Making
Strategic Choices: Abandoning Business
Recasting
your firms strategic direction may be well worth
it, but who has the time to take on more initiatives with
everything else we have to do? The answer may not be in
what you do, but what you dont!
There seems to be a dozen different ways to define strategy, but all have one
thing in common--- making a series of choices. In fact, almost everything about
crafting strategy involves choices. These choices must be made as clearly as
possible without a lot of ifs, ands, or buts.
The
more well-defined the choices, the more focused an
organization can be. In turn, the more relentless
the organization can be in pursuit of its new strategic
direction. To create new strategic positions, an
organization must make fundamental decisions not
only about what it does, but more importantly decide
what it does NOT do. Here are two classic examples:
What business are you in?
Answering this question is the single, most important
step in the crafting of a breakthrough strategy. Why? Because
an organizations "perceived business" colors
everything it "sees" and "does." It
is the filter that tells managers which opportunities to
pursue and which to reject as "applicable to the business
or not." What an organization believes defines what
facilities it builds, where they locate, who they hire,
how they organize and so on. Is Disney in the theme park
business or in the entertainment industry? Is IBM in the
computer business or the consulting arena? Was PepsiCo
in the beverage/salted snack segments or in restaurant
business until they sold off Tricon?
Obviously the answers to these questions will shape the overall form and function
of those business. This is such a huge question that it cant be answered
in a single weekend planning retreat. Its so big, most organizations
will never ask it. But if a company wont at least think about it, they
will probably never develop a simpler strategic plan.
Who are your customers and what will you sell them?
There will always be customers to pursue and products and services to
offer, but the question is, which ones? If a company fails to make clear
choices here, their business growth
strategies will be less focused and consequently less successful. Good
strategies can result from deciding what customers and products you will
go after--- Breakthrough strategies often come from deciding which customers
and products you will abandon! The Sleeter Group, a successful national seminar
company, decided to forsake accounting software users as customers in favor
of accountants and CPAs, a less crowded and more profitable segment. While
a bold move at the time, it was well within their capabilities. Time Warners
acquisition of AOL has not been so successful, primarily because it brought
in a customer/service segment that didnt make sense for them or their
core competencies. It will likely be in their best interest if they soon
divest themselves of those ISP customers who at this point only serve to
drag them down.
Do you have difficult, slow pay, or marginally profitable business that you
have been hanging on to? Are you trying to serve customers outside of your
core competencies? What would it mean to your business to abandon them? What
else could you invest your time and resources into next year? The irony is
that forsaking certain classes of customers, products, or even entire lines
of business can have startlingly positive effects on your bottom line. Often,
it is dumping the losers and feeding the winners that will allow a firm spectacular
profit growth with less effort and investment than expensive and time consuming
new initiatives!
It's Not Easy
But making such choices can be difficult. At crunch time, no one knows
for sure whether a particular idea will work out or whether it is the best
and most appropriate direction for the future of the firm. But many executives
shy away from making changes that are broad enough, deep enough and swift
enough to make a difference. Instead, they administer a series of cosmetic
changes that focus on process rather than measurable results and do it too
slowly to make a noticeable difference.
This uncertainty can be reduced to some extent by establishing a sound evaluation
process and/or by testing the idea to see how it works. But, uncertainty cannot
be eliminated altogether. No matter how much careful thought goes into a decision
or how much testing is carried out, the time will come when the firm must make
a decision, one way or another.
Business Growth Strategy Tip:
Instead of taking on more next year, what customer segments, products
and services would be best for you to abandon? Willingness to relinquish
the right segments takes courage, but will ultimately pay off handsomely
when done well!
|
|
Recent
Articles:
Competing
with Price Smart Strategy or Business Suicide?
Strategy:
Your Value Proposition
Innovation
as a Strategy
Strategic
Decisions: Abandoning Business
Improving
Your Business Forecasts
|