A
Manual for Self-Disruption
Did ride-sharing apps kill the taxi business?
Or did the taxi industry disrupt itself by consistently offering users a lousy
experience at a high price and refusing to innovate?
These
aren’t merely academic or semantic questions. Today, many companies find
themselves competing with businesses whose primary purpose is not simply to
take a small amount of market share, but to completely upend their industry and
obliterate incumbents’ raisons d’ĂȘtre. And when confronted with
such an existential threat, leaders spend too much time and budget trying to
keep up with, or stay ahead of, their traditional competitors. A tip: If you
need your competitors to alert you that taking your customers for granted will
crush your margins, it might be too late. Often, other companies’ faster
adoption of emerging technology is a symptom of complacency within your
organization.
The leading indicators of complacency might
be intangible, but they are usually significant. Is your star talent leaving
for competition, or, even more telling, for entirely new industries? Are your
costs of recruitment rising and internal recommendations dropping? Do people
joke internally about how long it takes to get things done?
The best way to fight complacency and defend
against disruption is to go on offense. Instead of playing catch-up, companies
should seek to change the rules of the game. They must identify and invest in
the people who are always pushing for progress over perfection, and channel their
passion and ambition in the service of disrupting their own business models.
While doing so, leaders must create a high level of urgency, gain clarity, and
express a strong vision.
Invest in Iconoclasts
It takes a special kind of person to speak up
and ask if the business is stagnating. Think of your workplace like a
chessboard: Everybody has a role to play, and you can’t win a game with only
knights. It’s healthy to have a mix of personality types. And one of those
types is a team member who raises her hand, asks tough questions, and sparks
productive debate.
Some
people are naturally good at creating friction — they’re agitators,
instigators, disruptors, and downright bothersome. Although they may not always
be welcomed in many organizational cultures, they play a vital role when
competitive landscapes shift. They’re the people who ask tomorrow’s
questions, which tend to not to have answers.
Iconoclasts
tend to make great experience and product officers. Because such leaders must
work at the intersection
of business, experience, and technology (BXT), it
is imperative for them to look past the nuts and bolts of the current business,
see the bigger picture and articulate a vision. Given the reins of authority,
iconoclasts can work across silos to connect the best ideas and opportunities
from all parts of the organization.
Disrupt Yourself
Listening to your internal agitators might
reveal the need for a big change in direction. The brutal truth is, disruption
is holistic, endless, and inevitable. Beyond their business models, companies
are going to have to alter their very DNA to stay relevant. That might mean
changing behaviors so that people expect to operate in a state of flux. Doing so
can be uncomfortable. But painting a vivid picture of the company’s tomorrow so
that everybody in the organization knows what what’s on the horizon can provide
much-needed clarity.
Embarking upon a transformation means making
a long-term commitment to help your business — by hurting it. Some of the
most innovative companies in the world operate with little to no margin to win
customers. Others unapologetically delay product releases because they will not
compromise on quality. Still others roll out new experiences so rapidly their
competitors can’t keep up. Risky business? In one sense. But with a clear
vision and a plan to play the long game, companies can make an unconventional
approach their standard operating procedure.
Self-disrupting businesses expect public
scrutiny, and they power through bad quarters to come out leaner and meaner on
the other side. That’s a modus operandi that is not easy to sell to
shareholders, or internally. I was in a meeting recently in which someone
complained: “Why is our business always changing?”
Building Urgency
The business is always changing because it
has to — for success, and for survival. For self-disruption to gain any
traction, the executive team and the board need to agree that the task at hand
is urgent, and to instill that sense of urgency in the organization. When I
work with business leaders and bring them all in the same room, we all become
the architects of the future, embrace the leading indicators of change, and
examine what is possible. It is only when we all come to the same conclusions
and own the same solution that we can move forward with the speed and alignment
needed to make tomorrow.
Urgency is key. Businesses don’t embark upon
needed transformation when they think the threat level they are facing is
DEFCON2. They have to act as if they are at DEFCON 1, the highest level of
alert, long before they are actually facing an existential threat. But ringing
sirens in an attempt to spur people into action only gets you so far.
Harnessing the power of iconoclasts and evangelists within the organization in
pursuit of a new vision is a necessary first step. And since the work can’t be
done solely by your own team, leaders must take pains to bring along vendors,
associates, and customers at the inception of a transformation process.
Gaining Clarity
A clear vision will ensure that
transformations maintain their momentum. And, here, too, focusing on the
prospects of an internal transformation — and not simply looking ahead, to the
side, or behind at competitors — functions as a powerful lens. It may help to
play a form of Mad Libs and fill in the blanks:
(My company name) didn’t kill the (my
industry) business.
We
disrupted ourselves by (constructing an
entirely differentiated experience).
Anybody can follow a path
into the future by walking in the ruts that others have made. Today’s intrepid
pioneers are those who carve out their own roads in unforgiving
David Clarke
https://www.strategy-business.com/blog/A-Manual-for-Self-Disruption?gko=a6146&utm_source=itw&utm_medium=20180104&utm_campaign=resp
1 comment:
Very true. Employees who ask too many right questions are ignored and avoided by companies with rigid managements.
Post a Comment