Показаны сообщения с ярлыком turnaround. Показать все сообщения
Показаны сообщения с ярлыком turnaround. Показать все сообщения

суббота, 2 ноября 2024 г.

Turnaround in business. Part 6

 


Why Do Firms Fail in Emerging Markets?

It is well accepted that emerging markets like BRIC countries represent a huge present and future opportunity for growing the business. Thus, many companies are entering into those markets. Unfortunately, not all organizations are able to show off that they are growing as it was planned. So let us review why do firms fail in emerging markets like Brazil:

Focus on what we need (increase sales) rather than in which customers need

Our financial goal can be to increase sales, but we must maintain customer focus. We should not assume that because our products fulfill global needs and are selling properly in some developed countries, those are going to work properly in emerging countries. We should ask ourselves: What are customers’ needs? And what is customers’ behavior (in emerging markets)? So, we will likely realize that customers in those countries buy with a different mindset. E.g. In Europe, it is much more likely to find customers that buy products according to “Product Life Time Value” than in Brazil that prefer list price to make purchasing decisions.

Market research focuses on the size of the opportunity and “neglect” product and price market constraints

There are still companies in B2B markets that pay much attention to sales and much less on marketing. So, some firms wrongly leave product introduction project on the hand of not very experienced marketing people. Having a deep study of how our products and prices fit the market is so important.

Decision-makers and influencers with lack of understanding of emerging markets

We can find that decision-makers have been historically located in Europe or North America headquarters. Some of them have never lived or even been in any of those markets, and they use their own country mindset.

“Global product strategy” rather than “fit to market strategy”

We have listened many times: “be global, act local.” However, there are still many companies that executing their global strategy (for instance reduce complexity,) they kill the necessary “fit to market strategy.” E.g. In the automotive industry in Brazil, customers prefer mechanical engines, so offering just electronic engines in order to have a global product strategy means give up a huge potential customer base.

Not understanding the “good enough segment”

Important growth in emerging markets comes from that segment. Good enough segment expects reliable enough products at low enough prices. I mean enough quality at affordable prices that still generate profits. Moreover, this segment is important to achieve economies of scale that will allow us to access to competitive price levels. E.g. In the automotive industry environmental regulation for emerging countries have a few years of delays. Trying to reduce product complexity having the same product for Europe and Brazil means increase features and prices that push us out of the “good enough segment.”

Not understanding “growth strategy” implications

In order to grow, firms need to invest. Some companies get in dead-circuit because they want to grow and get short-term profitability, and both strategies used to be incompatible in the short-term. Indeed, growing means investing (facilities, stock, days of sales outstanding, sales force, and so on,) and just a few industries allow firms to materialize profits in the short-term. Many of the successful firms that entry in emerging countries have invested strongly during years before getting the expected return. Other companies think that the important is just to fulfill their global footprint, and they invest shyly (probably one salesman by-product or vertical industry). In this last case because the investment is not enough, it will take very long time to get the return on investment, and firms could lose the patient and enthusiasm for those markets.

“Problems are OUT (of the firm) approach” rather than “problems are INSIDE (of the firm) approach”

The arrogance of some people/companies does not allow them to realize that they have many improvement opportunities inside. Those companies blame to market, customers, and so on. Many times, those people are bad listeners, and therefore people with low customer orientation. Moreover those people with a limited view of the problem cannot take advantage of the “power of AND” when trying to solve problems. So, they think in terms of OR. For instance, rather than improve the firm processes to be more competitive AND solve the market price issues, they think that the solution is lost money OR to increase even more the list price.

Measure success perceptually (%) rather than in euros/dollars ($)

Controllers can kill growth initiatives because those initiatives do no reach a percentage of net margin. Indeed, those initiatives can have a positive net margin, an important contribution margin, and support market share growth during the market penetration stage.

Not pursue costs saving aggressively

There are huge global corporations that are losing market share because they created in the past huge facilities (with several thousands of employees) difficult to manage properly. Those plants have very limited flexibility, diseconomies of scale, and massive overheads. Again, we have the risk of controllers assuming wrongly that current cost structure is correct, and suggesting “rationalizing” products, customers or markets.

Assuming that managing more value activities means creating more customer value and profitability

Some organizations decide to enter emerging markets and be focused on sales development. So, they use resources to grow quickly, and they take advantage of local partners and outsourcing activities. Other firms decide to invest at the same time in sales and building other capabilities. For instance, there are companies that have a distributor business model, but those firms try to add assembling/manufacturing capabilities to the distributor business model to generate more customer value and be more profitable. Nevertheless, they deviate resources from sales development to assembling/manufacturing, and because at the beginning there are not enough sales, the assembling facilities do not get economies of scale to compete. So, they face two problems at the same time: low sales and lack of economies of scale in production.

It is important to highlight that many of those causes are interrelated. So, companies failing in emerging markets are quite often affected by several of those causes, which increases even more the probability of failure in the emerging markets.


Is Profitable and Justified Strategically Maintaining Our Current Network Of Facilities?

Products, customers and offices unprofitable must be identified and make profitably or we should take the decision to remove them. Many times it is assumed that facilities network are a strategic long-term decision, so it is not reviewed the strategic convenience of those investments approved for top management any time ago. Thus, we are going to review some of the commonest strategic and financial reasons argued to open/maintain subsidiaries opened.

We must be aware that in the last few years many things relating communications have changed a lot. For instance, traveling costs are cheaper because we have low-cost airlines, communication costs are cheaper because there are communications base on Internet, companies have adopted widely conference-calls as a cheap and reliable communication way, virtual offices with sharing meeting rooms and other services are in place, teleworking can avoid investing in an office, and so on. Moreover, dot com firms have showed us that is possible to compete in many industries with a much less footprint those traditional companies.

So let’s go to analyze those often strategic reasons for opening/maintaining facilities:

“Being close to customers was going to facilitate customer acquisition and/or retention.”

  • If we analyze our value proposition, we used to ask ourselves: What value do we deliver to the customer? Which one of our customer’s problems are we helping to solve? What bundles of products and services are we offering to each Customer Segment? Which customer needs are we satisfying? Why do customers turn to one company over another? (Alexander Osterwalder & Yves Pigneur 2010) But having a new office is not a likely question.
  • If we analyze our customer relationship approaches: Personal assistance; Dedicated Personal Assistance; self-Service; Automated Services; Communities; Co-creation (Alexander Osterwalder & Yves Pigneur 2010). Even the personal assistance relationships not necessary must be built from the same location. In personal assistant is more important the person than the location.

“Being close to customer means offering better services.”

Nowadays, we have access to motorways, higher fly frequency, service logistics operators that deliver in 24 hours or fewer from central distribution centers, etc. This means that today we could offer a similar service level from a central location than from a local one.

Many times is hard to recognize that managing subsidiaries is a very tough task for our organization. So outsourcing that distribution center or for instance using a dealer could be more profitable at the same time that we could be able to improve service levels. Although that means having the humility to recognize that someone can do a better job than us.

“Cost of doing business is reduced because traveling costs are reduced.”

We must analyze the traveling cost avoided versus cost to have a facility:

  • Obvious office related costs: Costs for rent, electricity, water, communications, insurance, cleaning, security, taxes, and so on.
  • Office staff related costs: Salaries, office furniture, telephones, computers, software licenses, company cars, petrol, traveling costs to headquarter meetings, etc.
  • Office/Warehouse improving costs: Human being used to try to improve things. So because we have a new facility, we can take advantage of that and we could think that we could build some stock. So because we have some stock, we need racks. So because we have some stock, we need a forklift. So because we have a forklift, we need a warehouse man, etc. I mean once that we have a new facility we open the door to many initial unexpected costs.
  • Control costs: ERP customization to control that office, traveling to audit and support the office staff, etc.
  • Productivity costs: Many small offices have less access to resources, training, control, etc.
  • Complexity costs: Sometimes subsidiaries argue that local suppliers are better than corporate ones. That practice reduces cost saving of using corporate suppliers.

I am not suggesting that having more than one facility is wrong. What I am trying to suggest is that in turnaround is very important to review the real need of current offices or even the appropriate decision to open a new one. Subsidiaries can affect massively in company profitability.


When Should We Outsource Activities?

“Whenever a company produces a service internally that others buy or produce more efficiently or effectively externally, it sacrifices competitive advantage” (Quinn, James Brian, Thomas I. Doorley, Penny C. Paquette “Technology in services: rethinking strategic focus” Sloan Management Review, Winter 1990). Thus, any activity not considered a core competency has the potential to be outsourced, but what are the advantages of outsourcing?

Outsourcing Advantages


The big disadvantage of outsourcing that used to be mentioned is the “loss of control”. Although with the information systems that today are in place, and managing properly the relationship with the outsourced firm by having regular meeting and conference calls, we should be able to overcome that “disadvantage.” In reality one of the biggest handicaps for outsourcing could be “the loss of power” for some managers. For instance, we could have a Supply Chain Director managing more than 1,000 workers and after outsourcing the distribution centers network he could be managing just 20 people. So that strategic focus could be seen for some managers as “loss of power and control.”

Activities like transportation, warehousing, co-packing, publicity, payrolls, or legal support have been outsourced during many years in order to materialize the outsourcing advantages. However, the outsourcing process continues its evolution and its getting further. In the last years some companies have implemented outsourcing AND offshoring strategies in order to enhance the outsourcing benefits. For example, DHL is outsourcing globally some IT activities in India, or Telefonica is outsourcing call centers in Colombia.

The long tail concept introduced for Chris Anderson in 2004 is supporting the access to outsource for very small firms or low volume activities. For instance, Legalitas in Spain offers outsourcing legal advice for just 15 €/month, or outsourcing the marketing creation of a PC wallpaper can be sold in Internet for just $ 50.

Once that we have identified a potential outsourced activity, the next step would be answering the following question: How can we “guarantee” that we should outsource that particular activity? We should outsource it, if we are able to answer affirmative to the following three questions:

  1. Are we reducing complexity or increasing flexibility? If managing the outsourced firm is being easier than managing that activity internally. From the change management perspective, this is an important issue because outsourcing important activities are probably creating some internal conflicts with trade unions. Moreover, those processes could affect staff morale (thinking that their jobs are in danger in the current or in the future coming from outsourcing processes.)
  2. Is the service being improved? If the outsourced firm has more expertise or specialized resources to perform those activities, the outsourced firm is likely improving the current service.
  3. Are we improving our cost structure or reducing our assets? Companies with higher expertise and more specialized resources should have better processes (reducing the cost of “poor” quality) and higher productivity. Moreover, better processes and resources allow companies to use less experienced and cheaper workers to perform activities. For example, warehouse men using well design processes supported by radio frequency just would need a very short training about products, their location, picking strategy, etc. The location and type of business that the outsourced firm performed can create a competitive advantage from the labor cost point of view what it is so important in intensive manpower industries like services. Cost reductions is going to support turnaround projects, but assess reductions offer one of the best opportunity in turnaround projects to improve cash (selling warehouses/buildings, machines, etc.)

How Does Top Management Make Decisions?

Many CEOs assume that making and publishing an organizational chart is enough in order to answer the structure and some relates matters like company style. However, there are some key questions like the style question “How does top management makes decisions?” that are not answers with an organizational chart.

According to Bain & Company there are mainly four decision styles (directive, participative, democratic, and consensus). Nowadays that we live in the democratic and team work age, we could think that the most collaborative styles (consensus or democratic) bring out the best results for firms. Nevertheless, research and experience of Bain & Company have found that participative style uses to perform better than the other styles. Be aware that even having primarily a participative style, it does not mean that all decision fall into this specific style.

Decision Styles: Adapted from Marcia W. Blenko, Paul Rogers and Patrick Litre


Bain & Company explains that participative styles improves decision quality because takes advantage from collaborative styles that at the same time get employees engagement via participation. Additionally the decision-making process is accelerated because just one person takes responsibility for each decision avoiding bureaucracy. It having one person in charge of every decision brings single-point accountability as well.

We would like to stress that there is another important advantage not mentioned for Bain & Company from having one single-person taking the responsibility for each decision; we get a consistent and coherent decisions direction because the same person is in charge of decisions. We mean we get decisions alignment.

From the turnaround perspective we cannot sacrifice the speed of decision, neither the quality. So we could say that we are almost forced to use the participative decision style.

Finally, we have to mention that it is essential that the CEO decides and communicates the primary decision style for the company. This can avoid internal conflicts. For instance, if the firm decides to use a participative style and there are people who feel most comfortable with other more collaborative decision styles (democratic or consensus) communicating formally the participative style decision will help that staff to embrace the decision style and avoid unnecessary internal conflicts. We must be aware that people from primary activities of the company can feel most comfortable with the participative style, while people from support activities can prefer consensus style. So again we have to highlight the importance of defining and communicate the decision style to avoid conflicts and get people much better aligned.


Business Alignment: When Board Is

Misaligned with Management

It is pretty obvious that business alignment is a prerequisite for firms to success. This alignment is even more important in the two top layers of the firm, the board of directors and the management team. Thus, we can find companies underperforming which main cause is poor management, and the effect is the misalignment between the board and management.

What is board and management alignment?

Peter Drucker defined this alignment very clear and showed us that a clear responsibility definition is one of the main business Key Success Factors: “The board must not act at the level of tactical planning, or it interferes with management’s vital ability to be flexible in how goals are achieved… the board is accountable for mission, goals, and the allocation of resources to results, and appraising progress and achievement. Management is accountable for objectives, for action steps, for the supporting budget, as well as for demonstrating effective performance.”

Adapted from Peter Drucker: "Defining the board and management responsabiities"


How board and management misalignment used to happen?

Most of the time a board member does not understand his role. In this situation that member used to implement what we could call “micro-management.” That is entering in the tactical planning and interfering with management.

What are the consequences of this misalignment?

The consequences could be disastrous for the following reasons:

  • The board member wastes his time with tasks that he should not perform.
  • The management team waste their time and energy internally rather than externally making loyal customers and fighting with competitors for market share.
  • The board used to overrule the management members. This is a common human being practice to demonstrate “they are adding value”. This attitude used to unmotivated the management team, and in the mid-term could provoke desertion of good managers who will prefer moving to others firm with less interference in their job.
  • For seniority, respect and status quo the suggestions of the board used to be followed. However, those suggestions could be “wrong” because the board members used not to have the daily contact with customers and other regular issues to “properly understand” the importance,  urgency, and consequences of those tactical decisions. The other reason why board members used to fail in tactics’ decisions is that most of them use what I call the “fishbowl approach.” I mean they prefer isolating themselves in their offices to improve their own productivity but that approach used to work uncorrelated with the capacity to solve tactic issues that required to be very much in touch with the staff, customers, suppliers, and so on.

There is one case in which could be understandable the practice of micro-management for a board member. It is the case in which the management team is not good enough. Nevertheless, the top management team have been hired for the board. So it is again the responsibility of the board to select a good management team and to replace underperforming managers, but no interfere with managers’ tactics. We should not forget that another Key Success Factor for board members should be their ability to hire the right people for the right position.

Before continuing, we must answer the question is micro-management always a bad practice? The answer is no. I mean micro-management could be needed it for managing young and inexperienced staff, or to manage inexperienced middle management in underdeveloped countries and/or organizations. However, board should not use micro-management under any circumstance with management.

Other way to identify poor management practices in the board is analyzing their tasks. Poor board members do what they do not have to do, and they do not do what is expected from their positions. It is easier to perform micro-management because those tasks used to be easier than board activities but this is not the expected work for board members.

How is business alignment and misalignment affecting turnaround initiatives?

In turnaround projects, we should wonder us:

  • Do we have a poor management issue?
  • Is there a misalignment between the board and management?
  • Who is the responsible of this misalignment?
  • Can we perform a success turnaround, if the people underperforming are still in the firm?

This misalignment issue probably is quite uncommon on large corporations. But it is quite common in small businesses that have grown fast, and the same people who used to be managers are now low experienced board members.


The Sales Area Is Underperforming: Have

 You Promoted Your Best Salesperson to

 Sales Manager?


It sounds strange hearing that it could be something wrong promoting the best performer. For instance, do you know any good mechanics or engineers who were promoted to a managerial position, and the company lost a good technician and got a not too good manager? Please, don’t misunderstand me. There are many mechanics or engineers with the right managerial skills but having technical skills, does not guarantee good managerial skills.

From the Kindergarten, we have been taught that people with better score are the best. Therefore, we can find many Small and Medium Business (SMB) that follow the assumption that the best salesperson should be promoted to the position of sales manager. Even in the  subsidiaries of global corporations are in place the same assumption because the hiring responsibility of the sales manager position depend on the country manager in order to have full accountability.

We have been taught that all of us we should be leaders and the proof of our success will be achieving a managerial positions. However, this is not exactly true. No everybody is or will be prepared to be an effective leader or manager. However, that does not mean that the person failed. It just means that those people are more suitable for other positions that can be of high value for the firm and very well-paid too. Anyway, I prevent you that this article could be very challenging for the current mindset of many salespeople and sales manager.

Why the best salesperson wouldn’t probably be  the best suitable person for the sales management responsibility?

First, as Mike Weinberg point out “the successful individual sales producer wins by being as selfish as possible with her time… The seller who best blocks out the rest of the world, who maintains obsessive control of her calendar, who masters focusing solely on her own highest-value revenue-producing activities, who isn’t known for being a team player, and who is not interested in playing good corporate citizen or helping everyone around her, is typically a highly effective seller… The successful sales manager doesn´t win on her own; she wins thorough her people by helping them succeed.” It is relevant to stress the difference between selling on her own and selling thorough her people. An evidence of the misunderstanding of selling through other is that with almost the exception of IT industry, no other industry is using Partner Channel Management as a powerful sales channel that could provide around 60% of total company sales. Anyway, you could find a top salesperson who is suitable to be a sales manager but is quite improbable. I am explaining why in the next paragraph.

What is the profile of Top Salespeople and Sales Managers


Second, the skills and responsibilities of a salesperson and a sales manager are different. Let list some of the skills of a sales manager: building a sales culture; leading a team; team motivation; hiring; retaining top performers; conflict management; coaching; feedback delivery; challenging data, false assumptions, wrong attitude, and self-complacency; create the area budget and forecasts; etc. Are those the skills of sellers? The answer is NO!

Third, as Mark Roberge highlight sales top performers used to base their success in a specific selling skill (relationship building, or consultative selling, etc.) Nevertheless, the sales managers need “a well-rounded grasp of the entire sales methodology. Sales leaders with balanced abilities would be able to diagnose a specific issue and be qualified to customize a coaching plan to address the issue.” So, sales top performers with unbalanced skills are not likely able to coach a team on any skills that they have poorly developed. Now, we must clarify that a sales manager must have a good performance selling in order to know the process of selling well but he is not usually a top sales performer.

Fourth, we should remember that “what distinguishes great leaders from merely good ones? It isn’t IQ or technical skills, says Daniel Goleman. It’s emotional intelligence.” Many people with high technical skills are promoted without some training on management and leadership. Other times, firms think that managers could be built with just a few days of leadership training (for instance the “famous company talent programs.”) The good performance of top sales producers does not guarantee that they will be great leaders for sales teams, and a few days of training on leadership neither. In fact, as Mark Roberge says: “Sometimes really good salespeople are selfish, egotistical, and competitive by nature. Those traits do not translate well into management.”

I would like to say that the rule should be “don’t promote your best salespeople to sales management.” Nevertheless, as any rule there are exceptions but remember that exceptions are very few cases.

Be careful if you are using a multitasking approach: Part-time salesperson and part-time sales manager

This used to be a very seductive approach for small business and even large corporation subsidiaries. Getting two roles for the price of one. I have to say “good try but this shortcut is not working at all.”

As we have mentioned before it is quite improbable that you find the right person for both different positions. However, if you are lucky to find someone who fits with booth positions, you will have some important challenges mixing those responsibilities:

  • This salesperson will probably pick the best leads for himself with the excuse that the top performer must manage those important leads in order to increase the probability of win the customer. This could create mistrust on the sales team.
  • How much time will he commit to each person if part-time means 2.5 working days per week? He could spend just very few hours on each salesperson what could be not enough to develop the sales team.

How can you motivate and retain your top sales performer without promoting her to sales manager?

The answer is building a Career Growth Plan with a few sales titles that link performance with the sales compensation model. Thus, higher sales performance means higher position and total salary.

So, what should be your first recruit priority? A top salesperson or a sales manager?

For a new sales organization with no more than a couple of people on sales, hiring a top salesperson could be a good first step. Indeed, I know some success examples of this approach. Although there are three considerations regarding hiring a top salesperson:

1. Industry experience used to be overrated: I remember the best salesperson that I have ever met that told me once: “Today, I am selling logistics but the important thing is that I master the selling technique. So, I could sell to any B2B almost any product or service.” This is true but there are still some fear for hiring people from other industries.

2. Industry connections used to be overrated: We must highlight that “customers belong to companies not to salespeople.” Salespeople could bring small accounts that have very low risk trying a new supplier. However, for large B2B sales account the reality is different:

  • for large purchasing amounts used to have medium or long-term contracts in place that prevent to move the account;
  • the relationship between buyer and seller used to be built around many people in different levels of the organization, not just the salesperson;
  • the buyer justified internally the decision to work with the current supplier, trying to move to another supplier would mean that the decision was wrong which could be put in danger the job of the decision maker;
  • move from one supplier to another just because the salesperson moved to other firm does not have any sense from the risk associated with large contracts
  • Etc.

So, do you really think that a salesperson would be bring her last sales accounts to your firm? I don’t think so. If this is happen, it will take at least 2-3 years to move large complex accounts.

3. Is this person able to success in an unstructured environment? My experience is that top sales performers used to be hired from larger and better organized corporations with more sophisticated sales and ops process, customer based, marketing support and lead generation capabilities. Small firms used to have the temptation to solve their sales problems hiring a top sales performer from one of the largest competitor. This used to be “a big mistake.” First, as we have explained before is quite unlikely that the salespeople are moving their last sales to your firm. Second, small unstructured firms require of “evangelistic sales” in order to communicate their “not well-structured value proposition” and building the company brand. That necessary education skill is quite unusual on top sales performers from large firms because large firms are well-known and customers do not question their capabilities. Salespeople working for large firms no need to educate the customer regarding their company rather than developing a different skill, quickly building customer solutions. So, what is the probability that she replicates her past success selling with your small unstructured firm? Honestly speaking, very low!

If we are thinking not just in one or two salespeople rather than building a sales organization, it should be more suitable to hire a sales manager before thinking about recruiting a top sales producer. Be aware that a sales manager should increase the chance to hire the right top salesperson. Additionally, the sales manager would implement a sales leadership and culture that could be exponentially deployed around salespeople and branches.

For new sales organizations, Mark Roberge suggests hiring a quite uncommon profile rather than a sales manager or a top salesperson, the entrepreneur. He pointed out “the entrepreneur is most likely to accelerate the company toward the right product/market fit…She will dig in with prospective customers to learn about their challenges, opportunities, perspectives, and priorities.” I am personally think that he is right. Recruiting a sales manager for a consolidated and organized firm has sense, but for a new company or sales organization the first thing is to learn about customers in orders to build the “customized sales weapons” (communication plan, firm positioning, etc.) that will guarantee the success foundation for a fast growing sales organization.

Self-questions

If you are a…

  • Sales manager: Are you in the right position or should you go back to be a top sales performer?
  • Salesperson: What do you think that is more suitable for you career path to remain as a salesperson or to move on sales manager?
  • CEO and your sales area is underperforming: Do you have the right person to growth your company revenue?

Creative Destruction in Human Resources: Creating High Performance Teams with the 20–70–10 Rule

Jack Welch is a leader with followers and detractors. So we are going to analyze the 20-70-10 Rule that some people could say that is a worthy management tool that creates high performance teams, and others say that is a cruel tool because it fosters to fire 10% approximately of the less performer.

The 20-70-10 Rule can be categorized inside the concept of creative destruction (Joseph Schumpeter work). We mean the idea is not firing 10% of the staff to reduce cost rather than change poor performers for other people with the expectation that the new staff could be better. Thus, increasing the number of high performance people and raising the company results.

20-70-10 Rule: Defining good and poor performers


We should ask ourselves a few key questions in order to know if the tool is adding value or not to our organization:

  • Can our companies allow itself to maintain poor performers? Nowadays markets globalization, weaker economic drivers, intense competition, product commoditization, etc., make difficult to justified maintaining poor performers.
  • What is the internal message maintaining poor performers? The culture of the company would get “paternalistic” or permissive. Then people working close of poor performers would realize that they could reduce their productivity and the firm is not taking any action. So what is it going to happen to the company productivity?
  • What is the consequences to maintain a poor performance in the long term? The company would lose competitiveness day a day while other firms are rising their competitive advantage. Thus probably one day the firm would take the decision to close down the facility and move it to other location even outside the country. Thus, the consequence could be fired 100% of the staff rather than 10%. Some people could argue that the battle competing with emerging economies is already lost. Indeed, we have countries like Germany that they are demonstrating that the battle is not lost at all, if firms focus on raising productivity.
  • Is it fair to maintain 10% of poor performers having people looking for an employment? Probably it is not. Moreover, it is not fair for the staff that are performing well, because maintaining underperforming people can put in danger the company and their jobs in the future.
  • What about good performers? Poor performers are easy to retain, but good performers are a different issue. Good performers are demanded by the market, and they are more confidents in their abilities in order to move to other company. Moreover, good performers expect to work in high performance environment, and be paid according to the value that they create. Although with poor performers into the company is difficult to fulfill those expectations. So there is a real risk that good staff would get out of the firm, and mediocre staff would grow even higher than 10%.
  • Why do we maintain under performers? In order to answer properly this question we should ask ourselves another question before: do we maintain under performers because it is an unpleasant task to fire people?

In turnaround projects where poor management is an issue, one of the most important causes of the company decline is because we do not have the right people. It is not unusual to find in those firms 10% of poor performance staff. So in those cases “getting out the bus” that staff allow us to increase firm results, and accelerate the change management process bringing new people with new mindset and abilities to the organization.

We have to highlight that organizations have the responsibility preventing poor performers, and we can suggest to prevent poor performers: First, having good performers in key positions, because good performers do not use to tolerate the poor performance. Second, selection process should be excellent. Third, making a periodic follow up of the team and specially the new staff, because two or three months is enough to realize if new employees should continue or not. It is better to “get out the bus” people in the second or third month that allow continuing in the company.

Finally, while poor performers by definition are people who damage the organization, and “getting out the bus” those people would not be an issue for the company. What it is not clear for me is the following: as Jack Welch suggests continually changing 10% of the staff that worst performs (being categorized like poor performers although they are not necessary underperforming, just they are on the bottom of the list) is getting any return. I mean there is low risk changing the staff that underperforms, despite changing people that are not “really” underperforming is increasing the risk to get the worse staff. Additionally we are losing the investment done in our current staff, and we have to invest in finding and training new workers. Moreover, we are creating an unhealthy stress in the organization. So I would not personally recommend continually changing 10% of the staff just because they are the worst performers.


https://tinyurl.com/7f3kyb8s

воскресенье, 29 сентября 2024 г.

Turnaround in business. Part 5

 


Do We Really Have A Strategy? “When the Strategy Is that We Have No Strategy”

We have learnt about strategies that work, but what about the common mistakes crafting our company strategy. If we do not know the common errors crafting strategy, we cannot avoid them. So let’s go to analyze different misapprehensions that could make us believe that we have a strategy, when our “pretended strategy” is not working at all:

Confusing Strategic Intent with Strategy

Some CEOs misinterpret Hamel & Prahalad when they suggest “to rewrite their industry rules and create new competitive space.” Therefore, those CEOs use a more internal environment focus to formulate strategy. They “forget” to perform a deep analysis of competition and the coherence of our strategy related to our competitors position, movements and strengths. So, they focus on the goals that they would like to achieve, disregarding the environment/competitors’ analysis. This is a dangerous misinterpretation of strategic intent, because the firm could plan expenses for unrealistic higher revenue and profit growth. Moreover, unrealistic goals are very dangerous because use to undermine staff morale and bonuses/incentives.

Ignoring the strategic boundaries

Many firms decide a Customer Intimacy/CRM strategy or Product Leadership/Innovation strategy in order to try to run away from product commoditization. Notwithstanding, that those differentiation strategies have an important boundary, I mean the price and promotion of the products use to constraint those strategies. So, customer flexibility can be a source of competitive advantage just at affordable prices. Moreover, Product Innovation could improve the quality, but quality perception has limits and the price that customers are willing to pay for an innovation too (e.g. How much is willing to pay for a car buyer in order to reduce the petrol consumption just 0.1 liter?) Other important risk of Product Innovation is being too much focused on the product, and forget that products are bought by customers (e.g. assuming that all the customer would like to have a Mercedes Benz or other good brand could push that firm to lose customer focus).  We have to mention that there are products with less price elasticity than others (e.g. luxury products.) On the other hand, we have Operational Excellence/Infrastructure Management strategy as a low cost strategy, its boundaries are the minimum product features and the right placement requested by customers. Finally, heavy overheads can lead to failure almost any strategy. So, overheads must be monitored, and especially in the low cost strategy.

Strategic Boundaries


Not having a good value proposition

If we ask companies with a weak strategy for their value proposition, we are likely going to receive ambiguous answers like: “we are a customer centric firm”, “we have a global presence”, and so on. So, the next question would be:  Why are customers going to buy our products rather than competitor products or even substitutes?

Not having a solid business. Does our business generate recurrent and stable profits? Are we able to replicate our business success in other markets and/or products?

While we have companies like ZARA/Inditex that they are able to replicate success in almost every market and product line, we have organizations that they do not even understand their success in a few markets. So, they are not able to take advantage of growing sales and profits much faster than the fixed costs. Furthermore, because their business success is “unpredictable,” they do not use to take full advantage of financial leverage too. So, the strategic paths of those firms is selling the firm or growing by acquisitions, because they cannot replicate success. We should be aware that in solid and replicable business success like ZARA/Inditex make sense vertical integration, and outsourcing potential benefits are limited by the real synergies of that working business model.

Confusing Competitive Advantage with Strategy

People who enjoyed some success in the past use to assume that there was a good strategy in place. Sometimes, that success comes from a First Mover Competitive Advantage just selling first in a specific geography. Therefore, when they tried to replicate their success in another market with strong competition (after a few years), they realize that they cannot replicate the past success. First Mover Competitive Advantage use to be sustainable when we create a product innovation, buyer switching costs, or we achieve a critical volume that offers us Economies of Scale. Thus, we should monitor that we are not losing market share or reducing our margins’ year by year, because that could be a signal that we are losing our old competitive advantage of being first selling in one specific market. In that case, we did not generate sustainability in the First Mover Competitive Advantage for the lack of strategy.

Believing that strategy is just the definition activity rather than definition and execution activities

Our strategy formulation process shows where we want to go, but do we show clearly HOW TO get there? A poor strategic execution shows a huge gap between our strategic objectives and our feasible achievements. Those firms use to impose unachievable objectives with the expectation to revamp the firm, but they cannot materialize the growth without defining HOW TO. Again, that dynamite staff morale, and best staff will probably leave the company.

Forgetting the third strategic level

When the strategy formulation starts with the Corporate Strategy and end with the Business Units Strategy. So, the Functional Strategy is not developed at all. Therefore, most of the business policies are not developed neither.

More focus on support activities than customers and strategy

Sometimes when we read a companies’ annual report, we can find that the main subjects are important, but just support activities like Corporate Governance, or Health and Safety matters. In those cases, it is difficult to locate strategy or new customers’ acquisition subjects. Thus, we should wonder us a couple of questions: Are we leaving at a difficult time with lack of ideas? Or do we have companies managed for people with difficulties in bringing and materializing new ideas?

Building a management team too much homogenous 

It is much easier to bring up ideas, building management teams based on diversity. Nevertheless, we can find many companies that the concept of globalization is just entering new markets and move the sales responsibility locally. So, in those firms, many of the management positions are just for people located or coming from the global headquarter, with the same nationality, with the experience in the same industry, and even with the same degree (engineers for example). When this is the situation, it is difficult to bring up new ideas and create a “killer strategy.”

Wrong people in the wrong position

We can meet with the board of some organizations; people with a good background, many years of experience in one specific industry, good communication skills, and with the same nationality of the firm. However, are those the Key Success Factors (KSFs) to develop a leading strategy? Probably NOT, the KSFs are likely creative and strategic thinking, and these are not very common competences. Another important question is: do we have good managers to execute our strategy? In order to identify good managers I would suggest the following: good managers have a good staff around them, and they have the competence to identify quickly brilliant people. Unfortunately, that capability is not as common as must be. In those cases, we will have average teams, performing mediocre strategies.

Lack self-confident and visionary people

It seen amazing, but we can find top management more worried with action than inaction issues. Finally, we have managers that rather than bringing and supporting new growth and improvement initiatives, they are focused again just on Corporate Governance, Health and Safety, and avoiding or delaying investments.

Short term and very low risk focus

If the focus is the short term ROI and low risk, we are not thinking strategically that means the long term planning. So, we are rejecting many opportunities to build “new” competitive advantages and create a growing path for the firm. We must mention that those firms do not use to feel comfortable planning HOW TO execute strategies. They use to fail putting resources in place to avoid so much as possible the investment and risk associated with it. The result of a strategy not supported with the right resources is the frustration of the team and a false strategy start.

Be global and unable to act locally

There are subsidiaries that copy the huge elephantiasis global organizational chart at the local level. Indeed, they do not know how to adapt the global strategy at local level. Furthermore, it is quite common that headquarter staff request at local level resources to implement their global initiatives that not always fit with the local priorities.

Strategy is a matter of “just top management”

There are companies assuming that all the top management has the strategic thinking competence. Thus, the strategy process is limited according to hierarchy position. We can find good operational people with limited strategic thinking, participating in the strategy process. On the other hand, we have “young” staff with good strategic thinking skill that they do not participate, because their position in the organization inhibits them. Moreover, in those firms the strategy communication process uses to be an issue. They use to forget that strategy execution must arrive to the lowest level of the organization. The communication process, the message, and the objectives should be different for each level. Nevertheless, every employee in the company must be informed about the strategy and its evolution in order to allow the strategy to transform the whole organization. We should be aware that some companies do not communicate their strategy because they are afraid to be copied by competitors. That just actually shows the misunderstanding of strategy execution power and copying execution complexity.

Turnaround a business which “strategy is that they do not have strategy” is complicated. A business that does not have a clear direction and execution of strategy cannot guarantee a profitable future. Therefore, we should be aware of strategy crafting pitfalls in order to make the necessary adjustment into our strategy to build a business able to generate sustainable and replicable profits.


The Lost Link to Make Strategy Work: Sales & Operations Planning (S&OP)

A strategic plan without a strong strategy execution is just a “dream.” We are living in a very turbulent business environment, in which crafting the right strategy is a key activity in the company growth and profitable journey. However, crafting the right strategy doesn’t guarantee the strategy will work. It is well known that many of the strategies that fail are as a result of poor strategy execution. Many organizations have strategic plans and annual business plans (budgets) in place. Nevertheless, the experience said that annual budgets are not enough to success on strategy execution. Thus, let see how we can accelerate and improve the strategy execution using the Sales & Operations Planning (S&OP) – Note: Be aware that some people rename this tool as Integrated Business Planning.

Why the Sales & Operations Planning (S&OP)?

  1. The reality says that in companies that don’t have a S&OP process in place, the two core functions of the firm Demand and Supply use to run their own and different plans. The misalignment of the Demand and Supply functions increase the total cost structure of the firm (higher inventory costs, lower productivity, emergency cost raising, etc.), reduce the service level to end customers (stockout, delays, etc.) and last but not least, deteriorate the competitive position of the firm. But the situation uses to be even worse in medium and large firms because the Demand function uses to be divided up to three departments (product/brand, marketing, and sales). The same it’s happening with the Supply function that uses to be divided up to three departments (purchasing, production, and logistics). So, one of the main deliverables of a S&OP is having one version of the truth, I mean one unified plan in which all the main areas of the company are fully aligned. This is so important because any issue at the planning level will amplify the problems at the tactical and operational levels.
  2. Nowadays, we have a high customer expectations which are difficult to match. The monthly S&OP process is building a more agile and responsive organization which can optimize the use of inventory and other resources, and improve customer service at the same time.
  3. Companies with internal plans misaligned use to spend much time and energy fighting internally (marketing vs. sales or demand vs. supply) and blaming each other. Another deliverable of a S&OP is to minimize the internal frictions, and secure the firm energy to increase market share and work internally to improve the company.
  4. Likely the root cause of firms underperforming or “satisfactory” underperforming (doing just fine) use to be a lack of coordination between the Demand owners and the Supply owners. Communication between those areas used to be poor with many unplanned events that cost a lot of money to the company, and damage the quality of the products and services. Again, the S&OP process is solving that issue establishing a few planned and coordinated meetings every month with the right people involved.
  5. Another characteristic of firms underperforming is that they are struggling with the present. Their processes are not well optimized, so those firms are more focused on solving the issues of the short-term (3 to 4 months) rather than planning the future. However, the lack of planning and visibility after 3 to 4 months doesn’t allow the firm to proactively anticipate future market trends or company constraints. Organizations that are struggling with the present should solve their short-term issues, but in parallel they should invest in developing a S&OP process that will reduce the chaotic and costly unplanned events.
  6. It is well accepted that nowadays efficient and market-driven companies are supported for cross functional processes. However, cross functional processes are not working just because there is a quality document that shows the link between different areas. To really make cross functional processes work, organizations need to build high performance cross functional teams that take business decisions rather than functional ones. One of the foundations of S&OP is the creation of those cross functional teams (Demand team, Supply team, Pre-S&OP team, and the Executive team) with regular meetings and change management techniques in place to work as one team with one unified plan. Those high performance teams should have the following goals: planning, performance measurement, accountability, continuous improvement, and bottom-up feedback.
  7. Last but not least, firms with a poor strategy execution used to fail to achieve their goal of defining the company direction. A poor strategy execution creates confusion and lack of truth in the Leadership team. Nevertheless, the S&OP will strongly support the strategy execution. First, the S&OP process starts with the input of the Strategic Business Plan which guarantee the integration between both plans. Second, the S&OP is a link between the long-term Strategic Plan and the short-term Budget/Annual-Plan because the S&OP is a monthly operational and financial rolling plan between 18 and 36 months. Third, the S&OP is a tactical plan that additionally to the financial figures shows operational and actionable units of measure to take important execution decisions in the areas of resources, production, inventory, and product/service distribution. Forth, the S&OP plan incorporated performance measures and learning lessons from KPIs with actions plans for continuous improvement the operational and financial performance of the firm in a monthly basis.

What is Sales & Operations Planning (S&OP)?

The S&OP is a tool that was created in the 70s with the purpose of operations planning mainly for manufacturing environments. Since then, the planning tool has expanded its scope to other departments and other industries. But, let see what is the S&OP definition from the APICS Dictionary 15th edition:

“Sales and operations planning – A process to develop tactical plans that provide management the ability to strategically direct its businesses to achieve competitive advantage on a continuous basis by integrating customer-focused marketing plans for new and existing products with the management of the supply chain. Then process brings together all the plans for the business (sales, marketing, development, manufacturing, sourcing, and financial) into one integrated set of plans. It is performed at least once a month and is reviewed by management at an aggregate (product family) level. The process must reconcile all supply, demand, and new products plans at both the detail and aggregate levels and tie to the business plan. It is the definitive statement of the company’s plans for the near to intermediate terms, covering a horizon sufficient to plan for resources and to support the annual business planning process. Executed properly, the sales and operation planning process links the business strategic plan with its execution and reviews performance management for continuous improvements.

What are the barriers to take the decision of having an S&OP?

I would say that a S&OP is a must have business tool. Although there are some barriers to take the decision to implement it.

  1. “This is a supply chain tool.” Yes, you are right, it is a supply chain AND strategic tool. S&OP is mainly a supply chain tool that involves almost all the areas of the company (including finance and human resources). Nowadays, among other things, the higher market competition and lower margins are pushing firms to improve the operational performance (I mean supply chain) to achieve the desired financial performance.
  2. “This is a planning tool for manufacturing companies.” It is true that the supply complexity of production environments means that S&OP adds even more value for those firms. Nonetheless, all the companies must manage their demand, and supply of products and/or services to satisfy that demand. So, for instance, let think in a small business consulting firm, that company needs to manage its demand (marketing plan, sales plan, etc.) and its supply (capacity planning and resource planning – consulting hours capacity and how many consultants). So, the tool is useful for not production environment too.
  3. “I already have my MRP (Material Requirement Planning) for planning.” Good! Having a MRP in place means that you have a process and a system to assist you with the Supply short-term (3-4 months) plan. However, the focus of S&OP is not just Supply but also Demand. Additionally, the planning horizon is very different because S&OP horizon uses to be between 18 and 36 months. So, MRP is a complementary tool rather than a substitute one.
  4. “I already do almost the same with the traditional Budget (Annual Plan).” The budget is an excellent and necessary business tool, but it isn’t an alternative tool rather than a complementary one. In fact, the S&OP is an Integrated Business Planning tool that integrates finance with operations. Although in S&OP operational figures are translated to money, the format is not a P&L format. Furthermore, the planning horizons of both tools are different.
  5. “This is a tool for large organizations.” Large organizations take an important advantage of this tool to reduce their complexity and improve their planning process. But be aware that many companies are running their S&OP process in just an Excel spreadsheet. So, the main investing is mainly in one full time person with the capability to run this process. In fact, there are some consultants that recommend initiating the S&OP process in an Excel spreadsheet, and just move to a specific software when the process is clearly defined and stabilized.
  6. “This is another fashion business tool.” This tool is in the market for more than 40 years. It is a tool highly demanded it, and software firms like SAP or Oracle has invested importantly to develop S&OP solutions for their customers. Moreover, there are successful consulting firms as Oliver Wight that improve companies’ performance just implemented S&OP projects (they rename the tool as Integrated Business Planning – IBP).

Implementing a S&OP process is clearly reducing the gap between strategy formulation and execution. Even if your business is small or not too complex, you will accelerate the performance of the business.


Annual Budget: Are You Using Budget As a Real Strategic Execution Tool?

Nowadays, most firms have annual budget processes in place. Nevertheless, there are no many of them using a budget process that is fully align with the company strategic execution process. Even many large firms use budgets just as a “merely” finance tool. We have to stress that budget should be an essential tool for turnaround a firm, but in this case budget must be used as a strategic execution tool that really approach, integrate and align all the areas of the company. Let’s review what make a budget a very powerful strategic execution tool.

Annual budget should be an extension of the company strategy

Before presenting the specific company/unit/department budget, a strategy summary (just a few slides)  of the company/unit/department should be present. This is the way to guarantee that the budget (short-term planning) is aligned with the strategy (medium and long-term planning). The strategy summary should respond briefly to the following questions regarding growth:

  • What is the company positioning compare with competitors?
  • What are our differentiators (strategic sweet spots)?
  • What is our cost and/or differentiation (competitive advantage)?
  • What is the firm strategy (according to the value disciplines, or the core business type framework, etc.)?
  • What are our target customer segments (scope)?
  • Where is the company expected to be in 2 years, 5 years, and 10 years (vision)?

Budget is not just related with Sales

Unfortunately, there are some top managers that focus budget “just” mainly on sales. They hyper simplify business success just in sales growth. But sustainable and replicable growth required of other functions as solid operations, proper finance structure, etc. Organizations that focus “just” on sales successfully used “to leave a lot of money on the table” because they do not optimize operations. Overestimated operations should affect the capability of the firm to achieve sustainable growth. I mean the growth of the firm is just support for the good performing of the sales, but operations and cost structure are not optimized. Therefore, if sales growth stop or drop the impact in the organization will be huge.

We must have a detailed list of the annual strategic initiatives for each firm/business-unit/department

Budget is not just figures. The figures must be related to coherent initiatives that show the cause and effect relationships between short-term strategy execution and budget. Just if we get in detail at the initiative level and aligning all the company main areas, we can improve strategic execution skills. Moreover, annual budget it is a good moment to: review KPIs; define what the KPIs target  for the following year should be; and what resources we need from budget to guarantee success achievements.

Cash flow budget should not be define just for the finance area

There are companies that assume cash flow is mainly an issue for the finance department. However, cash flow is a top strategic decision in which all the areas should participate in the planning process rather than leaving finance to decide what could produce short-term misalignment decisions. The most important cash flow decisions are:

Customers days of payment

It is important to align Sales and Finance in this subject because extending the days of sales outstanding (DSO) is equal to additional customers’ discounts. Furthermore, Sales should define if it is more important extending DSO, or reducing DSO to be able to reduce the days payable outstanding (DPO) what should help us to improve our costs structure to support or sales close process and/or sales profitability.

Supplier days of payment

From the financial point of view, we should extend as much these payments. We must be aware than from the operational and strategic point of view, we could be interested to reduce suppliers days of payment to achieve the following objectives: better cost structure because suppliers will be willing to offer better rates to customers that offer better payment conditions; better services because supplier are willing to prioritize good customers (customers that pay in a shorter period and without delays); better finance conditions because the balance is more solid and banks have less risk; and better days of sales outstanding (DSO) because reducing days payable outstanding (DPO) will push us to improve the DSO.

Inventory days

If Sales, Supply Chain and Finance are not properly aligned about inventory we can face issues like the following: Sales promises services that the firm cannot accomplish for the lack of cash flow, Supply Chain import products according to Sales, and Finance is not prepared to pay importation taxes. The company has to pay for penalties (warehousing costs, etc.) for the delay on taxes’ payments. So the cost structure is suffering, and the brand name is damaged.


Budget alignment example


People and structure must be reviewed

In many companies the people review process leading for Human Resources is not 100% connected with the budget process. Probably because there are still companies that in their understanding budget process is a “pure financial” process rather than a strategic one. Indeed, budget process used to be run between mid-September and late-November, although the people evaluation process used to be run from February to March because the main focus is bonus calculation. So the suggestion is making people review at the same time that the budget process, although final bonus calculation can be calculated next year from February to March. At the same time of the budget process the firm should answer at least the following strategic questions related with people and structure:

  • How fast is salaries growing compare with profit growth?
  • Do we have the correct productivity?
  • Do we have the right balance between direct and indirect staff?
  • Should we change our current structure (centralized vs. decentralized, and vertical vs. horizontal)?
  • How is each member of the team performing?
  • What is the provision for bonuses?
  • What is the provision for firing under performers?
  • What is the provision for headhunters?
  • What is the budget for training?
  • What are the MBOs?

Aligning MBOs (Management By Objectives) and bonus program with budget

There are firms that start the new  fiscal year and after several months people do not still know what their corporations expect from them. I mean MBOs are not still defined. Even it is worse that people did not participate in the alignment process between budget and MBOs what could create an unmotivated effect in the MBOs because employees can think that MBOs are unfair. On the other hand, we have companies that limit the amount of money that people can obtain via bonus, and they do not use accelerators in the bonus system to motivate high performance behaviors. Those bonus systems that limit the speed of growth could have a “short-term finance justification” but they are strategically unacceptable because it reduces the attractiveness of the firms for top performers, limit employees satisfaction, and reduced the company growth rate.

Monthly and quarterly business and budget review

Well-managed firms used to monthly review the budget and prepare the new forecast for the current fiscal year twice or three times per year. However, many organizations forget to communicate budget and strategy status to the whole company in regular basis (quarterly). If information remain just at the top of the company, we cannot expect the mobilization of the entire company to achieve the budget. So there are firms that pursuing finance confidentiality too much, they reduce the firm speed to get or exceed the budget.

Budget must reflect 100% the most likely scenario

Companies that are in the stock market realize the importance of using the most likely scenario for budgeting. But many firms fall upon temptation to push management to overestimated budget thinking that difficult objectives motivate to work harder and make happier the shareholders. Nevertheless, overestimated budget is a very dangerous decision. Overestimated budget can bring the following problems in the short-term: Main concerning in the shareholders for the gap between actual and budget figures; stressing the team; problems to pay for bonus to high performers because objectives were unrealistic; better employees leaving the company because they are not willing to work in those conditions and they have other better workplaces outside; create cost structure problems because operations make investments to support unrealistic sales volumes; create important cash flow problems because we are using an optimistic scenario.

Making the correct strategic questions about budget

Manager used to ask questions which push people to improve the budget. Common wisdom teach us that budget as objectives should be SMART (Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant, and Timed). But there are leaders who believe that attainable means approximately 10% of probability because they think that this is achievable (there is a probability of 10%) and those “incentive” people to work harder. The reality is for low performers we cannot expect too much, and for high performers they are already working hard. So the result of this approach just used to demotivated high performers. Probably the right strategic questions regarding budget should be to verify the coherency of budget rather than raising objectives too much. For instance in Sales some coherent questions could be:

  • What is the average time for closing sales?
  • What is the minimum pipeline probability used to incorporate sales pipeline opportunities in the budget?
  • What are the additional resources to justify the proposed growth?
  • What is the assumption of productivity of new resources in the initial stages (for instance new reps used not to be productive in the initial months)?
  • What are the initiatives that support the proposed growth?

Annual budget is an opportunity to learn and questioning our cost structure

There are still organizations that prepare budgets just making the extrapolation of the previous year. Nevertheless, budget is a great opportunity to study the previous year and suggest improvements’ initiatives like travel savings, reducing the number of facilities, etc. There are companies that wait to run under budget to implement improvement initiatives rather than doing proactively.

Questioning company strategy

Sometimes we used to assume that budget must be aligned with strategy, but what about if we have an unrealistic strategy. If there is a misalignment between budget and strategy execution, it is time to discuss if the issue is the budget or it is the strategy.

As we can review, there are many opportunities to improve the   budget process and our strategy execution. Materializing those opportunities can make an important difference in the company performance and turnaround process.


Quick Financial Firms Analysis: Extended DuPont Model

In 1920 DuPont created DuPont Model. Almost one century after DuPont started using this analysis, it still remains a quick and useful tool for analyzing firm’s financial situation and improvements’ status.

The heart of the model is the ROE (Return On Equity) = Profitability x Efficiency x Financial leverage. In this Extended DuPont Model we have added the following features:

  1. The model has been extended to add essential information to analyze some of the main risks for the survival of the firm (liquidity and indebtedness). Thus, we have added the following ratios: the current ratio (liquidity), current liabilities to debt (debts quality), borrowing cost and self-financing.
  2. We have added some financial tendency information (present and last year information) of a few main variables: Sales, Net income, Assets and Debts.

Adapted from Oriol Amat: Extended DuPont Model


Extended DuPont Model contributions

  1. It shows information about the main traditional economic value indicators: Net income, Cash flow, ROA, and ROE.
  2. The model is based on ratios that can be easily and quickly created extracting the information from the income statement and balance sheet (annual report).
  3. Those ratios summarize the financial situation of the company and allow us to compare easily our performance with other subsidiaries and even with our competitors or best in class firms in our industry.
  4. It is a “simple” and quick tool that provides a better understanding of the main accounting variables and how they are related. There are other tools like EVA (Economic Added Value) that approach the value creation issue but they are more complex to implement.
  5. It brings some important growth conclusions:

Growth model

  • High turnover
  • High margins
  • High turnover and margins
  • No growth model at all

Growth status

  • Healthy and balanced growth of all model ratios
  • So fast growth (indebtedness and ROA problems)
  • Run away to the front (just sales are growing, so this growth without profitability is unhealthy and will likely continue deteriorating the indebtedness ratios)
  • Sales issue, but the other ratios are not underperforming “yet.”
  • Weak growth (sales and ROE problems)
  • Excess of structure (the structure is too big and all the ratios are underperforming)