Tuesday, November 19, 2019
4 keys to success in todays rapidly changing business climate
4 keys to success in todayâs rapidly changing business climate 4 keys to success in todayâs rapidly changing business climate Geoff Tuff is a Principal at Deloitte Consulting LLP and a senior leader of the Innovation and Applied Design practices. Steven Goldbach is also a Principal at Deloitte, where he serves as Chief Strategy Officer. The two recently sat down to discuss why the old business playbooks arenât working anymore, and offer more insights from their new book, Detonate: Why- and How- Corporations Must Blow Up Best Practices (and Bring a Beginnerâs Mind) to Survive.This conversation has been edited and condensed. To watch the full version, click the video here.Follow Ladders on Flipboard!Follow Laddersâ magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and more! Geoff: Youâve been a strategist for a long time, and youâve talked about sources of advantage. Whatâs happening these days with advantage?Steven: Well, the long-standing advantages are getting disrupted by new technologies that make possible businesses that are an order of magnitud e better quality, or an order of magnitude lower cost. For example, in the world of radio, you used to have to spend a lot of money to erect radio towers, and now with a few lines of code, youâve basically got radioâs business model in Spotify, which is cheaper to distribute.Or if you wanted to get a custom-made suit, you used to have to go to a tailor, right? That was your only option. And now you can use an app like MTailor to take a 3D image of your body and upload it, and then theyâll send you the same custom-made suit at a lower cost.Technological advances are driving this movement from the known to the unknown. And how are organizations responding? Theyâre trying to apply the playbooks from the known world to the unknown world- and thatâs the problem weâre trying to solve.Remember the first day that you started your job? You probably sat down with your career advisor, and they said something like, âIf you want to be successful at this organization, here are all t he things that I did when I was in your shoes.â That was the recipe for success- âDo what my forebears did, and you, too, can be successful.âThe problem is, [as we transition into a world of] uncertainty, we start to get system failure. Weâre seeing this vicious cycle where you put a business model out into the world and, all of a sudden, consumers donât like it- it fails. And then the boss comes in and says, âWell, did you do what I told you to do? Did you follow the playbook?âAnd then they start to do all the predictable things from the world of the known. They examine the data, they analyze, they try to understand what went wrong in their risk models. Then they put it back into the marketplace and, lo and behold, it fails again.Now someone more senior comes in, and all of a sudden, youâre going towards a world where youâre [like] Blockbuster video, defining your business model as, âWeâre in the store business, not the DVD-to-home business.ââIn everythi ng you do, focus on human behavior.âGeoff: No oneâs going to change their company overnight, but you do need to instill a different mindset. There were four key principles that we identified in the course of our research, two of which have to do with thinking differently.One is that at the heart of systemic change and getting rid of old playbooks is the notion that, in everything you do, focus on human behavior. No matter how digital companies become, the most basic economic unit of analysis is still human behavior. And I donât just mean customers- it can be customers, employees, regulators, suppliers, or partners, but someone somewhere has to change their behavior in order for a performance curve to change.And the [advanced] version of that is understanding: what is the accumulation of human behaviors that creates economic value for you? From the beginning of your value to the end, who are the human beings involved? And then say, âIf we look at the entire system, which one behavioral change would have disproportionate value for us?âIf we spent our time saying, âWhat are the human behaviors weâre trying to drive?â, and then focusing our resources on actually achieving that behavioral change, that would lead to a completely different way of doing business.The second âthink differentlyâ principle is about bringing a beginnerâs mind, a well-known concept from Zen Buddhism. My favorite quote about that comes from D.T. Suzuki, and itâs something like, âIn the beginnerâs mind, there are many possibilities. In the expertâs mind, there are few.âOne of the ways you [increase] efficiency is to find people who have been there, done that, or lived through that experience before, and have them bring their expertise to the table in order to make a decision. [Although] when you bring expertise to the table, you narrow the aperture in terms of possible solutions. [But not] if you bring a beginner to the table and say, âGo try to do this.â Imagine the average startup entrepreneur, the digital disrupter- when they come to a challenge, they donât say, âJeeze, how do I execute on this using my legacy business system?â No, they say, âHow would I do this better? How would I better achieve the behavioral change that Iâm after?ââIn the beginnerâs mind, there are many possibilities. In the expertâs mind, there are few.âSteven: Right. If you think differently, youâve also got to be willing to act differently. The thing that [professionals] need to do the most is [focus on] minimal viable moves. We took that idea from the world of product design, which often starts with minimal viable products, and extended it to almost any business decision that you can make: âHow could you do something in a small manner that would [help you] learn about the human behaviors youâre trying to cause?âGeoff: And you have to do it super quickly- just go out and try it.Steven: Super quickly and super cheaply. Particula rly if youâre in that uncertain world, you want to figure out to what extent you can change the behavior that you need to change. Can you do it? How much will it cost? Youâre going out and constantly testing, consistently making minimal viable moves.When I was at Forbes magazine, we wanted to corner the market on the CueCat, a device that [allowed] you to scan a barcode on a print advertising page, and it would take you to a webpage. We wanted to know if we could create more value for advertisers by creating more engagement, so we were going to be bold and send out a million CueCats to our subscribers. But the issue was the cost of the devices and mailing it to them- it was a good chunk of money.This was the [year] 2000, and the CueCat was a wired device. You had to use it while you were plugged in to your desktop computer, and as it turns out, people donât always read their Forbesmagazine sitting in front of their desktop. They like to read it, say, on a plane, or a train, or the subway.So it turned out our hypothesis was wrong- we couldnât change the behavior. But that doesnât mean that it wasnât worth testing- it just means we didnât need to send the CueCat to a million people. [We could have sent it to] just thirty, watched what they were doing, and figured it out.âWhatever problem youâre facing, go figure out how you could design a test, or design something to try in the real world.âGeoff: It sounds like the opposite of the old world, which is all about analysis. Donât get rid of data completely, because youâll still have some opportunities where itâs going to work. But these minimally viable moves are all about, âLetâs not spend time analyzing- letâs just go try it.âSteven: Exactly. And to clarify, when we say that the data is no good, we mean the historical, syndicated data that [already] exists. We want to create new data by going out and giving our customers something to respond to in the real world.So if the t hird principle is about making minimal viable moves, the fourth one is embracing impermanence. If you make a move today, you canât be so wedded to it that you wonât be willing to blow it up later. The world is moving really fast, so [that move] is not likely to last forever.Itâs silly when people ask questions like, âIf I stay [in this organization,] where will I be in 15 years?â Weâd have to assume that we can [predict] the steps [of an organizationâs evolution,] and thatâs just no longer a relevant conversation. We have to be willing to embrace that we donât know what might happen, and therefore, we should be more focused on the things that are working today, and what we can learn about the future.What advice would you give to people who want to apply some of these ideas?Geoff: The first thing to do, especially if youâre in a position of authority, is to ask different, better questions. Donât ask about the return on investment, ask about return on behavior. We should care about financials, but forecasts should be based on observable outcomes in the market. So if I were to ask you, âCan you figure out what the return of driving this behavior versus that behavior would be?â, I bet youâd see significant change throughout the entire system.What [advice would you give]?Steven: I think youâve just got to pick something and try it. Donât overanalyze it. Whatever problem youâre facing, go figure out how you could design a test, or design something to try in the real world. Weâre spending way more time trying to learn about something before we make a choice- instead, letâs decide today and see the response. Thatâs the best way to study something.This article originally appeared on Heleo.You might also enjoy⦠New neuroscience reveals 4 rituals that will make you happy Strangers know your social class in the first seven words you say, study finds 10 lessons from Benjamin Franklinâs daily schedule that will double your productivity The worst mistakes you can make in an interview, according to 12 CEOs 10 habits of mentally strong people
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