraged, recognized and rewarded?

What are the new tools that enable companies to harness an explosion of new, productive, innovative ideas in a changing world. Steps one and two are described above. Cut through the clutter. Step three is to encourage the idea generators. These will be leaders at all levels who champion change, generate innovative solutions and recognize that they must thrive on innovation and originality, encouraging risk-taking and divergent voices.

Scattered throughout your organization are idea generators with fresh ideas for enhancing your company's business practices -- whether it's increasing productivity, elevating quality, redesigning processes, or leveraging technologies. Perhaps someone in manufacturing has devised a unique idea for advertising, while someone in marketing may be advocating new approaches to customer service.

Idea generators not only envision new realities, they use smart change-leadership tactics to embed them in your organization's practices. As a result, your company differentiates itself from competitors, workers strive to excel, retention is high and business performance soars.

Strategies for Cultivating Idea Generators

Recognize them.

To spot idea generators in your company, look for these distinctive behaviors:

  • Opportunity Scanning: Successful companies and leaders are constantly scanning for opportunities. They search for market opportunities/threats and take quick, creative action.
  • Commitment to Action: You can feel the organizational pulse rate by the speed with which they commit to action, allocating and reallocating resources (time, talent and capital) to pursue new opportunities. Decisions are made quickly, and intention is translated into action.

  • Constant Innovation: They engage in constant innovation, identifying opportunities and anticipating demand.

  • Hunting for ideas in management literature, at business conferences and just about everywhere -- even looking outside their business for new problem-solving approaches.

  • Learning from Other Industries: In other words, if you want your clothing company to cultivate superior service, have tea at the Four Seasons. If you want to attract top talent, see how Apple and Procter & Gamble do it.

  • Framing ideas in terms of key themes -- innovation, efficiency, effectiveness -- that decision makers value.

  • Selling ideas up and down the organization -- senior executives, the rank and file, and middle managers.

  • Implementing ideas: For example, by participating in early, small-scale experiments.
  • Carve out roles for them.

    Create formal units dedicated to exploring new business ideas or new ventures. Also carve out roles that leverage idea generators' strengths. Ensure that they end up in a good position after an idea has run its course or becomes embedded in your organization. If idea generators don't prosper from championing ideas, others won't see the value in pushing ideas.

    Give them freedom to pursue new ideas or improve on old ones.

    Set them loose within the limits of explicitly stated corporate values. You'll help them feel more comfortable taking risks within clear boundaries. Many companies have the 10 percent rule, giving people 10 percent of their time to work on projects of their own choosing.

    Reward them.

    Idea generators are motivated primarily by intellectual stimulation and seeing ideas transformed into action. Reward them by listening to them and fully considering their ideas, visibly supporting meritorious ideas, and publicly acknowledging their achievements. Motorola, for example, annually announces new recipients of its Dan Noble Fellow Award and recognizes a broader group of valued technologists by naming them to its Science Advisory Board.

    Support their ideas.

    The single greatest factor determining whether ideas catch on in a company is the perception of CEO or top-management backing. Signal your support for a hot idea through organization-wide memos and management-team meetings where participants discuss how they're using the idea.

    Create an idea-friendly culture.

    To ensure that good ideas flourish, communicate the importance of embracing new ideas to risk-averse managers in your organization. Also encourage tolerance for the inevitable failures that come with exploration of new ideas.

    Innovation is in the DNA of every great company. Their innovation process is considered to be a source of sustainable competitive advantage. It permeates all aspects of the business -- innovation in product and marketing, workplace practices, and corporate citizenship. Creating trends. Setting new standards. Continuously improving through change.

    Now, more than ever, constant and meaningful innovation is critical to commercial success. The worldwide business environment is fiercely competitive. Global trade, instantaneous communications and the ease of market entry are among the forces putting greater pressure on product and brand differentiation. To be successful, it is imperative that we change, competing in new and different ways that are relevant to the shifting times. We must look at the world with new lenses and use the power of ideas to improve everything we do across all dimensions of our business, from modest improvements to total re-inventions.

    But can you afford to innovate in such a deep recession?

    Actually, you cannot afford not to. Nothing delivers more value to a business than innovation. Smooth the path to innovation and your whole company wins. Curtailing innovation efforts in tough times is a long-term strategic mistake. A barren innovation pipeline increases the risk of long-term competitive disadvantage. As the economic cycle inevitably shifts upward, companies who have dropped the innovation ball will find their fortunes sagging just as the economy surges.

    Research and development or other innovation-related areas are natural places to look when searching for areas to cut in order to meet stricter budget targets. After all, these investments are unlikely to offer immediate returns, so trimming them back won't hurt the company's ability to meet top-line revenue targets.

    Assiduously avoid this temptation. It might seem like your core operations have already been cut to the bone through efficiency-related efforts in the 1990s and 2000s, but many companies still have ample resources focused on efforts that are unlikely to create long-term strategic advantage. It is probably impossible to avoid a short-term crunch, so why derail long-term competitive advantage in a misguided attempt to avoid the unavoidable?

    That's not to suggest you should spend innovation dollars thoughtlessly. It is important to safeguard efforts with the most long-term potential, while also ruthlessly pruning efforts that aren't going to pay off.

    If you want to know how to innovate in a recession, there are examples right in front of you. Success leaves clues. All of the obvious successes -- the iPhone, iPad, Kindle, Flip and Zipcar, have one thing in common. They are always thinking about what's next. What's around the corner? How can we capitalize on change? Perhaps you should be thinking these things as well. via huffingtonpost.com 

    What if you maximized your effectiveness? What if you increased employee and customer engagement? How would you rate your competitive advantage?

    For over 25 years, Jim Woods has worked with hundreds of people all over the world, helping them discover their ultimate effectiveness through breakthrough educational and coaching programs. Jim is an expert on leadership, competitive strategy, and organizational issues. He is president of InnoThink Group and Center for Creative Leadership and Competitive Strategy.

    For Speaking or Consulting Engagements Contact Jim
    Jim Woods
    President and CEO InnoThink Group
    jwoods@innothinkgroup.com
    Follow Jim on
     Twitter

    719-266-6703

    Tuesday, October 16, 2012

    Dan Rockwell - Overcoming the Reason People Resist Change #Leadership

     

    “In a chronically leaking boat, energy devoted to
    changing vessels is more productive
    than energy devoted to patching leaks.”
    Warren Buffett

    Talking about change is easy, acceptable, even exciting. Talking and executing are two different things. Change becomes real when we have to change our own attitudes and behaviors, not until.

    The wrong picture:

    Change movements don’t begin with painting pictures of a castle on the hill – dreams of the future.

    People won’t dream of bright futures
    until it feels dark all around.

    The right picture:

    Doom and gloom in the valley always comes before gleaming castles on the hill.

    Change movements begin with dissatisfaction in the present. Create want. People won’t change until they want change.

    Change begins with those who accept
    that the present is unacceptable.

    Paint pictures of organizations who failed doing the things you’re doing. Demonstrate the current path is mediocrity at best and death at the worst.

    Warnings:

    1. All doom and gloom inspires defeat not dreams.
    2. Insulting the present insults those who are invested in the present.
    3. Making it hurt, hurts. All change hurts because something always goes away.

    Suggestions:

    1. Where possible, celebrate and build on the past and present.
    2. Help people see where they fit in.

      People won’t go to a place
      where they don’t have a place
      .

    3. Provide large doses of comfort and encouragement with honor, recognition, and gratitude.
    4. Realize all change happens from the bottom up and the top down. Neglect one and you’re doomed.

    Martin Luther King’s dream was a top-down and a bottom-up movement. Its real power was it touched and empowered people at the bottom.

    Favorite quotes:

    “A year from now you will wish you had started today.” -Karen Lamb

    “If you don’t like change, you’re going to like irrelevance even less.”—General Eric Shinseki 

    Discover What's Been Preventing You From Achieving The Top Line Growth, Peace of Mind, Relationships, Spiritual Connection And Health You Desire …and Learn the Next Step to Overcome It!

    Jim is an expert on leadership, competitive strategy, and organizational issues. Some of his work has focused on how organizations attain superior performance, and how they constantly reinvent advantages to propel growth in times of stress.   

    For Speaking or Consulting Engagements Contact Jim
    Jim Woods
    President and CEO InnoThink Group
    jwoods@innothinkgroup.com
    Follow Jim on Twitter

     

    Monday, October 15, 2012

    Apple Practices Deliberate Intention to Out Compete

     

    No decision is too small to sweat for Apple. We see that in the design of their products and in the design of their retail stores. From this Wall Street Journal article, we learn how deliberate Apple is in making decisions that impact their retail stores. (The WSJ article is behind a pay wall, but this one isn’t.)

    Apple’s attention to the smallest of details is similar to Disney’s attention to small details in all its theme parks. Which is interesting because in this article we learn, “… more people now visit Apple’s 326 stores in a single quarter than the 60 million who visited Walt Disney Co.’s four biggest theme parks last year

    Some might even say Apple is too maniacal and far too controlling when it comes to the operational details of their retail stores.

    For example, Apple instructs its store employees exactly what to say to customers with product issues. They are told to limit their responses and respond with reassuring phrases like, “I understand.” They are also told to be positive in tone and never utter the negative sounding word, “unfortunately.”

    Employees can be fired if they arrive minutes late to their shift more than three times in a six-month period. Employees are also STRICTLY forbidden from discussing new product rumors and from prematurely mentioning when widespread issues are happening with products.

    When shipments of new products arrive in boxes, they are stored in the back-of-house area in clear view of security cameras so as to prevent employees from knowing too much too soon.

    Apple also makes deliberate decisions in the layout of their retail stores. They create special places for children to play while their parents play with iPads and such.

    Apple deliberately chooses which photos and music are preloaded onto demo computers, iPods, iPhones, and iPads. New products are positioned front and center upon entering. The Genius Bar is located in the back of stores to encourage more browsing from customers.

    All this attention to detail benefits Apple from a sales perspective. According to the article, Apple’s generates $4,406 per square foot. That’s more than Tiffany’s ($3,070), Coach ($1,776), and Best Buy ($880.)

    Apple also benefits from its attention to detail by being so talkable. Keller Fay’s Talk Track® study reveals Apple is the most talked about technology brand in America and is the seventh most talked about brand in America regardless of category.

    As I’ve recently ranted… The best word of mouth isn’t a marketing tactic. It isn’t a tweet, a status update, a viral video, or anything else you can find or do on a social media website. The best word of mouth isn’t a publicity stunt or anything done to get some buzz for a day. The best word of mouth is how a business does business not just one day, but every day it is in business.

    Clearly, Apple’s maniacal focus on the smallest of every day details is benefiting them as a bankable and talkable brand. Perhaps you and your business should also sweat the small stuff to become more bankable and talkable. via brandautopsy.com

     Discover What's Been Preventing You From Achieving The Top Line Growth, Peace of Mind, Relationships, Spiritual Connection And Health You Desire …and Learn the Next Step to Overcome It!

    Jim is an expert on leadership, competitive strategy, and organizational issues. Some of his work has focused on how organizations attain superior performance, and how they constantly reinvent advantages to propel growth in times of stress.   

    For Speaking or Consulting Engagements Contact Jim
    Jim Woods
    President and CEO InnoThink Group
    jwoods@innothinkgroup.com
    Follow Jim on Twitter   Ph. 719-266-6703

    How to Set Goals Without Caring About the Outcome

    Are you confused between the difference between setting goals and being attached to outcomes? Learn the big difference between these two.

    Many people experience confusion regarding the difference between setting goals and letting go of attachment to outcomes. A client and I were discussing being in the moment with her work, rather than stressing about the outcome. "Then how can you set goals for yourself? Everyone sets goals based on the outcome. Why else would you even set goals or try to accomplish anything?"

    Setting goals is a very positive and powerful thing to do. Setting goals helps us take the loving action we need to take in our own behalf, to accomplish the things we desire to achieve.

    However, setting goals and working toward accomplishing those goals is very different than attaching our happiness, worth and well being to achieving those goals. If we attach our happiness and worth to accomplishing our goals, then we will never feel happy until we have what we want. And, because most of us continue to create new goals once we accomplish our previous goals, this means never being happy or feeling worthy. As long as we attach our happiness and worth to accomplishing our goals, we can never be happy in the moment. There is always the proverbial carrot dangling in front of us, and we never reach it. No matter how much we have and accomplish, the carrot is always there. This is why there are so many successful people who are very unhappy and never feel that they are good enough.

    Goals are wonderful, and achieving them is fun, but happiness is right now -- being fully present with all that you have. Your sense of worth needs to be based on your intrinsic qualities -- your goodness and ability to love, your compassion, caring, and understanding -- rather than on achieving goals.

    Attaching your happiness to outcomes is what causes distress. As soon as you attach your happiness, worth and wellbeing to something -- to connection with someone, to money, things, approval, success, and so on -- you then want control over getting what you want. And it is your controlling behavior that causes your distress. Not only does the attachment itself cause anxiety because you might ruminate on getting what you want, but all the things you do to attempt to control the outcome keeps you from being present to your experience of life in the moment.

    Taking loving action in order to accomplish your goals is not the same as trying to control the outcome. Loving actions may include hard work, staying open to learning, being honest and acting with integrity, being on time, following through on commitments, caring about others, and so on. Controlling actions may include lying, using others, ruminating, getting angry or defensive, being closed to learning and so on. Controlling behaviors not only make it harder to manifest what you want, but these behaviors often result in feeling alone and unworthy.

    When you are willing to accept that you are not in charge of outcomes, you can be fully present in this moment, connected with the inner guidance that will help you to achieve your goals. It's wonderful to want to be in a loving relationship, to be rich, to have a baby, to be accomplished in your chosen profession, to lose weight or be healthy, to buy a new house or new car, to plan for a vacation, and so on. It's wonderful to do all you can do physically, emotionally, mentally and spiritually to achieve your goals. But if your happiness and sense of worth is dependent on achieving these goals, and if you spend your time trying to control the outcome of things, you will not be a happy person and you will not feel worthy, even if you achieve all of your goals.

    Do all you can do to achieve your goals, while being present, open, loving and caring about yourself and others. Do the work you need to do to achieve your goals, while being connected with yourself and with your inner guidance. Do the necessary loving actions to accomplish all that your heart desires, while being unattached to outcomes.

    -->

    Follow Margaret Paul, Ph.D. on Twitter: www.twitter.com/innerbonding

    Sunday, October 14, 2012

    Viral Mehta: Servant Leadership: Helping People Come Alive

    In an ancient parable, three masons are sitting in a row, all chipping away at large blocks of stone. A woman observing them is curious about what they're up to. She asks the first man what he's doing, to which he responds, "I'm chipping away at this block of stone." Indeed, she thinks. She questions the second man similarly, who says, "I'm working to feed my family." Also true, reflects the woman. Finally, she questions the third mason, who responds, "I'm helping to build a beautiful cathedral."

    Read Peter Drucker's What Makes an Effective Leadership

    It's a powerful perspective -- holding within it a value for collaboration, agency, creativity, and meaning. What if we all could see our work in that way? What if our organizations supported us in holding that perspective, and to go one step further, how can we create institutions that release these core values? In his seminal 1970 essay "The Servant as Leader," Robert Greenleaf coined the term "servant leader" to describe someone who has that interest. For such a person, "It begins with the natural feeling that one wants to serve, to serve first. Then conscious choice brings one to aspire to lead."

    A servant leader -- one who wants to serve first and lead second -- strives to create a work environment in which people can truly express these deepest of inner drives. Servant leadership entails a deep belief that people are the greatest asset any organization has, and to nurture their individual growth becomes the basis for all organizational development. That growth goes far beyond the limited dimension of financial benefit -- it dives into our core motivations as people.

    In his book Drive, best-selling author Dan Pink talks about the evolution in our understanding of what really motivates people, especially in our professional lives. According to Pink, the latest behavioral science research points to three key drivers: autonomy, mastery and purpose. Another way to frame this is empowerment, perfectibility, and purpose, and servant leaders endeavor to create a culture that fosters each of these three intrinsic motivations:

    Empowerment:

    People want to be engaged and also have some level of control over their environment. A servant leader recognizes that the people doing the work generally have the best ideas about how to improve the processes they participate in. Through tools like rapid improvement events and PDCA (Plan Do Check Act) suggestion systems, servant leaders practice participatory decision-making, empowering employees to be innovators and co-creators in positive change. Such leaders are also enablers; they spend a significant amount of time at the workplace, making direct observations, and then striving to create systemic improvements that add value to the work of their employees.

    For a concrete example of this kind of engagement, in "Improving Healthcare Using Toyota Lean Production Methods," Robert Chalice reports that Toyota Corporation employees globally generate 2 million ideas a year. And they come from all over -- more than 95% of the workforce contributes these suggestions, with each person submitting over 30 ideas each. Even more importantly, over 90% of these ideas are implemented. Leaders who understand how to unleash this kind of creativity build systems that support idea generation. But this kind of empowerment is also grounded. Servant leaders promote learning by doing and testing iteratively in a scientific way, and they demonstrate accountability. It's a great example of assuming value in all people, which soon translates into a scientific, transparent system for everyday improvement, which in turn fosters a culture of continuous perfection.

    Perfectibility:

    Perfect is a verb -- and every person can tap into an intrinsic drive toward perfection. A carpenter can strive to be a perfect craftsman, a nurse looks to provide perfect care at the bedside, and Michael Jordan was known to inexorably seek the perfect shot. The role of servant leadership is to create a culture and context in which that inherent drive toward improvement is channeled in a way that benefits the whole. If people are engaged in perfection as a journey and not a destination, then they are constantly looking for ways to innovate.

    This brand of innovation follows a very conscious design philosophy -- one that is inherently collaborative. All of us are smarter than any of us, as the adage goes. Far from being a cold, individual, strictly rational process, servant leaders design highly collaborative systems that balance the scientific method with in-depth engagement of people from all levels. They also actively break down silos and promote a shared view across functions and departments: in healthcare (where I currently work), that view is: "how can we maximize the real value to the patient, and as they move along the care delivery stream, what improves their well-being?" In that sense, servant leaders have a worldview of interdependence, and recognize that they have to own the entire value stream (including suppliers and partners), on behalf of the patient.

    Purpose:

    In the words of Picasso, "The meaning of life is to find your gift. The purpose of life is to give it away." In healthcare -- and especially in serving the underserved population -- it becomes all the more important (and necessary) to create structures that enable us to give in concert. Atul Gawande, the famed surgeon-author, uses a sports analogy to urge modern healthcare (though it's easily generalizable) to evolve from "cowboy medicine" to "pitcrew medicine," referring to the unbelievable preparation, synchronization, and seamless way in which a pit-crew services a race-car in the thick of intense competition. If a pit-crew can deliver flawless results in less than 12 seconds, imagine what a team of people can do longterm in the service of better care for all.

    “Jim is inspiring. One of the best presentations I have heard." MITRE See what they are talking about.

    At the root of such collaboration is still each person's own connection to greater purpose. Civil Rights leader Howard Thurman said, "Don't ask yourself what the world needs. Ask yourself what makes you come alive and then go do that. Because what the world needs is people who have come alive." Perhaps that is the essence of servant leadership: to facilitate people in coming alive. Interestingly enough, when we support people in tapping into that part of themselves that is most alive, then their most selfless motivations surface. So people who've come alive are naturally amenable to working in a collective.

    In this way, by supporting people in finding purpose, servant leaders inspire true, collective service. And it's all done invisibly, such that people can truly feel that they are each "helping to build a beautiful cathedral." In the ancient words of Lao Tzu, "The Sage is self-effacing and scanty of words. When his task is accomplished and things have been completed, All the people say, 'We ourselves have achieved it!'" via huffingtonpost.com

    Since 1987 as a nonprofit foundation we've helped organizations create competitive advantage to bring about fundamental change, put their competitors into a reactive position, cause their partners and suppliers to make adjustments, and deliver so much value to their customers that their market share grows larger still. We work with government, corporations, and small business owners like you. See our client list.  

    We seek to make a difference. Learn about our entrepreneurial and leadership academy for students to end poverty, reduce school dropout rates, and end abuse.  Contact us to schedule an appointment.

    Thursday, October 11, 2012

    Mel Robbins - F--- YOU - How To Stop Screwing Yourself Over #Relationships #Career

    “Jim is inspiring. One of the best presentations I have heard." MITRE See what they are talking about.

    Must See Video on Living In Gratitude and Happiness In Times of Stress

    In 10 minutes you like me will learn to see every employee, family member, and stranger on the train differently. You'll see that despite our differences we are yet the same. In these times of tumult we can easily lose sight of the blessings of our Creator as we pray thinking for more of everything. He has not forgotten us. This video if viewed daily will make an immense improvement in your life and career. I promise. I'd be delighted to hear your comments. Jim

    Frank Mattes invigorating presentation on Open Innovation Culture Change.

     

    Want To Grow Your Business – In Any Economy? Have you aligned your business with the 3 Forces that will enable you to not just survive, but thrive? 

    As always, admission is extremely competitive, and space is limited. But if you’re accepted, you can expect to grow your business 30-100% in the next 12 months! 

    Early enrollment has just begun, and now is the best time to apply! 

    Wednesday, October 10, 2012

    Creative Direction - 8 Ideas for When Creativity Is Too Easy or Hard - Mike Brown






    Let's End Abuse and School Dropouts!



    There’s a story I saw once (which, if you’ll notice, is how most apocryphal stories start) about Salvador Dali where an art patron inquired it were difficult for the famed surrealist painter to paint a picture. Salvador Dali answered, “No, it’s either easy or impossible.”
    You can’t deny that it’s a great creativity quote.
    Unfortunately, it’s a worthless perspective when you’re on the hook to deliver personal creativity on a consistent basis in a work or organizational situation. Suppose your work-oriented creative effort seems easy to you. If it does, it’s likely the creativity you are producing is ho-hum, at least to you. To the contrary, when your creative effort seems to be an insurmountable challenge to complete, you’re faced with the realization that it’s touch to get any credit for stunning creative thinking that can’t be brought to creative reality.
    If the two creative extremes Salvador Dali offered aren’t very good answers, what can you do to move your creative reality somewhere in between? You want to have  strategies to turn both creative extremes into challenging, workable creative successes. Here are four strategies for each creative extreme.

    Four Creative Direction Ideas When Creativity Seems Easy

    1. Critique Your Creative Successes

    Rather than resting on your creative laurels, push yourself to be dramatically stronger creatively. Use what seemed creatively strong from the past, look for small imperfections others would never see, and make creative masterpieces of them! Better integrate them with your strategy, discover more elegant creative simplicity, or find a way to express your extreme creativity in new ways. Pushing yourself to the heights of extreme creativity more than you ever have may be a creative challenge, but will yield creative dividends.

    2. Put Yourself on the Extreme Creativity Hook Publicly

    You (and by “you,” I probably mean “I”) could be prone to creative sandbagging through deliberately setting expectations at a relatively low, comfortable level you can easily meet without pushing yourself too hard creatively. Forget about taking the path of least creative resistance by sharing an extreme creativity goal – sort of your very own JFK and “Put a man on the moon.”  Sharing an extreme creativity goal with people who will hold you accountable to it clearly puts you on the creative hook. This will demand you embrace extreme creativity as a step toward creative success.

    3. Put More Creative Risk into the Mix

     Suppose you have all the resources and know everything that’s required to make your creative objective a reality. Decide to deliver your own creative stumbling block by forsaking a major chunk of your creative resources. Slash the time for your creative project by beginning later than expected or agreeing to finish it earlier. If you are part of a creative team working on a project, release one team member to work on another project, pushing the other team members to new extreme creative heights. Driving your effort to the creative extreme will make you develop alternative creative muscles to realize your creative objective.

    4. Significantly Modify Your Creative Direction


    Bruce Springsteen is a great example of this idea. Although successful with the E Street Band, he altered his  creative direction musically several times – an acoustic, home-recorded solo record, other “solo” records with different supporting musicians, and a completely new band to chronicle songs by Pete Seeger, a legendary folk musician. With every new creative direction, Bruce Springsteen continually avoided “easy” creativity in favor of using unfamiliarity to spur new creative directions.

    Four Creative Direction Ideas When Creativity Seems Impossible

    1. Lower Your Expectations

    If your overall creative task seems daunting, lower your expectations. Look for what smaller parts of the project seems possible amid a total effort which seems impossible. Consider what is the real downside if the entire effort didn’t come to fruition. After identifying workarounds for whatever might be impossible on your project, go all out achieving what is achievable creatively.

    2. Put a Creative Project on Hold

    Being pressured to be immediately creative can stifle creative abilities. Instead of being pressured to advance directly to implementation, take a time out and actually THINK. Strategize. Brainstorm. Find someone who will add to the creative thinking you’ve done. Take some time to consider something entirely different. Take advantage of a creative pause to let your mind wander where it will, making unconscious creative connections to instigate a fresh creative strategy.

    3. Find Implementation Assistance

    Maybe your perception of creative impossibility arises  from weaknesses in your personal capabilities. If that’s the case, launch your creative effort by seeking out talents you need to turn the impossible into the possible. Put together the best team to start, generate, and bring what would have been previously daunting creativity to life.

    4. Modify Your Creative Game

    If the creative task you are facing seems impossible, go ahead and redefine it. Instead of thinking about what the creative activity is, look at what type of goal you’re trying to accomplish instead. Next, look at the whole variety of ways you can accomplish your objective in some other way. Redefining the creative game is often just what’s needed to get into another game you’re much more likely to win creatively.
    Use these eight strategies as needed so you can depend on producing outstanding creativity on a daily basis! - Mike Brown via brainzooming.com
     

    Where good ideas come from? How to Re-imagine Your Creative Thinking




    Business people and entrepreneurs in particular are said to come up with ideas all the time. However have you ever wondered where your ideas come from. People often credit their ideas to individual “Eureka!” moments. But Steven Johnson shows how history tells a different story. His fascinating talk takes us from the “liquid networks” of London’s coffee houses to Charles Darwin’s long, slow hunch to today’s high-velocity web. Think your ideas are coming from your head? Think again.



    via thinkbigbebigentrepreneurs.com




    Tuesday, October 9, 2012

    The CEO's Frugal Innovation Agenda - Navi Radjou, Jaideep Prabhu, Simone Ahuja

    CEOs of large companies face a conundrum: they are confronted with a growing number of frugal consumers clamoring for affordable solutions, yet their existing corporate culture and incentive systems are designed to support a "bigger is better" business model — not to deliver more with less. As the Age of Austerity dawns, however, corporate leaders will have no choice: they will have to bite the bullet and infuse their organizations with a frugal mindset. In sum, CEOs need a frugal innovation agenda.
    Frugal innovation is the ability to innovate cost-effectively and sustainably under severe resource constraints. In our last blog post, we showed how Carlos Ghosn, CEO of Renault-Nissan and inventor of the concept of "frugal engineering", is reinventing his entire company so it can innovate faster, better, and cheaper in a complex and resource-scarce global environment.
    Carlos Ghosn isn't the only CEO spearheading the frugal innovation revolution. In our book Jugaad Innovation, we profile leaders at companies such as GE, Procter & Gamble, PepsiCo, and Siemens who are also working on frugal ways to innovate and drive sustainable growth. These visionary CEOs aren't caving in to Wall Street's demands for short-term gains. Rather, they are boldly restructuring every function in their organizations to boost their firms' long-term ability to deliver affordable and sustainable solutions to increasingly cost-conscious and eco-aware consumers.
    Based on our research, we suggest that CEOs eager to do more with less drive systemic changes across their entire organization — focusing their change management efforts on three functions: R&D, marketing, and sales. Specifically, CEOs must:
    1.) Challenge R&D teams to create "good enough" solutions. CEOs should encourage R&D teams to move away from pursuing over-engineered "perfect products" — which today's thrifty customers find too expensive, hard to use, and eco-unfriendly — and focus instead on developing "good enough" solutions. By "good enough," we don't mean stripped-down versions of existing high-end products. Such quick-fix solutions could leave customers feeling less than satisfied, and designers would inevitably have to return to the drawing board down the road to undo the problems caused by such half-baked solutions. Rather, engineers of large firms need to create affordable solutions from the ground up — by heeding the advice of John Maeda, president of the Rhode Island School of Design, who notes: "R&D engineers must make frugal simplicity the core tenet of their design philosophy. They must design for the 'real world' by practicing...'radical incrementalism' — which is doing more with less."
    Emerging markets like Africa, India and China offer Western engineers a great training ground to practice frugal simplicity. For example, Siemens, the German industrial giant, is using its R&D teams in India and China to develop minimalist solutions that deliver higher value to customers. In one instance, Siemens' engineers in India — working closely with their German colleagues — developed a Fetal Heart Monitor that uses inexpensive microphone technology rather than the costlier ultrasound technology. This "good enough" medical device promises to make quality healthcare affordable and accessible to more people — not only in emerging markets but also in developed economies.
    2.) Create separate brands to sell the company's less expensive offerings. Given that they might already have well-established brands for higher-priced segments, to avoid brand dilution, marketing heads should develop distinctive new brands for their company's affordable segments. Doing so will reduce the problems of brand dilution while ensuring greater market coverage. For instance, many of Renault's affordable entry-level vehicles are sold under the brand Dacia, which includes the Logan, the highly successful sedan that sells for about $10,000, as well as an affordable van, pickup, and even SUV. Rather than marketing its Dacia products as "low-cost" vehicles, Renault is cleverly positioning them as vehicles that are stylish, comfortable, dependable, and affordable — i.e., they deliver more value at less cost.
    Similarly, Siemens is grouping its affordable offerings — such as the microphone-tech-enabled Fetal Heart Monitor — under the label SMART, which stands for Simple, Maintenance-Friendly, Affordable, Reliable, and Timely-to-Market. In other words, Siemens is positioning its SMART products not only as being less expensive (they are 40-60% cheaper than high-end solutions) but also faster to deploy and easier to use and maintain for customers. Siemens's SMART product portfolio already boasts more than 160 affordable solutions ranging from X-ray machines to steam turbines to railway signaling systems.
    3.) Create incentive systems for salespeople to sell frugal products. Western companies must recognize that frugal innovation isn't just about designing affordable products. It is also about successfully selling these frugal products in the marketplace. But successful selling won't happen as long as salespeople have the incentive to sell only big-ticket items. Instead, companies will have to align their salesforce's incentive systems with the corporate strategy of doing more with less. Companies can address this issue by reorganizing their salesforce along brand lines, with different salespeople responsible for the low-end and high-end segments. This will also help reduce any internal resistance based on the fear of cannibalization. Even better, as Renault-Nissan has successfully proven, healthy internal competition between divisions could drive sales and marketing personnel responsible for different brands to be more innovative in how they reach and keep their respective customers.
    Consider that for decades, Procter & Gamble maintained a homogeneous sales structure, selling premium products to mainstream middle-class consumers. But as the purchasing power of middle-class Americans declines, P&G has restructured its sales force into two distinct groups that separately target high-income and low-income segments. This restructuring of the sales function bodes well for P&G, which is currently engaged in a "frugal innovation arms race" with its archrival Unilever. Indeed, Paul Polman, CEO of Unilever, has set a bold goal to double Unilever's revenue by 2020 while simultaneously curbing its environmental impact by 50%.
    CEOs who are bold enough to implement this frugal innovation agenda — as leaders at P&G, Renault-Nissan, Siemens, and Unilever are doing — will be able to deliver significantly more value to customers while saving on costs and reducing environmental impact. According to the World Economic Forum, corporations can save a whopping $2 trillion by 2030 by implementing frugal innovation strategies that do a better job of utilizing resources.
    In our upcoming blogs, we will share more case studies and proven techniques that can help you effectively design, make, and market frugal products and services.
    Meanwhile, we are curious to hear from you: Is your organization, led by your CEO, driving a frugal innovation agenda? Are you involved with developing and commercializing affordable, good-enough solutions for customers feeling the squeeze of the recession? We want to hear about the challenges you have faced and the lessons you have learned so far in your frugal innovation journey.




    Monday, October 8, 2012

    Why Apple Should Buy Nokia - Forbes

    Journalist and technologist Tristan Louis has a reasonable argument here for why Apple should buy Nokia, now that the former has driven the latter to the brink of dissolution. His case is built on several points:
    • Apple needs more patents to cover its wireless roadmap for the next decade and keep Samsung at bay. Nokia has one of the best and youngest sets of patents around LTE and other 4G wireless technologies. Apple settled out-of-court with Nokia in 2011, a deal Louis hears brought Nokia $500 million and a royalty in the range of $5 to $7 per iPhone, a 1% tax by the Finnish company. The patent portfolio is worth anywhere from $6 billion to $10 billion. Nokia’s market cap today is $10 billion.
    • Maps. Apple is way behind here and Nokia has some of the best location software and databases in the industry from its 2007 Navteq deal. Why build when you can buy a distressed Nokia for about the same price ($8 billion) that Nokia (over)paid for Navteq?  Companies such as Google, RIM, Microsoft, Amazon and Samsung all depend in some way on Navteq maps, giving Apple new leverage over those other companies.
    • Wireless TV. Nokia has good technology for delivering live TV to wireless devices, and TV is an area everyone is betting Apple moves into.
    • Knock Microsoft on its heels. Nokia is one of Microsoft’s bigger, if not the biggest, partners for Windows Phone, especially at the high-end with the new Nokia Lumia handsets. Assuming there wouldn’t be any antitrust claims leveled by Microsoft (and wouldn’t that be ironic) Apple could squelch whatever progress Microsoft has struggled to secure in mobile.
    • Apple would do a deal as a double-reverse with a flip. It can buy the patents and some software engineering (more like what Google did with Motorola) and flip the rest to a telecom equipment maker such as Alcatel-Lucent (likeliest) or Siemens, Nokia’s current wireless-equipment JV partner.

    Louis ends with how the deal might play out:
     
    With a mar­ket cap of $10 bil­lion for Nokia and Apple sit­ting on a cash pile of over $100 bil­lion, the Cuper­tino giant could fund this from change it found in its couch. For the rea­sons listed above, I sus­pect that Google and Microsoft would also jump into the game, bid­ding Nokia’s share price fur­ther up. But few com­pa­nies have the buy­ing power Apple has and it would even­tu­ally win that fight and, once again, reorder the mobile land­scape while solid­i­fy­ing its own con­trol of the future.
    AP Photo/Paul Sakuma Siri Inc.

    via forbes.com        

    Friday, October 5, 2012

    Hypercompetition - The New Strategy and Why It Is New

    Senior executives used to know what a strategy was: a multiyear plan to create or protect a defensible competitive advantage in the marketplace. Often it was based on creating long-term advantage through scale and physical assets. Industrial giants like United States Steel and the General Motors Corporation were built through just such a focus.

    However, in many — maybe most — industries, the old approach to strategy no longer holds. The world in which economies and institutions operate has changed dramatically, thanks to three revolutionary, if familiar, sources of business upheaval:

    • New and disruptive technologies create uncertainty. Value chains are transforming, creating nextreme w sources of value that can be exploited by new as well as existing players able to create and leverage innovative business models. In this environment, competitive advantage is often short-lived. We can determine strategies to win today, but we can only guess at what will be required to win tomorrow.

    • Deregulation and globalization are making the economy more efficient as well as more volatile. In an increasingly deregulated world, competition forces business models to adapt quickly to meet customer needs, and to do so on a global basis. More efficient transactional relationships allow companies to focus on specific links in the value chain, while participating in (and competing as)  extended, coordinated chains. With these new structures, technological and strategic innovation can be more quickly leveraged across global markets.

    • Capital markets have become more efficient, putting more pressure on senior executives to increase shareholder value. It is no longer sufficient to manage the existing business competently; executives must create new growth platforms to drive substantial growth in shareholder value. Failure to meet expectations can result in dire consequences for management.

    For these reasons, in many industries, the old approach to strategy is under assault.

    Today, the long-range planning process, usually employed to craft strategy, functions mostly as a feed into the budgeting and coordination procedures necessary to run the business from day to day. Its methods for managing operations are woefully inadequate for determining the actions, priorities, and decisions required to win in today’s markets. These traditional strategic-planning efforts may fulfill the planning function, but they are no longer strategic.

    The simple fact is that strategy and decision making — functions that for decades were causally related and sequenced — are becoming increasingly difficult to separate. Whereas strategy once determined the decisions and transactions necessary to advance the company, today operational decisions and transactions can often redefine the company’s strategy and thus alter the path forward. In this interlinked environment, strategic learning by the management team can be as important as the strategic plan. And adapting the strategy is as crucial as the initial approach.

    No firm should ever abandon its traditional focus on the underlying economics of its business. Nor should senior executives cease trying to identify the fundamental levers for creating and capturing sustainable customer value. But traditional strategies aimed only at shaping and protecting long-term positions need to be supplanted by a focus on continuous transformation, to forge capabilities required to win in the next game. And the next. And the next.

    Managing a Fleeting Advantage
    For all the changes in global and sectoral economies, the principal objective of business — and thus the objective of strategy — has remained fairly stable: to earn superior returns on shareholders’ capital. Strategy development, therefore, still must start with a fundamental analysis of what it takes to win in the market — what creates customer value, what drives costs, and how to maximize profit.

    But in today’s fastest-moving industries, the methods for developing a strategy have changed. The time dimension is different. It used to be sufficient for a firm to create a strategy, build the facilities and capabilities to support it, and plan for a strategic position that could be ensured for five years, often longer. For example, finance, organization, technology development, and marketing models enabled General Motors to surpass Ford Motor Company in the late 1920s and kept GM the world’s No. 1 vehicle manufacturer for the rest of the century.

    As executives and government leaders assess strategy in an increasingly volatile marketplace, most are finding that the same critical success factors abide: strong leadership, the ability to understand and respond to shifts in the environment, a robust pipeline of growth initiatives, a focus on continuous improvement and an agile operating model. See how we can help you.

    The Action Lab: Creating a Greenhouse for Organizational Change

    IN THE MIS-1990's, Royal Dutch/Shell, like many other large companies, was nagged by a sense of unfulfilled ambition. At every level its traditional change-management approach - painstaking analysis and planning followed by careful consensus building and sequential implementation - was powerless to move it from where it was to anywhere it wanted to be.

    Take, for example, Shell Malaysia, where the chairman, Chris Knight, needed to create a whole new direction for the downstream marketing and distribution part of its $6 billion, 6,000-person business. For the first time in memory, Shell was contemplating a decline in its gasoline market share in the face of aggressive competition. An initial cost management drive had improved financial returns but not the allure of its gas stations, whose unappealing exterior was turning off increasingly picky and affluent customers. Meanwhile, prime sites for new service stations were becoming harder to win.

    The newly privatized downstream portion of Malaysia's national oil company, Petronas, posed a particularly tricky problem. On the one hand, Petronas competed against Shell's downstream business. On the other, as the national oil company, Petronas owned all the underground assets and mineral rights in the nation, so Shell was obliged to partner with it in negotiating upstream exploration and production contracts.

    Effectively, Petronas held the key to Shell's success in Malaysia. Finding a way of managing this delicate relationship creatively - balancing competition and cooperation - was crucial.

    Mr. Knight needed to achieve a change in both levels of service and strategic ambition - and in real time rather than the 24 or 30 months any major change would have taken the company in the past. He turned to a radically new approach for Shell - a series of Action Labs. The Action Lab (see accompanying article, page 69) is a short, extremely intense collective effort to telescope time frames and promote radical new behaviors that companies may have talked about for years but never been able to achieve. For instance, Shell Malaysia's first lab was charged with reversing the erosion of market share by transforming customer service to Shell's 1,000 service station dealers and 12,000 commercial customers. A second lab was commissioned to explore the idea of a joint rationalization of storage depots with Petronas as a possible entree to a broader logistics partnership. But instead of two years to analyze and plan, Mr. Knight gave the labs just 60 days to produce results.

    In effect, Mr. Knight had to create a "greenhouse" for extraordinary innovation that was insulated from the day-to-day "jungle" of running the business and its cultural norms. Composed of cross-functional and multilevel participants reflecting the stakeholder groups that would implement the solutions, the labs were headed by informal leaders and assisted by facilitators who helped clarify the labs' charters and break through ingrained mind-sets and assumptions that had hindered previous attempts to change. Outsiders, such as dealers or officials from Petronas, were invited in or enrolled in the experiments that followed. Finally, Mr. Knight and two members of his team served as executive sponsors to protect and to review the lab's progress. Often, they found themselves rolling up their sleeves to help participants negotiate around the organizational land mines.

    SHIFTING THE LOCUS OF ACTION

    Now comes the hard part. It is one thing to put people in fresh surroundings, give them a blank sheet of paper and assure them it is safe to fail. But lab participants invariably begin by asking: "Do they really mean it?" or "What's the hidden agenda?" As the lab team interviews sponsors and others outside for the answer, the members typically encounter all the conflicting views that have held problems in place for years. Stress intensifies. Ultimately, the lab is forced to accept that no one else has the answer - the team itself must generate it. Management really does need help! Participants often need coaching to get through the eye of this emotional needle and gain the confidence to pursue bold and original ideas.

    All this points to a paradoxical rule of thumb: When an Action Lab is not experiencing upsets or failures, it is probably not pushing the envelope hard enough. Because of the human tendency to postpone trauma, most of the lab's real work happens in the pressure of the last weeks. Until then, the lab is building strength by gathering a base of facts, strengthening cohesion and dealing with occasional failure. Regular debriefings foster the daily mixture of hardship and insight. Developing an initial team point of view is the jumping-off point for action. Generally, the faster the lab gets into action, the faster it learns.

    As executives and government leaders assess strategy in an increasingly volatile marketplace, most are finding that the same critical success factors abide: strong leadership, the ability to understand and respond to shifts in the environment, a robust pipeline of growth initiatives, a focus on continuous improvement and an agile operating model. See how we can help you. 

    While the executive sponsors may regard the lab as a "safe haven," for participants it is a pretty uncomfortable place to be. They usually feel they are walking a tightrope between results that are too timid or overly bold: either way their career prospects are on the line. Nine times out of 10 the Action Lab takes the courageous route.

    Consider the aviation lab of Shell Brazil, which targeted fuel sales to corporate jets. Emerging from a regulated environment, jet fuel in Brazil was historically sold at a fixed rate for major airlines and private aircraft alike. Consequently, pilots of private aircraft were at the bottom of the food chain, serviced only after the big airlines had been taken care of. The result was a chronic scheduling problem for these pilots, who often found themselves bearing the frustration of their V.I.P. clients. When the pilots were invited into the lab for some on-line research, the findings pointed to a significant opportunity not only for a premium-priced prompt fueling service, but also for add-on services for the V.I.P.'s.

    Sponsors and other stakeholders outside the lab were initially lukewarm about the proposal. What was so exciting about a market analysis that showed a revenue opportunity of only a few million dollars, based on a few pilot testimonials? But the lab persisted, knowing that what it planned for aviation would set a precedent for other market segments, and indeed for the whole organization. Finally, it hit on the idea of acting out the strategy in cooperation with an airport- and inviting senior management to take part. Having struck a deal with a major airport in São Paulo, the lab spent an exhausting and exhilarating week packaging its menu of services, notifying parties of the offering and setting up a prefabricated V.I.P. facility for private pilots, complete with business services and refreshments. Senior managers were invited to the airport at 5:30 one morning to see the idea put to the test. On the appointed day Shell sold double the normal amount of fuel at a premium price, waiting times were slashed from hours to minutes, and the planes were cleaned and restocked while being refueled.

    Hardly surprisingly, once pilots had a taste of the V.I.P. service, they wanted more, prompting Shell to roll out the service throughout the country. The executive segment now contributes 10 times more to total aviation net income than it did two years ago - and the delivery team is known for its innovation and responsiveness. Shell has expanded its specialty fuels concept to include motorcyclists and commercial accounts. The former chief executive of Shell Brazil, Wim Goebel, commented, "It makes me shudder at what else is possible if we put this kind of effort into everything we do."

    From their joint experience, both lab participants and senior management learned a crucial lesson: Success on the commercial battlefield has as much to do with commitment as a team as with the brilliance of ideas. As they got the hang of "acting their way" into the new strategy, each took full accountability for pulling off the experiment. One lab participant said: "We were not following orders or a predetermined plan - we were making it up in the field. This is not the normal way of taking strategic initiatives at Shell."

    The Cummins Engine Company, the world's largest diesel-engine manufacturer, also experienced the power of acting its way into a new strategy. By mid-1997, the company had lost its engine leadership and was seeking new competitive advantage in "lifetime customer value," emphasizing the owner cost of a superior-quality engine over its full service life, versus cheaper (but more expensive to maintain) rivals. To make the proposition work, Cummins needed not only to reduce prices by 20 percent but also to embed the service life concept throughout the engineering, manufacturing and dealer repair activities of a 20,000-person organization.

    One of the lab teams, including union stewards, manufacturing supervisors and plant managers, challenged the company's most sacred assumption - that everything must be made in-house to meet Cummins's stringent quality standards. In just four weeks the lab pioneered alliances that entailed turning over whole plants to supplier collectives. Cummins would become the "focused assembler" for key components and the quality watchdog for the whole process. The lab also came up with imaginative ways of moving toward flexible manufacturing while protecting jobs. Early results indicate that the new strategy has opened up new areas of market potential and avenues for market leadership. It has also restored Cummins's competitive edge in cost and productivity.

    EVOKING NEW BEHAVIOR PATTERNS

    Social psychologists tell us that new social structures and behaviors take shape only when the rigid patterns and assumptions of the past are unfrozen. Unfreezing takes place when people are stressed emotionally, physically and intellectually to the point where the familiar framework fails. The lab's constrained deadline and unconstrained aspiration - delivering a demonstrable and unanticipated business result in four to six weeks - is deliberately imposed to force participants out of conventional methods and hierarchical patterns, which limit the solution space. Stressed and bereft of familiar supports, all labs pass through a period of panic and despondence before, typically, rescuing themselves by getting precise about goals, resolving to break through traditional solution constraints and rallying around their determination to generate action.

    Choosing to move ahead within this new context often leaves traditional positions behind and starts a brand new kind of conversation in which, uncomfortably at first, no one feels really competent. Indeed, people begin to realize that positional authority and traditional patterns of "camaraderie" are often the factors that got the company into the impasse in the first place.

    Shell Malaysia's logistics lab was chartered to pilot a partnership for a gasoline distribution depot with the recently privatized marketing and distribution arm of Petronas. This was seen as a precursor to a full network rationalization of both companies and ultimately to a total logistics partnership. Success in depot operations had historically been defined by unit-cost efficiency. That is where the lab conversation started - and stalled. At the time, Petronas was a less efficient operator than Shell. So where was the gain?

    The breakthrough came when the lab was prompted to reframe both question and answer. What if Shell and Petronas sought the larger prize of becoming dominant in downstream logistics in Malaysia? Focusing on unit cost per ton of gasoline transported by truck from depots to service stations had blinded the lab from assessing the possibilities of jointly financing a pipeline that Petronas was planning to build that would slash the cost of throughput from refinery to customer.

    Over time the lab laid the groundwork for a new relationship with Petronas. Not only did the subsequent logistics partnership realize cost savings that surpassed Shell's most optimistic forecasts, it changed a vulnerable downstream supply and distribution business into a strategic and operational partnership with one of the powerhouses of Southeast Asia. By an ingenious blend of competing and collaborating - not just at the top of the organization, but at all levels - both companies gained on all other competitors. Shell generated $5 billion in investment opportunities, while the industry as a whole avoided the waste and oversupply problems that plagued neighboring Thailand. Shell Malaysia added a new strategic capability - the ability to form joint ventures with erstwhile competitors - which has subsequently become a pivotal element of Shell's downstream strategy worldwide.

    CHARTERING THE LAB

    Framing a lab effort is often difficult - if it is too narrow, its contributions become trivial; too broad and the charter is unmanageable. The pipeline subsidiary of British Gas, Transco, confronted this dilemma when it instituted a strategy lab in the middle of an industry and company restructuring. The lab was challenged to map a course of action that would spin off its various components and enable them to be stand-alone, commercially viable entities within six to 12 months. The inquiry was driven by the likelihood that regulated income would disappear at some point in the future. The problem was, the charter proved to be unmanageable given the regulatory uncertainties beyond the control of British Gas. The lab foundered, with great frustrations for both participants and sponsors.

    In contrast, British Gas simultaneously began a second Action Lab, which focused on Transco's $1.6 billion annual capital budget, covering everything from massive pipeline infrastructure projects to routine replacement of off-the-shelf hardware, such as gas meters. On the one hand, stiffening regulatory scrutiny was turning the screws on the capital investment program. On the other, investment was difficult to control because two-thirds of the investments occurred through tens of thousands of expenditures under $100,000. The lab's charter was to create transparency with a new process that was more manageable and demonstrated integrity to the regulatory body and the public at large.

    The lab spent the first weeks mapping a "day in the life" of an investment decision. It was a revealing exercise. The map uncovered the extent to which each geographical manager could pursue his or her own view of where the best investment interests of the company lay. Naturally, many views conflicted, and overall corporate priorities were ignored.

    To help senior management change the rules of the unspoken and self-defeating game, the lab set up investment review groups containing cross-functional teams of managers whose job was to provide a peer review of all expenditures and to surface conflicting views. At the same time, the lab seized on an ongoing reorganization to restructure local work groups by giving them profit and loss accountability. One of the chief revelations of the lab was that with the investment review groups and new work group accountability, commercial behavior was unavoidable, even in a regulated environment. The results are already notable. In less than a year, Transco's capital expenditure requirement for enhancement of the infrastructure has been reduced by 40 percent. Straight talk about investment permeates the company. One investment review group member said, "Our test of a good question during a peer review is to ask the question that we are afraid the regulator might ask."

    THE NEW REALITY FOR LEADERS

    Top management alignment has a crucial bearing on the success of Action Labs. At Shell, Cummins Engine and British Gas, senior executives have learned that combining strategy and execution in the lab quickly confronts the company with the "political" constraints to its espoused strategy. In particular, it exposes how many consensual management practices lead to compromise solutions, which everyone can accept but no one really wants. The lab disrupts the givens of "who defers to whom," and disturbing questions about organizational policy and turf frequently shake up the surface agreements among the senior group.

    Throughout the journey senior executives find themselves in the hot seat. The façade of espoused strategy cracks under the tension when lab action reveals that it is at variance with the enacted reality. What the top team thinks it stands for is revealed in all its ambiguity as the interpretations cascade through the organization. For instance, top management at Cummins knew that the link between its statement of "lifetime customer value" and what employees actually did to put it into operation was open to infinitely broad interpretation. It took the labs to help managers become more articulate about what the vision really meant.

    In another example, British Gas set up a lab to demonstrate what it would take to establish a pipeline-to-home Connections Business that could compete with outside providers. The company had analyzed and discussed the possibility for more than a year, but nothing concrete had materialized. It took the lab just a week to grasp that what was preventing action was not difficulty of execution but crippling hidden strategic disagreements at board level. Instead of setting up the business unit, the lab's first action was to help reveal (with dignity) the misalignment at senior levels. Then the lab's objective could be talked about openly and acted on with an ambition that grew as the work progressed.

    As the glare of lab attention peels away the difference between intentions and execution, executives are often led to change the way they lead. Rather than feeling obliged to have all the answers, they learn to create an environment for radical solutions to emerge from unexpected places. If things seem out of control, they are, to an extent. This is the price of breaking up patterns that keep an organization in an unwitting conspiracy to maintain the status quo. Chris Knight at Shell observed: "When we started this, there were two surprises. We didn't expect the lab participants to be nearly as thoughtful and imaginative as they were. And even though we were forewarned, we didn't expect that the breakthroughs they were asked to address were actually hidden in the disagreements we had concealed among ourselves for many years."

    Breakthroughs such as those at Shell, British Gas and Cummins Engine were possible only because senior management allowed lab participants to "own" a part of the business. They had to recognize that a successful lab would come up with its own results, not their answer as senior managers. This is a critical point. When they subconsciously expect the lab to come up with their answer, the very leaders who sanctioned the lab in the first place can end up thwarting its work.

    FROM THE GREENHOUSE TO THE JUNGLE

    If the Action Lab is a greenhouse to nurture new growth, establishing the seedlings so that they can grow to potential in the jungle of the organizational environment is a delicate and critical task. One lab on its own can disturb the soil and nourish new ways of working. But it cannot compete with the institutional undergrowth that defines how employees really get promoted, paid and recognized. Often, the durability of the status quo becomes evident only when it is threatened.

    For example, Shell Brazil chartered a lab to find ways to make its key industrial customers more successful through the use of Shell lubricants. In short order, the lab team found ways to achieve substantial savings in one major customer's manufacturing processes, at the same time drastically increasing the sales of one lower-margin lubricant at the expense of short-term sales of a higher-margin product. Everyone celebrated the early win, and the lab turned its attention to negotiating a profitable long-term customer contract. Work stalled, however, when the participants found that the new focus on the customer's lifetime value conflicted with the sales reward systems that favored high product margins. The lab could not legitimize the value of the new way of working without jeopardizing sales compensation. In the end, the institutional context defeated the new initiative.

    On the other hand, Shell Malaysia's customer services lab managed to cut through huge institutional inertia to bring its solution to fruition. It was easy enough to hire and train a team of operators to staff a new 24-hour service center to provide customers with a single point of contact. It was quite another thing to shift organizational power to empower customer service representatives rather than managers to break the logjams and redeploy resources to follow through. Normally, the organization would close ranks to insure that such radical solutions were frozen out.

    As it wrestled with the organizational realities of departmental budgets and attitudes, the lab could see that the quality and therefore success of its initiative was ultimately dependent on the service center's relationships with the sales force, distribution schedulers and dealers. As lab members, some of them had had a voice in creating the aspiration. But what about their colleagues? For instance, sales workers would no longer be responsible for administration and order-taking, a major part of their everyday work. Their new role looked more like business consulting. Deliberately using its ambiguous hierarchical status, the lab acted like a Trojan horse in steadily incorporating more employees into its experiment. New yardsticks of success were negotiated (rather than imposed) by the teams and tested in the lab by delivering early results together. Each issue was dealt with "on line" with real data and real customers. The customer service center was acting its way into its new role, becoming a demonstration model of what the rest of the organization could be. One behavioral barrier at a time was removed, as the center worked to instill a competitive customer service discipline throughout the downstream business using live commercial issues.

    Enrolling a critical mass of employees behind the widespread change is a first lesson in jungle survival. As of this writing, British Gas and Cummins had conducted more than 10 labs each in 10 months. Shell Malaysia conducted more than 40 labs in an 18-month period. The work of protecting these vehicles and progressing fell to Results Councils established to insure that the company did not settle for less than the ambitious results committed to in the labs. Mr. Knight said: "The seedling transplant structure we created in Malaysia was about building capability and developing new ways of working in action. By [our] binding the managers together in the Results Councils, they were compelled to participate and could not hide."

    By grounding its work in the reality of action, the lab generates not just an improvement but a fundamental shift in the business "ground truth" - underpinning expectations and assumptions - that can roll through an organization like an attitudinal tidal wave. More than 100 pacesetter labs within Shell's worldwide manufacturing organization have shaved $400 million from refining operating costs during the period 1996-98 and are regarded as instrumental in transforming the 2,000-person research and development organization from a cost center to a commercially viable technical consultancy. Through Action Labs, British Gas has not only found ways of reducing its capital expenditure requirement by 40 percent but has also made strong inroads into replacing the complacency that accompanied a long history of regulation with a commercially oriented sense of enterprise. While labs are early in the rollout at Cummins Engine, results of the new ways of working with suppliers and customers open the way for radical improvement.

    AN AGENT OF TRANSFORMATION

    As these pioneering organizations show, successful labs can produce extraordinary results. By engineering a breakdown of the existing order, they open up a new space of possibilities; by instilling the disciplines of accountability in action, treating setbacks as opportunities and aligning around new operational yardsticks of business success, they translate that possibility into action. As a bonus, the lab environment has the benefit of identifying and developing new generations of leaders who would otherwise be unrecognized in normal reporting and recognition structures. By underwriting new leaders as well as new processes in lab experiments, these corporations are increasing their chances for sustained success.

    Increasingly, corporate leaders are coming to realize that the technology of the Action Lab can help them to create breakthroughs, not just in their current ways of doing business, but in rethinking what their businesses could be. That is, as corporations internalize the disciplines of the lab, they become not simply more successful by today's criteria but more capable as organizations, able to respond proactively to new opportunities by redefining in practical terms what success means - for themselves, for their industries and for the societies in which they operate. Although not sufficient on its own to achieve transformational change, the Action Lab is nonetheless an essential means of breaking the gridlock that prevents executives from being powerful and of banishing the entropy that over time slows down even the best of corporations.

    Reprint No. 99408

    The Action Lab in ActionThe Action Lab is based on a simple, profound and paradoxical truth about most deep learning in adulthood: We are much more likely to act our way into a new way of thinking than think our way into a new way of acting. Three corporations in different corners of the world have translated theory into action guided by four design principles:

    1. Create an environment that is safe enough to promote experimentation and learning but intense enough to foster discontinuous change. The trick involves keeping group attention focused on the difficult challenge, regulating distress so that the group does not become dysfunctional and handling the conflicts that arise as participants grasp avoidance mechanisms, such as scapegoating and looking to authority for the answers.

    2. Evoke new behavior patterns using a compelling real-life challenge facing the business that stresses the social order of the team. The situation must be relevant and intense enough to "unfreeze" the social norms and force members outside their comfort zone into ambiguous and uncharted territory.

    3. Get to the bottom of the assigned task by uncovering the "ground truth" - the real business issues and expectations that exist when all the obscuring layers are peeled away. This base of facts is the anvil against which straight talk occurs and new responses are forged.

    4. Foster a discontinuity in how a team is "led" as a prerequisite for achieving discontinuity in performance. The traditional repertoire of leaders (relying on authority, having "the answers" or exercising detailed levels of control) typically fails in the lab setting. Radical solutions often emerge from unlikely sources in the organization. This frequently makes leaders feel threatened and uncomfortable. Keeping leaders in the hot seat requires enormous commitment on their part to stay the course.

    Zoom in on a lab in session. The door leading into an open workspace displays a sign: "Leave your position outside and enter." Within, a team of 10 individuals - including representatives from operations, marketing, H.R., finance, I.T. and from time to time customers or suppliers - sit in a circle. Dress is casual. Shop-floor workers and fast-track managers are indistinguishable from customers and vendors. Small tables with untidy piles of paper occupy the room's perimeter. Flip charts adorn the walls, providing a chronicle of what the lab is up to and what it has accomplished from day one. One has a big square of "possibilities" with sections X'd out as feasibility analysis and organizational constraints have narrowed choices toward a likely course of action. A shoebox on one table accumulates $1 donations as a celebration fund that grows each time anyone makes limiting statements such as "we tried it before and it didn't work" or "they'll never let us do that" or breaks a punctuality commitment by showing up late.

    The lab participants are tired. They have spent the day trying to engage sponsors in bold propositions. Each sponsor, viewing the proposals through a different lens of experience, has found some flaw. One of the quieter lab participants speaks up: "We seem to give up on our grand ideas every time an executive finds something to criticize. If this keeps up, we won't have anything left. Maybe this pattern of avoiding conflicts is the problem." The lab realizes that it has unconsciously been drawn into the company's hierarchical and consensual management style, thereby limiting itself to safe territory. As one lab participant sums it up: "The lab is the company. Everything that blocks this company's ability to invent a new future is right here in this room."

    Such insights are compelling. Instead of selling an idea, participants are drawn to look deeper at "why the disagreement?" They uncover how their solution is being interpreted and what their colleagues, sponsors and other stakeholders think the company's interests really are. Armed with this understanding, the lab can create joint work that helps others outside the lab become enrolled in a bold solution.

    Reprint No. 99408


    Authors Richard T. Pascale, Richard T. Pascale is an associate fellow of Oxford University and a visiting scholar of the Santa Fe Institute. A faculty member at Stanford's Graduate School of Business for 20 years, he is a consultant to leading companies worldwide. Dr. Pascale is co-author of "The Art of Japanese Management" (Simon & Schuster, 1981), a New York Times best seller, and author of "Managing on the Edge" (Simon & Schuster, 1990) and numerous Harvard Business Review articles. He is completing "Surfing the Edge of Chaos" (with Mark Millemann and Linda Gioja, Random House, 2000), applying recent scientific insights into the nature of living systems to achieve discontinuous organizational change.Anne H. Miller,

    Anne H. Miller is a partner at Applied Value, where she leads efforts for combining strategy and organizational skills to deliver large-scale change in major corporations worldwide. Ms. Miller specializes in the issues facing leaders who seek to renew and sustain organizational capability for innovation. She has been responsible for large-scale change efforts across a variety of industries and national cultures, including Southeast Asia, South Africa, South America, Europe and the United States.