BOOK SUMMARY 40 The
Connected Company
·
Summary written by: Alyssa Burkus
“A connected
company must be able to respond dynamically to change – to learn and adapt in
an uncertain, ambiguous, and constantly evolving environment.”
The Connected Company, page 85
We see
it all the time – companies that start out as small, nimble, entrepreneurial
entities, but as they grow, they add layers of people, processes and
complexity. What happens? They become inflexible, slow moving and
unable to quickly respond to the changing needs of their customers or industry.
In The
Connected Company, author Dave Gray (with Thomas Vander Wal) outlines how
organizations need to create better connections between employees, enabling
them to maintain the dynamic and fast-response mindset of a start up
environment. Customers today are using social media to form powerful
communities that at times can take control of your brand. Companies need
to be able to connect to these communities and respond quickly.
“Companies must be flexible enough to rapidly respond to
changes in their environments, or risk extinction.” (pg. 63)
Golden Egg
Connect People to People
“What you need is a way to let customers pull you toward
the things they need and want most.”
The Connected Company, page 103
If you
are listening, your customers will tell you what they need. As companies
grow, they focus on infrastructure, scaling, and other complexities that
distract them from the customer. Gray walks through the challenges that
Starbucks faced five years ago when their sales and profitability dropped, and
their CEO realized they had lost touch with their customers. They
refocused internally with staff, and rebuilt their business with a stronger
push on staying connected to customer needs and staying true to their brand.
Employees
need to connect more deeply to each other as well. Connect them around a
common purpose, bring them together to share experiences and learn from each
other, and find ways to reinforce those connections through internal tools that
allow them to share information.
GEM #1
Structural Change Is Necessary
“Big companies are inevitably slow and cumbersome; small
companies are quick and responsive. Therefore, break big companies into
the smallest pieces possible.”
Lou Gerstner,
quoted in The Connected Company, page 135
quoted in The Connected Company, page 135
Companies
have layers, no question, but how you structure those layers can make all the
difference. Traditional hierarchies work well for reporting “up” results,
but that means employees are more vested in looking internally than outwards to
their customers. Gray describes instead the need to create smaller hubs of
people, with the tools or “platform” to allow front-line employees to be a
single point-of-contact for solving customer needs.
Whether
you refer to them as pods, holarchies or fractal work units, Gray challenges us
to think about building businesses within the business, where “each part is
also a fully-functional whole in its own right” (p.135), allowing them the
agility to solve complex problems quickly. Gray provides the example of
Whole Foods, where store product teams are provided with data and tools,
allowing them to operate autonomously and make their own front-line decisions.
GEM #2
Learn, Change, Grow, Repeat
“To adapt, companies must operate not as machines, but as
learning organisms, purposely interacting with their environment and
continuously improving, based on experiments and feedback.”
The Connected Company, page 74
The
idea of learning organizations isn’t a new one, but today organizations are
realizing that it is not enough to train employees; instead, you need to build
an environment that encourages employees to use what they have learned to
change how they work. Understanding how to learn from failure and recover
is part of this mindset, and the strongest organizations are the ones who are
continuing to grow and evolve. Gray provides the example of GE’s
“Work-Out” program, where employees step away from the assembly line to provide
process improvement feedback to management. It’s a great example of
bringing front-line employees and management together to learn about making
critical changes.
It can
feel daunting to imagine implementing some of the changes outlined in this
book, but you can start by looking at the structure of your organization, and
what elements are keeping you from staying close to your customers. The
book provides extensive company examples of putting these practices into place,
as well as guidance on how to lead a connected company, which helps bring the
ideas from the book to life.
Written
in pods similar to the framework outlined, The Connected Company is
delivered in chunks that can be read all as once or worked through in
stages. With incredible illustrations to guide you, this book shows you
what it takes to create an organization that connects people – to each other,
between layers, and to their customer community.
No comments:
Post a Comment