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  • Will You Add? - Tradition and Past Business Assumptions May Be the Root Causes of the Disease

    The Information Age, Make It Work For You
    The Information Age. That is what writers and analysts have labeled the concluding years of the twentieth century and the beginning of the twenty-first century.Throughout the time-line of history every great era has been given a name to identify the major achievement or advance in progress that marks that time period.Some that come to mind are the Ice Age, the Bronze Age, the Iron Age, the Industrial Age and now the Information Age.I don't know if the people of
    nology that made it possible to put a team anywhere in the world and get signal out. Anybody who was willing to challenge their own assumptions could see those things.”

    Michael Dell believes that the status quo is never good enough, even if it means painful changes with loss of his reputation. Success is greeted with five seconds of praise followed by five hours of post-mortem on what could have been done better. To Dell, celebration breeds complacency. He once rejected an idea to display Dell artefacts in the company’s lobby because “museums are looking at the past.” Says Michael Dell: “Celebrate for a nanosecond. Then move on.”

    Hence, companies sow the seeds of failures and arrogance

    In Your Best Interest
    A diversified medical group suffered from a common procedure that frustrated patients, doctors and laboratory technicians every day.First, doctors sent their patients to the laboratory for tests. After the tests, patients asked the laboratory technicians for results.When technicians shared the test results, patients often got upset. When patients got upset, doctors got upset. Doctors preferred to explain test results to their patients personally and offer next steps fo
    For a troubled company, it is prudent to challenge all “sacred cows” – those old and sacrosanct business assumptions. It is probable that some of these old “sacred cows” which were based on prior erroneous perceptions and assumptions that got the company into trouble.

    In times of rapid change, a strategic failure is often caused by an incorrect or false assumption. We console ourselves by telling ourselves that we have gone through the present problem before and hence are able to tide through it again. Often, we also falsely assume that this change is temporary, or that the impact would be limited and hence can be ignored. Success has got into the management’s heads and become their greatest root cause of the disease. The prevailing mindset is that “we have been successful and everything worked in the past and failures will not happen here.” Then the company’s profit erodes and their stock plummets.

    In a similar vein, we may dismiss the pain in our body such as a headache or stomach ache and just treat it with simple over-the-counter medication without noting its severity. Sometimes, this could well turn out to be more serious or life-threatening such as stomach cancer or prelude to a heart attack and stroke. The high death toll during the SARS outbreak of 2003 was also partly attributed to the initial dismissal of the symptoms and nonchalant attitudes adopted by some of the infected victims causing it to spread rapidly.

    Many of these old and obsolete assumptions happen in large and well-known companies whose traditional cash cow businesses have become sacred cows and end up as sacrificial cows or mad cows when market forces turn against and overwhelm them. Time and again, some wrong business assumptions and perceptions by experts have led many companies astray. For example, Ken Olson, president of Digital Equipment said in 1977: “There is no reason anyone would want a computer in his or her home.” Chairman of IBM, John Akers added in 1983: “The world market for computers is about 275,000.” Because of these erroneous assumptions and perceptions, it is no wonder both Digital Equipment and IBM were late in entering the personal computer market.

    Gary Hamel said: “One of the things that I believe is that whatever you need to know to create the future you can know. By definition, whatever Microsoft needed to know, it knew. Whatever CNN needed to know, it knew. Take an example. Why was it CNN rather than BBC that created the global news network? I do not think it was a prediction issue for CNN. It was not somehow they had some wonderful planners who saw what the BBC could not see. All the things that you needed to create CNN were totally visible.

    You had cable television eroding the monopoly of the traditional broadcasters. You had satellite technology that made it possible to put a team anywhere in the world and get signal out. Anybody who was willing to challenge their own assumptions could see those things.”

    Michael Dell believes that the status quo is never good enough, even if it means painful changes with loss of his reputation. Success is greeted with five seconds of praise followed by five hours of post-mortem on what could have been done better. To Dell, celebration breeds complacency. He once rejected an idea to display Dell artefacts in the company’s lobby because “museums are looking at the past.” Says Michael Dell: “Celebrate for a nanosecond. Then move on.”

    Hence, companies sow the seeds of failures and arrogance

    A Little Pride Goes A Long Way
    In today’s competitive world, the small things sometimes measure the fine line between success and failure:1. The caring smile of each employee.2. The extra effort to meet a deadline.3. One final check of a job before it goes to the customer.4. The moment you take to add one last touch to your best effort.And where do these small things come from? They cannot always be taught or programmed. In fact, they come from only one place - inside each o
    root cause of the disease. The prevailing mindset is that “we have been successful and everything worked in the past and failures will not happen here.” Then the company’s profit erodes and their stock plummets.

    In a similar vein, we may dismiss the pain in our body such as a headache or stomach ache and just treat it with simple over-the-counter medication without noting its severity. Sometimes, this could well turn out to be more serious or life-threatening such as stomach cancer or prelude to a heart attack and stroke. The high death toll during the SARS outbreak of 2003 was also partly attributed to the initial dismissal of the symptoms and nonchalant attitudes adopted by some of the infected victims causing it to spread rapidly.

    Many of these old and obsolete assumptions happen in large and well-known companies whose traditional cash cow businesses have become sacred cows and end up as sacrificial cows or mad cows when market forces turn against and overwhelm them. Time and again, some wrong business assumptions and perceptions by experts have led many companies astray. For example, Ken Olson, president of Digital Equipment said in 1977: “There is no reason anyone would want a computer in his or her home.” Chairman of IBM, John Akers added in 1983: “The world market for computers is about 275,000.” Because of these erroneous assumptions and perceptions, it is no wonder both Digital Equipment and IBM were late in entering the personal computer market.

    Gary Hamel said: “One of the things that I believe is that whatever you need to know to create the future you can know. By definition, whatever Microsoft needed to know, it knew. Whatever CNN needed to know, it knew. Take an example. Why was it CNN rather than BBC that created the global news network? I do not think it was a prediction issue for CNN. It was not somehow they had some wonderful planners who saw what the BBC could not see. All the things that you needed to create CNN were totally visible.

    You had cable television eroding the monopoly of the traditional broadcasters. You had satellite technology that made it possible to put a team anywhere in the world and get signal out. Anybody who was willing to challenge their own assumptions could see those things.”

    Michael Dell believes that the status quo is never good enough, even if it means painful changes with loss of his reputation. Success is greeted with five seconds of praise followed by five hours of post-mortem on what could have been done better. To Dell, celebration breeds complacency. He once rejected an idea to display Dell artefacts in the company’s lobby because “museums are looking at the past.” Says Michael Dell: “Celebrate for a nanosecond. Then move on.”

    Hence, companies sow the seeds of failures and arrogance

    Housing Starts - Why Business Won't Be Usual
    Some will blame current economic pressure on a subprime market that was more enthusiastic than realistic. Housing starts are down with consumer confidence following suit. According to The Conference Board its “March [2007] consumer confidence index fell to 107.2, the lowest level since November and a decline that was larger than Wall Street expected.”The good news is the Dow has performed well in the midst of this news while labor statistics remain strong.Federal Reser
    infected victims causing it to spread rapidly.

    Many of these old and obsolete assumptions happen in large and well-known companies whose traditional cash cow businesses have become sacred cows and end up as sacrificial cows or mad cows when market forces turn against and overwhelm them. Time and again, some wrong business assumptions and perceptions by experts have led many companies astray. For example, Ken Olson, president of Digital Equipment said in 1977: “There is no reason anyone would want a computer in his or her home.” Chairman of IBM, John Akers added in 1983: “The world market for computers is about 275,000.” Because of these erroneous assumptions and perceptions, it is no wonder both Digital Equipment and IBM were late in entering the personal computer market.

    Gary Hamel said: “One of the things that I believe is that whatever you need to know to create the future you can know. By definition, whatever Microsoft needed to know, it knew. Whatever CNN needed to know, it knew. Take an example. Why was it CNN rather than BBC that created the global news network? I do not think it was a prediction issue for CNN. It was not somehow they had some wonderful planners who saw what the BBC could not see. All the things that you needed to create CNN were totally visible.

    You had cable television eroding the monopoly of the traditional broadcasters. You had satellite technology that made it possible to put a team anywhere in the world and get signal out. Anybody who was willing to challenge their own assumptions could see those things.”

    Michael Dell believes that the status quo is never good enough, even if it means painful changes with loss of his reputation. Success is greeted with five seconds of praise followed by five hours of post-mortem on what could have been done better. To Dell, celebration breeds complacency. He once rejected an idea to display Dell artefacts in the company’s lobby because “museums are looking at the past.” Says Michael Dell: “Celebrate for a nanosecond. Then move on.”

    Hence, companies sow the seeds of failures and arrogance

    Company Incentive Programs
    Companies use incentive programs for a variety of reasons.They want to change customer behavior.They want to attract new customers to their products. These customers later become loyal customers and provide the company with a continual flow of revenue.They want to reward loyal or long time customers. These are the companies’ bread and butter and companies will go out of their way to see that they are kept happy.A company can use and incentive program to g
    r both Digital Equipment and IBM were late in entering the personal computer market.

    Gary Hamel said: “One of the things that I believe is that whatever you need to know to create the future you can know. By definition, whatever Microsoft needed to know, it knew. Whatever CNN needed to know, it knew. Take an example. Why was it CNN rather than BBC that created the global news network? I do not think it was a prediction issue for CNN. It was not somehow they had some wonderful planners who saw what the BBC could not see. All the things that you needed to create CNN were totally visible.

    You had cable television eroding the monopoly of the traditional broadcasters. You had satellite technology that made it possible to put a team anywhere in the world and get signal out. Anybody who was willing to challenge their own assumptions could see those things.”

    Michael Dell believes that the status quo is never good enough, even if it means painful changes with loss of his reputation. Success is greeted with five seconds of praise followed by five hours of post-mortem on what could have been done better. To Dell, celebration breeds complacency. He once rejected an idea to display Dell artefacts in the company’s lobby because “museums are looking at the past.” Says Michael Dell: “Celebrate for a nanosecond. Then move on.”

    Hence, companies sow the seeds of failures and arrogance

    Who Is Managing Your Career?
    I was reminded of this story by Trish, a former colleague. I hadn’t forgotten, because it was the catalyst for a new career advancement strategy I developed. In my various human resource roles I always advise my clients to consider a range of self promotion strategies to advance their career. As a result of the case study below, I developed a new strategy to take the initiative to keep their own company employee file updated by ensuring the Human Resource Department received and rec
    nology that made it possible to put a team anywhere in the world and get signal out. Anybody who was willing to challenge their own assumptions could see those things.”

    Michael Dell believes that the status quo is never good enough, even if it means painful changes with loss of his reputation. Success is greeted with five seconds of praise followed by five hours of post-mortem on what could have been done better. To Dell, celebration breeds complacency. He once rejected an idea to display Dell artefacts in the company’s lobby because “museums are looking at the past.” Says Michael Dell: “Celebrate for a nanosecond. Then move on.”

    Hence, companies sow the seeds of failures and arrogance during good and successful times. Managers get addicted to the old formula of success and refuse to change when the competitive situation changes. To ensure its effective and successful implementation, the troubled company must critically re-examine and re-visit every business assumption.

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