1. Intelligent
New Strategies
for New Battles
Managers everywhere are under siege. Yesterdayās paradigms ā economic,
political, social, technological, and more ā are no longer valid. And what is
worse, it seems virtually impossible to fully grasp or make sense of the evolving
patterns of forces they are likely to face tomorrow.
By Douglas Bernhardt
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2. B
UT PERHAPS the most frightening ā¢ A world-wide banking crisis precipitated by
phenomenon of all, even for the the collapse of āsubprimeā lending schemes;
most seasoned of executives, is ā¢ Chinese and Indian pharmaceutical [Apple] appears to understand
that the very business models companies swamping the world with generic
which seemed so robust, and substitutes for expensive āblockbusterā drugs its competition and its
appeared to work so well, in an industrial age and; customers in equal measure, a
have today crumbled into irrelevance. Indeed, ā¢ The ubiquitous internet spawning not just
as businesses from Africa to America to Asia new enterprises and services, but entirely powerful recipe for continuing
ratchet up their efforts to gain yet another point new business models. success.
or two of market share and proļ¬tability, one is Indeed, as managers prepare to engage
reminded of what the crew and passengers of growing armies of new enemies, they are
the Titanic would have achieved by re-arranging seldom certain of just who it is theyāre ļ¬ghting.
the deck chairs on that ill-fated vessel some 96 Is it any wonder then that business leaders,
years ago. including those whose MBAs prepared them
Today, it often seems that we are ļ¬oundering so well to manage in the 20th century, ļ¬nd
in a period where the dynamics of asymmetric themselves overwhelmed? And as they catch
warfare apply as much to the world of business their breaths to take stock of the uncertainties
as they do to the āglobal war on terrorā. around them, at which altar do they pray
The consequence is that many, if not most, for salvation? In many cases, if current
executives seem all too ready to wring their management literature is any guideline, it is at
hands in frustration as they retreat into the the altar of āmanagement innovationā.
familiar comfort of their cubicles and ofļ¬ce āPlease help us,ā they intone to the high
suites in search of ostrich-like respite from the priests ā or gurus ā of leading business schools
new realities ā or as some would say predictable and consultancies. āHelp us āinnovateā our
surprises ā of the early 21st century: way out of sub-standard performance, below-
ā¢ $100 and more for a barrel of crude oil average returns, and the dis-equilibrium
and the tsunami-like effect this has had on caused by environmental forces outside of our
commerce everywhere; control (and which we failed to anticipate or see
ā¢ About $1 000 for one troy ounce of gold; in time). Help us, we beseech thee, to meet our
ā¢ A cascading US dollar worth about 65 Euro legitimate aspirations for success.ā And why
cents; not? After all, as the consultancy McKinsey &
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3. Company observes: āInnovation has become a executive team is far more likely to defeat its
core driver of [corporate] growth, performance, opposition if it possesses real-time knowledge
Many ļ¬rms, now resting and valuation.ā1 and foreknowledge of its rivalsā capabilities,
But what do we mean by āmanagement intentions, and plans. Ask yourself, is this what
in corporate graveyards innovationā?* Gary Hamel, visiting professor your company and other companies with which
everywhere, were not equipped of Strategic and International Management you are familiar doing? Or do they continue
at London Business School puts it this way: to wage tomorrowās competitive wars using
to give serious consideration āManagement innovation is anything that strategies and tactics developed and reļ¬ned for
to how and where innovation substantially alters the way in which the work last yearās battles. Do they, in effect, focus on
of management is carried out, or signiļ¬cantly trying to improve business performance through
might help them achieve modiļ¬es customary organisational forms, operational effectiveness rather than by means
competitive advantage or and, by so doing, advances organisational of strategic reinvention and positioning based
goals.ā2 Moreover, adds Hamel, āManagement on future-oriented intelligence?
how their rivals intended to innovation tends to yield a competitive Consider the example of the South African
compete in the future. advantage when one or more of three conditions textile industry. This is what the countryās
are met: the innovation is based on a novel Textile Federation had to say in their report on
management principle that challenges some the trading environment for 2007:
long-standing orthodoxy; the innovation is The South African textile industry is currently
systemic, encompassing a range of processes facing extremely difļ¬cult trading conditions.
and methods; and/or the innovation is part of Employment in the industry has declined from
an ongoing programme of rapid-ļ¬re invention 70 500 in 2003 to just below 50 500 in 2006. In
where progress compounds over time.ā3 addition a number of textile mills have recently
Innovation should not, of course, be mistaken closed and have been forced to retrench staff.
for invention. āInvention is the creation of Imports are at an all time high. Imports of
something new. Innovation is the creation of yarns have increased from 77 000 tons in 2001
something new that makes money; it ļ¬nds a to 99 000 tons in 2006, an increase of 29% while
pathway to the consumer.ā4 imports of fabrics have remained relatively
In our experience, however, the real issue constant with 94 900 tons in 2001 and 95 300
is not whether management innovation tons in 2006. Much larger increases were
signiļ¬cantly increases a ļ¬rmās odds of winning recorded by imports of made up textiles which
its competitive battles; it clearly does. Rather, have increased from 4 900 tons in 2001 to 28
we suggest, the key issue is one which we elect 700 tons in 2006 an increase of nearly 500%
to frame in terms of the question: what role for and imports of clothing which increased from
intelligence in management innovation? 139 million items in 2001 to 567 million items in
By intelligence (or competitive intelligence) 2006 an increase of over 300%.
we refer to the co-coordinated, systematic Historically textile and clothing imports into
collection, analysis, and timely dissemination South Africa originated from a wide range of
of āall sourceā information about external countries chief amongst which were Taiwan,
forces that have, or are likely to have, a South Korea and Europe. However since 2001
material impact on the strategic ambitions, imports have increasingly been sourced in
interests, objectives, and plans of the ļ¬rm. The the main from China. In the case of clothing
dimensions of intelligence can be thought of imports, 89% currently originates from China,
in terms of activity (process), knowledge (the 3% from India and the remaining 8% from
end product, or deliverables), and organisation the rest of the world while 60% of all made
(function and structure). Intelligence products up textiles (blankets, bed sheets, towels and
(the analytically derived assessments and curtains) originate from China.7
estimates that give objective, in-context This state of affairs begs two questions: First,
meaning to raw data and information) in why didnāt the industry see the Chinese coming?
particular exist to āsupport senior decision Neither the capabilities nor the intentions of
makers in their capacity as strategists,5 the China should have come as a surprise. Did
very leaders whose main job it is to understand the South African textile industry assume that
and cope with competition.6 1.4 billion people were sleeping all day? And
Thus, if the essence of truly innovative second, why, instead of innovating its way out
strategy springs from thinking and actions of competitive submission, has the industry
which differ radically from what weāve done, and reacted by pleading with the government on
how weāve done it before, or what our rivals are bended knees for protection in the form of
* We prefer the term āstrategic innovationā. likely to expect us to do in the future, a ļ¬rmās more and tighter quotas and other measures?
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4. Wits Business School
INTELLIGENT NEW STRATEGIES FOR NEW BATTLES
Developing timely, innovative strategies for professionals, informing them ofā¦customersā hard truths, overshadowed their thinking and
commercial success are, ultimately, the only [present and future] needs and concernsā. Zara behaviour. As a result the management teams
chance the textile ā as well as other industries has not asked the Spanish government or the of these and many other ļ¬rms now resting in
ā have at regaining their diminished standings. European Union to protect it from the Chinese; corporate graveyards everywhere were not
A prime example is Zara, the ļ¬agship fashion it succeeds by out-innovating and out-smarting equipped to give serious consideration to how
brand of Spainās 9bn Inditex Group, which competition from the Far East. and where innovation might help them achieve
boasts a growing network of some 1 150 The South African textile industryās competitive advantage, or how their rivals
stores in 68 countries. Zara does not attempt experience is not, of course, unique. It is not intended to compete for the future. Consider
to compete on the basis of low-cost against the only once-thriving companies in South Africa some of the speciļ¬cs: including āspecial itemsā,
Chinese, India or other Asian states. (More than that have fallen prey to managementās failure the once mighty GM Corporation reported
70% of its production takes place in Europe). to systematically monitor, understand and a loss of $38.7bn for 2007. For many years
Zaraās success is attributable, in large, to a assess future threats. The executive leadership Kodakās overpaid executives continued to
business concept based on the premise āthat of global giants such as General Motors, Kodak, regard Fuji and other makers of camera ļ¬lm
national borders are no impediment to sharing and Swissair have also suffered from the as their main competition even while the digital
a single fashion cultureā. What Zara has done blindspots associated with de facto arrogance revolution was taking place outside their factory
is translate this notion into a highly innovative and thus, an unwillingness to routinely gates. And the once premium European air
business model where āinformation from [the integrate intelligence into their strategic carrier Swissair, despite 70 years in business,
companyās] stores is constantly transmitted thinking and planning processes. Their apparently refused to believe the forecasts for
to a design team made up of over 200 cognitive biases, rather than insistence upon the competitive storms approaching their rich
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5. Wits Business School
INTELLIGENT NEW STRATEGIES FOR NEW BATTLES
mountain enclave as their company entered a recipe for continuing success. Although we are
1 Barsh, J., Capozzi, M.M., and Davidson, J.
spiral dive into Switzerlandās most infamous not aware of the extent to which Apple relies
(2008) āLeadership and innovationā, The
bankruptcy in 2001. Unfortunately for these and upon a formal competitive intelligence function
McKinsey Quarterly, 1, pp. 37-47.
many other leading ļ¬rms, the innovation taking for strategic foresight and insight; what is
2 Hamel, G. (2007) The Future of
place in their industries is clearly not being apparent are the companyās rare competencies
Management. Boston: Harvard Business
launched from their boardrooms or marketing in looking outwards and in placing winning bets
School Press
departments. But how could it? on opportunities (think iPod and iPhone) its
3 Ibid.
How in the absence of steady streams of rivals havenāt yet dreamed of.
4 Fisher, A. (2008) āThe Worldsās Most
intelligence can managers even begin to act as So what remedies to strategic failure do we
Admired Companiesā, Fortune (Europe
innovators? Innovation, or creativity generally, propose? Or expressed differently, what must
Edition), 157(5), pp. 37-44.
seldom takes place in a vacuum. Even artists companies do to join the ranks of the worldās
5 Bernhardt, D. (2003) Competitive
feed on inspiration from somewhere, whether most admired companies? While there are no
Intelligence: Acquiring and
tangible or virtual ā sometimes a photograph, ready-made templates, and a full discussion on
using corporate intelligence and
sometimes a landscape, but always with a strategic innovation is outside the scope of this
counterintelligence. London: FT Prentice
unique interpretation of an event or scene, paper, there are two important steps which we
Hall.
real or imagined. Raw, especially open-source regard as prerequisites for success.
6 Porter, ME. (2008) āThe Five Competitive
(public domain) data and information alone First, management must embrace and
Forces That Shape Strategyā. Harvard
are not enough. Information does not in and nurture a culture of intelligence in the ļ¬rms
Business Review, 86(1) pp. 79-93.
of itself leap onto a silver platter and hand they lead, and ensure that it is integrated
7 http://www.texfed.co.za/main.htm (2008)
itself to the user proclaiming: āThis is what into the organisational architecture as a
(Accessed 12 March 2008).
it all means for youā. Information priorities discrete discipline and function. Innovation
8 Morris, B. (2008) āWhat Makes Apple
need to be established, then collected from and strategy without intelligence are little
Golden, Fortune (Europe Edition), 157(5),
all ā including human ā sources and, ļ¬nally, more than educated guessing games played
pp. 40-44.
evaluated and interpreted before it begins to at shareholdersā expense. Knowing the current
resemble an intelligence product. Again, is this state of play in oneās industry and markets
what the ļ¬rms you know are doing as part of is not enough. Managers need to be able to
their routines? assess and forecast the likely future impact of
In the corporate arena, Apple Computer, competitors and other key players, as well as
ranked number one in Fortune magazineās 2007 a host of other environmental forces on their
list of the Worldās Most Admired Companies, businesses. Similar to its role in government,
offers an excellent example of what it means a core purpose of the intelligence function is
to create and implement winning strategies to advance and protect organisational interests
based on a deep understanding of the world and security. In part it accomplishes this by
around it. Since the return of Steve Jobs as warning about existing and potential threats
the companyās CEO in 1997, it has consistently and explaining what these threats mean for
āinnovated its way out of the doldrumsā8 by high-level policy formulation and actions.
means of strategic innovation. If Appleās results Second, management innovation must be
serve as any indication ā 94% total return to regarded as much as an art as a science. Let
shareholders over the past ļ¬ve years ā the us return to the example of artists: although
company appears to understand its competition they are generally measured in terms of the
and its customers in equal measure, a powerful unique interpretative qualities of their work
ā the way they perceive reality or fantasy ā
underlying their craft is a wide-ranging array of
professional skills and techniques. Creating the
next iPhone is a worthy corporate goal but only if
Management must embrace conceived of within a context of timely, objective
and nurture a culture of facts and analysis about the marketplace and
intelligence in the ļ¬rms overall competitive environment. Zara and
Douglas Bernhardt is a guest lecturer at
Apple do not rely upon simple good luck, or
they lead and ensure that even rapid responses to environmental change,
WBS where he teaches an MBA elective on
Competitive Intelligence. He also teaches
it is integrated into the they anticipate opportunities and threats, they
at the Rotterdam School of Management
set the standards of management, product, and
organisational architecture service against which other ļ¬rms are forced to
and other leading business schools. His
professional time is divided between
as a discreet discipline and benchmark themselves and they continuously
consulting on competitive intelligence and
modify their business models to conform to
function. analytically-derived estimates of unfolding
lecturing. He can be reached at stratcon1@
hotmail.com
futures. And they do so intelligently.
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