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Total Number of Subscribers: 1626 |
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Date: 11th April 2010 |
Compiled by: M Sathya Kumar |
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If every nation may be said
to have a spirit that showcases its identity, ours must surely be one of
"chalta hai" (everything goes). How does this affect
us....customers as well as businesses? Managers at enlightened
organizations may often find themselves partial to Porter's five forces model
or the BCG four-quadrant matrix (as strategic positioning tools), the
resource-based view, balanced scorecard, core competence, or other frameworks
as the ideal strategy methodology. The idea of strategy, though,
is perhaps far simpler and commonsensical: it is simply a
matter of attitude, insights, and method. The acronym thus formed - AIM - is
also at once symptomatic of what strategy intends: it aims to secure a
differentiation by directing an attitude of "can do" to develop
critical insights and rooting it in method that delivers sustainable
advantage. It is in the method that various schools of thought differ. If every
nation may be said to have a spirit that showcases its identity, ours must
surely be one of "chalta hai" (everything goes). Indeed, this Hindi
phrase can be found in most of our languages and used frequently: in Kannada
it's "solpa adjust madi" (please adjust), in Tamil it's
"athulam kandukathangai, sir" (don't let these worry you), and so
on. The point is, we have internalized an attitude of taking things in our
stride, to not make a fuss, and to tolerate inefficiency, waste, and
poor quality. Such a national attitude has its repercussions when the
minority voice seeking a better product or service becomes the aberrant voice
and a "troublemaker". More importantly, products and service
delivery have lower thresholds and perpetuate the cycle of poor quality and
low expectations. Thus an attitude of acceptance of decreased expectations
prevents us from constantly seeking solutions and innovating on them. This
may seem harsh but the evidence is all around us. Certain sectors in recent
years have attempted to break free of self-imposed limitations, notably where
competition is high and any vestige of old style thinking likely to meet
resistance from newly empowered customers. We can think of banking and retail
in this connection. But a competitive marketplace cannot by itself ensure
innovations or better service because high growth and high volumes have their
own logic that sometimes run counter to marketplace economics. The telecom
industry is a good example.
Customers begin to have
higher expectations only when they have been exposed to superior products and
services. This is a slow process because it requires an oddball organization
to stand up and demonstrate that things could be better, and the results for
itself are not always positive. In the 1960s in Tamil Nadu, TVS ran an
extensive moffusil bus service whose standards of quality and on-time
performance has not been bettered to this day by the airline industry, let
alone passenger road transport. In our Nehruvian enthusiasm to embrace the
"commanding heights of the economy" passenger road transport
in state after state was nationalized as with many other sectors. In the
21st century, we still don't have any where close to the benchmarks set by
the likes of Tata-owned Air An attitude of complacence
and low standards fostered by the political and bureaucratic class is one
thing. What can one say of the private sector, now unleashed and rearing to
go places? A like attitude prevails in most organizations and it requires the
will and persistence of promoters and senior management to change this all
down the line. Permit me to cite two examples of the same organization that
display contrasting conduct. At the Chennai regional head office of the State
Bank of Attitude is important
because it inhibits or fosters the next step on the path to securing
strategic advantage: insight. Innovative companies require both attitude and
insight before they can begin to focus on the prescriptives that management
gurus often dole out. When these are missing - as they often are - strategic
initiatives founder on the rocks of internal confusion, absence of passion
behind a goal, oneupmanship, and forces that work at cross-purposes. And
these happen despite senior management commitment to innovation, quality, low
cost, customer focus, and other lofty ideas seeking to reposition the
organization. So where does that leave an organization that is keen to stand
tall and lead in its chosen market? Lost in the buzzwords such as market
share, margin, growth, positioning, and competitive advantage is the simple
idea that, just as with individuals, companies too need - nay, require - a
bedrock of positive attitude, self belief, and confidence. Long before the
suits get down to the task of strategic initiatives and reorgs perhaps
management might want to think about how to percolate positive vibes and a
can do spirit. For that to happen, listen to the hard working but voiceless
majority who watch helplessly as a minority that is deeply entrenched at all
levels of an organization run the roost. This is the cabal that has perfected
self interest, feathered its own nest, has constructed islands of groupism,
and promotes fear through a perception of reflected power. Any management
that is really intent on a makeover can win the war of attitude only when it
destroys this festering cancer. The majority will then be behind it all the
way. The next article will
explore the aspect of insight and how organizations could be receptive to,
and foster, ideas that germinate in every nook and cranny and bring it to the
fore. Jay Srinivasan is founder of CubbonPark Consulting, a
boutique management practice specializing in transformative processes and
customer experience. He is co-author of Internet Commerce, Metrics and Models
in the New Era of Accountability. |
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