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Transforming the Value Chain

Why the Global 500 are not utilizing information abundance

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 Over the last five hundred years, the primary source of value add, and thus profits, has gradually moved from production and delivery of raw materials and commodity intermediate products to production and delivery of finished goods (with the notable exception of petroleum). At the turn of the millennium, a similar shift is occurring from finished goods to production and delivery of information. The prior transformation saw few companies retain their former pre-eminence, and many countries experienced major changes in relative prosperity and influence.

Over the next decade, the key issue for current providers of finished goods (including finished goods that are largely information, like music) will be their ability to visualize and pursue an effective strategy for optimizing information flow and value from the end consumer back through their value chain. Many of the successful companies of tomorrow that do not own the brand or design process, will recognize their position in the value chain and act as specialty services providers to a number of companies across the value chains in their ecosystem(s). The matrix below illustrates the “Disrupt or Die” imperative facing most companies.

Future Competitive Landscape

The shift from raw materials to intermediate products to finished goods resulted in creating new sets of winners with each transformation. Early evidence indicates that the shift to information management as the key value add may have the same result: for every company that transcends the limits of its industry to become a key player in information management, there are numerous newcomers (Vodafone; Amazon; Solectron) whose absence of legacy baggage allows them to fill new positions quickly in their ecosystems. Executives in many industries indicate a greater fear of the well-equipped outsider than of their traditional competitors. This fear appears to be valid – traditional industry definitions are being made obsolete by the development of ecosystems made up of value chains delivering products/services that fill a similar customer need (for example, the mobile communications ecosystem filling the need for anytime/anywhere two way information exchange).

Speed appears to be a critical competitive advantage in the transformation equation. Different industries – indeed, different countries – have different ‘clock speeds’ as described in Clock Speed, by Charles Fine. When new ecosystems cross several traditional industries and geographies, the players with the fastest clock speed are capturing the majority of the value add in the value chain. In mobile communications, the traditional telcos are losing out to the new backbone companies, service providers, and content access specialists; and where regulatory barriers are being reduced, local companies are losing to Anglo-Saxon based entities.

Early indications are that geographic stratification will develop based on comparative advantage. Some examples already becoming evident are:

·    “Generic” manufacturing in greater China, to utilize the size, education and work ethic of the work force, and the entrepreneurial skills of the Chinese diaspora;

·    Service centers in Ireland, Holland, and India;

·    Tax advantaged assembly in Mexico, Ireland (pending an EU crackdown), and eastern Europe;

·    Branding and design in the United States and Japan

·    Fit in geography and accept the way things are done and will probably not have competitive differentiation;

·    Leverage the strengths and characteristics of geography to anticipate where it’s going, and position yourself ahead;

·    Fight to overcome the barriers and disabler characteristics of that geography;

·    Flight by either going to a different geography, business, or ‘greenfield’ approach and give up on changing existing business.

The rise of specialty service providers within an ecosystem leaves companies that do not own brand or design with two options: to compete or to leverage. Companies can continue to keep business processes internal (core competencies and other) and go up against the specialty providers, or instead, sell off non-core competencies as a means of leveraging the efficiencies and expertise of specialty service providers, and freeing up capital.

The gap in intrinsic growth rates among countries will continue to expand, with countries that have mobile labor forces, heavy reliance on explicit knowledge, and minimal employment barriers being able to sustain a consistently higher growth rate without adverse consequences such as inflation. At a company level, similar concepts will apply, with some caveats regarding the value of employee loyalty in maintaining institutional culture.

Strategies

The research suggests that there are numerous strategies that can assist in positioning a company in a value add role within the new ecosystem(s). Some examples found today are:

·    For companies that own the branding or design activities within a value chain, focus on those competencies and utilize best of breed providers in the value chain to perform other activities. Act as a ‘control tower’ to monitor and manage the value chain; do not abdicate responsibility for the activities that move outside the company boundaries. Based on a fairly small sample, companies executing this strategy achieve greater flexibility and speed in reacting to market changes; improve return on capital while reducing risk; and obtain channel advantages vis-à-vis more vertically integrated competitors.

·    Companies that provide utility products or services (i.e., own neither the brand nor the design) appear to maximize growth and profits by maximizing coverage across all the value chains in an ecology. These companies benefit from a narrower but deeper focus that results in performing fewer activities in house, but performing them better. For example, the Taiwanese semiconductor foundries and PC component manufacturers are increasing market share and profits by targeting as many value chains as possible within an ecosystem.

·    Where a company owns customer access, providing a branded portal that fully meets customer needs for product information and purchase decisions has proved successful across many industries (Dell; Sabre; [Progressive Insurance]). Access to competitor products through a company’s portal transfers some of the power of the brand to the owner of the portal. Strategies that limit product access through a portal to a company’s own offerings appear to be losing competitive positioning in the marketplace. This strategy becomes a differentiator at a country level where country laws discourage or prohibit multiple providers or discounted pricing through a portal (e.g., Germany).

·    Several Japanese companies have recognized, serendipitously or otherwise, that partnerships with companies who’ve already adopted new value chain models (all of which are currently U.S.-based), provides a transfer of knowledge and capabilities into their own operations (NEC/Cisco, AOL/NTT DoCoMo). This strategy has been proven successful for companies located in North America in need of transformation, by forming partnerships or acquiring U.S.-based companies (Nortel Networks acquired Bay Networks to serve this purpose).

The companies that will be most successful in the new era of information management will be those that own both brand and design, and that focus on those two areas as the levers to transform their value chains. Those companies, however, are the least motivated to lead such a transformation, based on the results of the research to date.

Disablers

The research identified several major barriers to value chain transformation that are particularly strong in East Asia and Europe. Individually, the barriers present major difficulties; collectively, they may be insurmountable:

·    Companies rely heavily on the implicit knowledge of their workforces, as the tradition of long-term employment has historically permitted companies not to invest in documenting processes extensively. Successful companies will select their core competencies and develop explicit documentation for the remaining processes (i.e., claims processing in insurance companies) that enables rapid transfer of a portion of business process to a specialty services provider in the value chain. While this finding is strongest in East Asia, it also applies in southern Europe (for example, Italy).

·    Society accepts the legitimacy of government involvement in business decisions. Governments are inherently resistant to disruptive change (with the exception of Singapore), and create formal and informal barriers to prevent companies within their jurisdictions from implementing such change. In continental Europe, this takes the form of a social safety net with associated costs to employers that makes large scale shifting of employment within the value chain infeasible; together with government partial ownership of or influence over major industries such as telecommunications. In Japan and much of the rest of East Asia, the control is exercised through government influence over capital allocation through direction of the banking industry.

·    Other non-executive stakeholders (besides the government) are also typically opposed to disruptive change, and in much of continental Europe have the power to prevent such change. Examples include union membership on the supervisory boards of German companies; heavy bank and insurance company ownership of shares in Germany and Japan; the system of cross-holdings to consolidate preferred partners in France, Italy, Japan, and elsewhere; and the informal networks among the overseas Chinese entrepreneurial companies. The corollary to the influence of external stakeholders is the relative weakness and lack of accountability of the CEO position in countries such as Japan, which prevents the CEO driving change from the top down.

·    Both Europe and East Asia have business and societal norms that focus more heavily on punishing failure than on celebrating success. Executives who protect and preserve their companies, and maintain an ‘appropriate’ profile, are more respected than those who take risks, even successful risks. Failure shames both the individual and the company. The major exception occurs with Greater China and the overseas Chinese community, where risk taking is accepted, but seeking a high public profile is not. The businessman as hero is a uniquely American concept.

·    East Asia has two unique challenges:

4  The opaque ownership structure and weak corporate governance make valuing portions of an enterprise challenging, and thus separating out an activity and associated assets when restructuring a value chain is more difficult. Trust is difficult to establish between arms-length entities due to the lack of visibility into these companies. Japan represents a partial exception; and within the Greater China community the guanxi networks provide a trusted substitute for corporate transparency for value chains that are entirely within that community.

4  While much of East Asia is suspicious of the North American way of doing business, and believes in an “Asian values” alternative, there has not been an indigenous success story others can copy. Without a demonstrated viable alternate model, East Asian companies are left with no clear direction on how to achieve information-intensive value chains within the constraints of culture and infrastructure.

The barriers identified by the research appear to prevent an established company in either continental Europe or East Asia from acting as the driver for transforming its value chain. Companies in greater China appear to be well positioned to become participants in new value chains in secondary roles, based on the flexibility and willingness to take risks of these still largely family-controlled enterprises.

Winners And Losers

The characteristics correlated with success and with failure suggest that established companies based in Europe or East Asia will need to follow one of three strategies to succeed long term in the Information Age:

Create a new, ‘greenfield’ company that is independent of any ongoing management involvement from the parent company, and that is chartered and staffed to act either as a value chain transformation driver, or to fill a specific role across several value chains within a particular ecosystem.

Winners

Losers

·   Companies with strong CEO involvement throughout the transformation process

·   Specialized B2B services firms (like Taiwanese contract manufacturers)

·   Companies unencumbered by geography, with strong existing alliances, and with a competence in developing further alliances

·   North American companies versus European and East Asian companies

·   Innovative companies in an ecosystem with laggard dominant players (telecomm in the U.S., for example)

 

·   Consensus driven companies

·   Autarkic companies – heavily vertically integrated

·   Heavily regulated companies (much of French industry; parts of East Asia)

·   Companies with powerful, diverse stakeholders (not necessarily controlling shareholders)

·   Most established companies based in continental Europe, except where able to enter new areas on a ‘greenfield’ or start-up basis

·   Companies with legalistic, contractual, cultures that are reluctant to share information.

 

Redirect the existing company to focus on filling a secondary but useful role within one or more value chains. This strategy is effective only if the company is already a ‘pure play’ enterprise, as opposed to having activities spread across a variety of functional domains.

Achieve high end branding within a particular product category, such that customers are willing to accept build to stock product, and margins are sufficiently high to support inefficient cost structures. Luxury goods labels (Mercedes, Gucci, Shiseido) are generally the ones that can execute on this strategy.

DoCoMo in Japan is an example of the first; the Taiwanese semiconductor foundries of the second; and LVMH of the third strategy.

 

 

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