Teaching Large Companies To Think Like The Little Guys
Q: I am an executive at a large company and in our industry we
are seeing a trend wherein smaller companies are gaining market
share at an alarming rate. Our CEO believes the reason for this
is that smaller companies are more prone to innovation and more
entrepreneurial than larger companies. He has instructed me to
form a committee to study this trend and make recommendations
on how we should deal with it. I’m an executive, not an
entrepreneur. Any advice would be very much appreciated.
-- Name withheld by request
A: Your question reminds me of the time my teenage daughter
tricked me into doing a chemistry project for her under the
pretense of asking for my advice. “But, daddy, you’re just so
smart…” The result was that her/my experiment got a C instead
of an A and almost started a fire in the chemistry lab. Reckon
daddy wasn’t so smart after all: at least that was the opinion
of the principal, her teacher, the fire marshal, and
ultimately, my manipulative, yet adoring daughter.
However, you’re in luck, Mr. X, because I know considerably
more about innovation and entrepreneurship than mixing
combustible chemicals.
Judging by your use of the buzzwords “innovation” and
“entrepreneurial” I’d bet your CEO’s opinion (which I believe
is dead-on, by the way) may have come from the Conference
Board's CEO Challenge 2004, which reported that 87% of the 540
global businesses surveyed cited innovation and enabling
entrepreneur- ship as priorities for their companies.
Furthermore, 31% of companies surveyed considered these issues
to be of the "greatest concern.”
FYI, the Conference Board is an 88 year-old, not-for-profit,
global, independent membership organization that “conducts
research, convenes conferences, makes forecasts, assesses
trends, publishes information and analysis, and brings
executives together to learn from one another. “
What many Conference Board members are learning is that they
are getting their big corporate behinds kicked by smaller, more
innovative, entrepreneurial companies that are not burdened by
the need to have a meeting once an hour or to bury every great
idea under a mound of red tape. You said it yourself: your CEO
told you to set up a committee to study the trend. You might as
well paint a big black hole on the wall and have everyone take
turns trying to run through it. Committees and superfluous
meetings are the biggest wasters of time and money in the
corporate world and rarely produce anything even remotely
resembling results and they are indicative of why smaller
companies are gaining ground on their larger brethren.
The fact that innovation and entrepreneurship run rampant in
smaller companies, but is often suppressed in larger companies
is nothing new. Management guru Peter Drucker first addressed
the issue in his 1985 book, Innovation and Entrepreneurship.
Drucker wrote that one of the most often-asked questions in
many a 1985 boardroom was, “How can we overcome the resistance
to innovation that plagues most organizations?”
The question they should have been asking in 1985 and the
question that you should be asking today is not only how can
you overcome the resistance to innovation and entrepreneurship
within your own organization, but how can you make your
organization more receptive to innovation and more open to
entrepreneurial practices?
Therein lies the key to your recommendation. To compete with
the small boys, the big boys must create an environment in
which innovation and entrepreneurship run rampant. Everyone in
the organization, from the CEO to the executives to the
managers to each and every employee must become innovation
generators and entrepreneurial thinkers. You must create an
environment where shooting for the stars is the norm instead of
the shooting down of ideas.
To put it simply, you must turn your lumbering giant Goliath
into a raging horde of Davids. Now I don’t mean that you should
arm your employees with slings and rocks and turn them loose on
upper management, although that could be really fun to watch.
What I’m talking about is turning your organization into an
innovative, entrepreneurial machine where everyone from the CEO
to the janitor works to make the company more competitive and
profitable.
One reason that large organizations are resistant to innovation
is that everyone is so busy just keeping the wheels in motion
and putting out fires and dealing with the day-to-day drama of
big business that no one has the time to even think about
innovation. And Heaven forbid they have to think like
entrepreneurs. No one has time to even consider the
opportunities that innovation and entrepreneurial thinking
might bring. They are too busy to see that their product is
becoming dated and their market share is becoming smaller. They
are too busy to see the smaller, more innovative companies
speeding up in their rear view mirrors. Competitors in your
rearview mirror are larger than they appear…
So, here’s how you begin. First off, you should develop an
innovation plan that outlines how the process of innovation
will work within your entire organization. If someone has an
idea for a new product, for example, the innovation plan would
explain the process by which their idea should be brought to
the attention of management and how it can be shared with
others throughout the organization. The plan should also detail
how entrepreneurial employees will be rewarded if their idea is
accepted and further rewarded if their idea brings future
profits to the company. Here is where most big companies drop
the ball. They take a great idea, brush aside the person who
thought of it, then hand the idea off to upper management so it
can be buried under a mound of red tape, never to be heard from
again.
This is a key point: to make innovation work you must reward
the innovators monetarily or by letting them take a key role in
bringing their idea to fruition. It’s my opinion that you should
do both: pay them and promote them.
Secondly, innovation and entrepreneurship must be promoted
within your organization as the norm, not the exception. There
must be a clear understanding that the best way to preserve and
perpetuate the organization is through innovation and
entrepreneurial thinking. If you can get everyone in the
organization thinking like entrepreneurs, innovation will soon
run rampant.
This is how you create the raging horde of Davids.
Next week we’ll talk more about how large companies can become
more innovative and entrepreneurial so they can compete with
those pesky little guys.
Here’s to your success!
About The Author: Tim serves as the president and CEO of three
successful technology companies and is the founder of
DropshipWholesale.net, an online organization dedicated to the
success of online and eBay entrepreneurs
www.prosperityandprofits.com
www.dropshipwholesale.net www.TimKnox.com
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