Archive for the ‘Marketing and Business Development’ Category

Brilliant Manoeuvre
Boots on the ground always beats fighting from a distance.

Discussion
A fundamental principle of counterinsurgency strategy is that you need ‘boots on the ground.’ You can’t influence a population and secure ground and terrain, especially populated areas, without having troops constantly on the lookout, patrolling, encountering the population, collecting information, and providing a sense of security. It’s the same in business, especially sales. Bombardier Aerospace is going into full sales mode to acquire customers for its new C Series jetliner. In order to be successful, the company has created a number of sales offices around the world, breaking with its traditional approach of selling from its main headquarters in Canada. There are now offices in Shanghai, Europe, Sydney, etc. There will also be offices in Johannesberg, South Africa and the US. The company has realized that nothing beats a physical presence when attempting to make large sales. As we say in French, “loin des yeux, loin du coeur.” You can’t expect to influence buyers from a distance. You have to be like counterinsurgency soldiers, and get boots on the ground.

Tip
Visit your customers and prospects on a regular basis. Ask them what they want and need, what their objectives are, what their concerns and limitations are. Find a way to stay connected with them on a continual basis.

Richard Martin is a consultant, speaker, and executive coach. He brings his military and business leadership and management experience to bear for executives and organizations seeking to exploit change, maximize opportunity, and minimize risk.

© 2013 Richard Martin. Reproduction and quotes are permitted with proper attribution.

In his book, Ignorance: How it drives science, biochemist Stuart Firestein starts by quoting an old proverb, “It is very difficult to find a black cat in a dark room,” and adds “especially when there is no cat.”

Firestein notes that the pursuit of science appears to non-scientists as a very rational and systematic approach to discovery. In actuality, it’s much more like that old proverb than walking down a well-lighted path. The truth is that scientists have to explore many false paths and grope around in the dark room, hoping to find that black cat. But the dark room can be huge, and even endless, and there is no guarantee that there is even a cat in there.

I find that many things about business are very similar. We don’t know ahead of time if our new product ideas will work. Will customers respond the way we anticipate? Will competitors beat us to the punch? Will we be able to deliver on our promises? We can make assumptions about all of this, but that is just what they are, assumptions.

As I pointed out in my book, Brilliant Manoeuvres, assumptions must be validated and tested. Military strategy and tactics provide one model of the application of trial and error to discovery and success. But science also provides a useful model and template. As pointed out by philosopher Karl Popper, science is really a series of conjectures and refutations about the nature of the world and how it works. For instance, in physics, theorists propose new models of the world and experimentalists test them. Theories and hypotheses that have little or no empirical validation are cast aside in favour of those with experimental evidence. This process continues over and over until progress is achieved in understanding reality.

The same process applies in business. Innovation, whether new products and services, new markets, or new internal processes, is nothing but a form of conjecture about what will work in the real world of business. The marketplace is the crucible of experimentation that seeks empirical evidence to demonstrate that the conjecture is correct. Correct business models and innovations are successful to the extent that customers accept them.

Call it a form of un-natural selection. Companies and entrepreneurs put forth ideas based on their understanding of the market and competition, and then they are proved by the test of business success.

To carry this analogy further, businesses must apply the basic principles of innovation and trial and error experimentation.

•    A mechanism to generate new ideas. These can be innovative products and services, or they can also be new ways of viewing the market. For instance, before Henry Ford imagined the Model T, he was driven by the vision of automobiles for every average American family. Prior to the Model T, cars were hand-made toys for the rich. Henry Ford’s innovations explored new manufacturing techniques in order to make his car available to a market that up to then had been essentially ignored.

•    This generation mechanism must be wide-ranging and non-censoring. The perfect model for this is of course brainstorming, where you simply throw out ideas without initial regard for their apparent reasonability or feasibility. In fact, the more ideas appear initially irrational or unfeasible, the better they might be at disrupting the status quo, both internally and externally.

•    Good ideas can (and should) come from all levels and areas of the business. As an example, customer service agents and field service representatives often know more about customer concerns and suggestions for improvements than anyone else in the company. Sales people usually know what the competition is doing. Suppliers and distributors can often provide advance warning of changes in the marketplace and competition. These sources of ideas must be nurtured, encouraged and exploited.

•    Innovations can be external and internal. By this I mean that good ideas don’t just translate directly into new or improved products, services, or markets. It can be someone suggesting a new internal procedure that saves time and money. Or a production manager who finds a potential new supplier at lower cost for equivalent quality. In other words, everything is subject to innovation.

•    Selection should be reality based. Too often ideas are rejected or put out of bounds because ‘that’s not how we do things around here,’ or ‘that’s never worked before,’ or even, ‘because I said so.’ The latter is probably the worst one, but I’ve observed this type of innovation selection by fiat and nothing is more stultifying of growth and continuous improvement. The only truly effective selection mechanism is successful implementation in the external and internal competitive and organizational marketplace.

This is why I advocate trial and error in innovation and change management. No one can predict the future, what will work or not, before it is actually tried. For this reason, we need to find ways to try different ideas and approaches while managing the associated risk. What have you tried lately that is new and innovative?

© Alcera Consulting Inc. 2013. We encourage the sharing of this information and forwarding of this email with attribution. All other rights reserved.

Data was published yesterday that PC sales are plummeting throughout the world.

It is obviously a result of a move to mobile communications and computing. Most people don’t need a powerful desktop or laptop computer for everyday tasks. Email, messaging, reading news, talking on the phone or through video conferencing, scheduling activities, budgeting, etc., they can all be done on mobile devices. Even the occasional memo or report can be produced on a tablet.

With the rise of ubiquitous voice recognition, artificial intelligence, and cloud based services, there is really a limited market for desktop computing. What we’re seeing is the realization of universal computing machines that can act as a multitude of useful devices. Most people can get by in their personal and professional lives without a dedicated computer.

There are still mainframe computers, but they are now highly specialized or focused on truly high powered applications. The desktop computing model will remain, but it will be increasingly marginalized to specialized applications and uses. Everything else will be mobile, always online, multimedia and multichannel, with embedded specialized AIs and interaction facilitators such as voice dictation, field of vision tracking, and various other forms of man-machine interfaces.

Microsoft, Dell, HP, etc., they all have business models that rely heavily on the desktop computing model. They’re trying to make the transition to cloud computing, mobile interactive online living, and various other manifestations of the universal computing machine model. But, it’s not easy.

This just shows how even the most successful companies can see their business models undermined. The only way to overcome this is to shape the future yourself. To take the initiative and to try to create the new business models, rather than just react to them. Microsoft, for instance, has been singularly unsuccessful at adapting to, and shaping, new business models. The company was highly successful at riding the wave of democratization and decentralization of computing, and even created it to a large extent by offering cheap and reasonably effective and usable operating systems and productivity software. But then it just stopped really innovating.

There are only a handful of companies that have operated in highly changing competitive markets that have been able to evolve and adapt, and even shape the changes around them. IBM is one, HP in its previous incarnations was another. Who will be able to adapt to, and shape the future business environments? Who will have the offensive mindset to seize and maintain the initiative? I’ve written about this extensively in my book, Brilliant Manoeuvres: How to Use Military Wisdom to Win Business Battles.

© 2013 Richard Martin. Reproduction and quotes permitted with full and proper attribution.

 

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/careers/management/a-military-approach-to-business/article10197913/

Brilliant Manoeuvre
Sometimes you have to move to make things happen and to confirm your initial estimations. Superficial impressions are often just that, superficial. Only probing and action can uncover opportunities and openings.

Example
I’m working with one of my clients to get his managers and employees to take prudent risks, to make a move to provoke a response, and to not just accept the initial framing of an opportunity or problem. Case in point: They have to decide whether to approach a prospect or to respond to a RFP. This often leads to dithering and worries amongst the staff about whether they feel they have the full capabilities to fulfill the mandate or whether it’s worth their time and effort as currently defined. The aim should instead be to reach out to the prospect and to make contact in some way, even if to challenge the specifications in the RFP or to push back on the customer’s claimed needs and wants. In this way, they can work their way to the true buyer and start developing a relationship. After all, most businesses depend on some form of trusting relationship between buyers and sellers. Once a relationship is initiated, it can be further developed and can lead to new possibilities. If you stay hunkered down in your fortress you can’t see what’s happening out in the real world. You need to test your assumptions and beliefs about competitors, customers, other stakeholders, by trying them in the actual game.

Tip
The aim isn’t to know everything, as that is impossible, but rather to know more than competitors so as to gain the upper hand and move faster.

Richard Martin is a consultant, speaker, and executive coach. He brings his military and business leadership and management experience to bear for executives and organizations seeking to exploit change, maximize opportunity, and minimize risk.

© 2013 Richard Martin. Reproduction and quotes are permitted with proper attribution.

Brilliant Manoeuvre
Let your competitors focus on their existing customers and products. That creates opportunities for you to manoeuvre around them.

Example
In the 1950s, Fairchild Semiconductor left the vacuum tube manufacturers to focus on their existing customer applications such as TVs and radios and went after the more demanding and much more lucrative defense and space applications markets with their solid state transistors and integrated circuits. Canadair (and then Bombardier Aerospace) didn’t try to build major jetliners but instead went into businness jets, water bombers, and small regional jetliners. Microsoft didn’t try to go directly up againt the IBMs and didn’t get into hardware, but instead offered low cost, reasonably effective operating systems and applications to individual users and small businesses. Google initially just offered search based ads to advertisers, leaving mass media companies to continue focusing on large accounts. Apple left the corporate and institutional markets to Research in Motion when it introduced the iPhone and went after the consumer market.

Tip
Use your competitors strengths against them.

Richard Martin is a consultant, speaker, and executive coach. He brings his military and business leadership and management experience to bear for executives and organizations seeking to exploit change, maximize opportunity, and minimize risk.

© 2013 Richard Martin. Reproduction and quotes are permitted with proper attribution.

Brilliant Manoeuvre
Use technology to move faster and make decisions faster than competitors.

Example
Technology has always been a key factor in warfare. The side that is better able to exploit a new technology and do so faster and in greater numbers than potential or actual enemies will tend to prevail. The same applies in business. Technology is evolving at an accelerating rate. Visionary inventor and entrepreneur Ray Kurzweil calls this phenomenon the Law of Accelerating Returns. As an example, the speed and quality of genome sequencing basically doubles every year while the cost continues to drop rapidly. IBM’s Watson supercomputer, which last year won Jeopardy by beating the two best ever human competitors (with a score that surpassed their combined scores), is now being turned by IBM to the development of AI-based medical diagnosis. It is conceivable that within a few years we will have access to our own medical records and biometric information in a continual manner as well as near instant health monitoring and diagnosis. How will this change medical and healthcare practice? What does this mean for doctors, nurses, hospitals, pharmacies, pharma companies, and health and life insurance companies? If I were in these fields, I would be developing scenarios and finding ways to be at the forefront of technology and innovation so I could be in a better position to preempt competitors and occupy the rich economic terrain that will open up. I would be actively looking at the impact of technologies in all fields, even outside of my own, because new threats may arise or, more important, new opportunities WILL arise. I would want to be on the winning side by setting the conditions and shaping the battlefield to my advantage.

Tip
Be on the lookout for evolving technologies in all spheres of endeavour and seek ways to incorporate them into your business or to leverage them for competitive and strategic advantage.

Richard Martin is a consultant, speaker, and executive coach. He brings his military and business leadership and management experience to bear for executives and organizations seeking to exploit change, maximize opportunity, and minimize risk.

© 2013 Richard Martin. Reproduction and quotes are permitted with proper attribution.

Brilliant Manoeuvre
The first and most important principle of war, and the only sure road to victory, is offense. Defense should only be used as a temporary measure while doing everything possible to (re)gain the initiative.

Examples
Too many companies (and even entire business sectors) have lost their relevance by assuming that their existing defensive posture would protect them from competition. Newspapers have been rendered almost irrelevant by web based media. The music industry was completely bypassed, first by Napster and other illegal copying methods, and then legally by iTunes. Television networks are struggling against the same reality, trying desperately to protect their control over programming, while teenagers barely watch TV anymore, preferring to watch their favourite shows on the web. Research in Motion (now Blackberry) thought its position in secure mobile communications made it invulnerable. When the iPhone came out, one of RIM’s co-CEOs pronounced it insignificant (or words to that effect). On the other hand, companies such as IBM, Bombardier, and Disney have continually reinvented themselves, or redefined their purpose in order to seek out and/or create new market positions. This keeps them ahead of competitors, and in some cases makes the competitors irrelevant.

Tip
Offensive business strategy succeeds best when companies make small, probing advances, experimenting with new products, services, processes, and business models. Once they see a successful incursion, they pour resources ‘into the breach’ in the hope of turning it into a breakthrough.

Richard Martin is a consultant, speaker, and executive coach. He brings his military and business leadership and management experience to bear for executives and organizations seeking to exploit change, maximize opportunity, and minimize risk.

© 2013 Richard Martin. Reproduction and quotes are permitted with proper attribution.

As I’ve pointed out in my book, Brilliant Manoeuvres: How to Use Military Wisdom to Win Business Battles, “To win in war and business requires seizing and maintaining the initiative; going on the defensive only buys time to withdraw, reorient or reconstitute one’s forces.”

In other words, successful business strategy is fundamentally about finding ways to go and stay on the offensive. The principles of offensive action are as follows: seize and maintain the initiative; manoeuvre for advantage; use the indirect approach; and probe and follow the path of least resistance.

I go into these principles in great detail in Brilliant Manoeuvres, but I’ve found that it is also necessary to understand one’s posture before trying to make any changes. This is why I’m currently developing a tool to assess offensive posture. Email if you would like to receive a copy of this document, which also includes examples of how it can be applied in competitive analyses.

As already mentioned, offensive posture is fundamentally about seizing and maintaining the initiative. This plays out in five different dimensions. When you combine all five, you get a highly revealing picture of your own competitive posture and that of key competitors, and that enables you to generate insights so you can ‘seize and maintain the initiative.’ For each of these dimensions, you can be the leader (or one of the leaders), ahead of the pack, in the middle of the pack, a follower, or far behind (or even dead last). Obviously, the terrain you want to occupy is leadership, or at least ahead of the main pack. Let’s look at these dimensions in greater detail.

Customers. If you’re the leader, you get to pick and choose your customers. This confers great flexibility as you can select product-market segments that are the most profitable, with the greatest growth potential, and also that contribute the most to a strong brand. Conversely, if you’re far behind the pack, you basically have to take what you can get in terms of customers. This usually forces you into a commoditized position, where you absolutely have no choice but to compete with ‘me too’ products at the lowest possible prices.

Price Flexibility. The key word here is ‘flexibility.’ It’s not necessarily that you always command the highest prices for your products and services, but rather that they be appropriate to your product-market mix and branding. If you’re the leader with all the initiative and freedom of action, you get to set your price. This could be the highest price possible, especially if you’re introducing new products and services aimed at early adopters. But it could also be at lower price points once you’ve created or penetrated a new market. Conversely, followers have little choice in setting prices. They basically have to follow what the market determines, and are often selling to the bulk commodity market and late adopters. Followers have no choice but to be imitators and low-cost producers.

Product Leadership. This factor follows naturally from the previous two. If you’re in a leadership position or ahead of the pack, you can be more innovative in creating differentiated products and services. You can also take more calculated and prudent risks. This is because you have more resources, such as capital and time, to experiment with initiatives. This confers greater freedom of action to manoeuvre around competitors but also to stay ahead of the pack. Conversely, followers are forced into commodification of their products and services, and by extension these have to be lower priced. This can be a conscious choice by a company, but it is also riskier because the leaders clearly have the initiative and freedom of action.

Brand Strength. Leaders tend to have strong brands that are recognized and admired. One of the principal benefits of brand strength is customer loyalty, even in the face of difficulties. Look at how customers have forgiven Apple for its mistakes over the years. At the other end of the spectrum, followers are non-entities in customers’ minds. They are generic and are often forced to produce generic products and services under license for stronger brands. This can be a conscious strategy, but once again it has considerably more risks, as the company has little room for error.

Surprise/Speed. This is perhaps one of the most unrecognized benefits of an offensive posture. When you have the initiative, you can pick and choose the time and place to act, how, when, and to whom you offer new products and services. Companies in the lead are often a lot quicker to respond to competitive challenges and changes in customer tastes. This confers surprise and magnifies the positive effects of the four other dimensions. On the other hand, followers are constantly being surprised or overtaken by competitors. A sure sign of a follower position on this dimension is when a company is constantly in crisis mode. Senior management has that ‘deer in the headlights’ look that comes from being surprised and unable to react in a timely and effective manner.

These five dimensions can be adapted to any situation beyond the competitive sphere, for instance in sales and marketing, organizational change initiatives, leadership, etc. A good start is to assess your offensive posture relative to your main competitors. Like I said above, feel free to contact me if you would like a graphical tool for doing so, or just to discuss your needs in this regard.

© Alcera Consulting Inc. 2013. We encourage the sharing of this information and forwarding of this email with attribution. All other rights reserved.

Brilliant Manoeuvre
If you can see something that appears self-evident, there’s a good chance that your enemy (or competitors) can also see it.

Example
Not long after my book, Brilliant Manoeuvres, came out, some of my friends and acquaintances who had also served in the military told me they had also been thinking about writing a similar book to mine. Another friend of mine has also been thinking of writing a book on a topic that is right in his ‘sweet spot’ as a consultant. The problem is that he’s been thinking about it for two years. In the meantime, someone else came out with a book that covers essentially the same ground. What both these literary examples have in common is that good ideas seldom come to only one person at any one time. Case in point, great scientific discoveries often occur to many people at essentially the same time. For instance, Darwin and Wallace discovered natural selection at the same time, but it was Darwin that published a full-length argument in favour of it. Consequently, he’s the one that history recognizes. The lesson here is that if you see an opportunity to introduce a new product, service, or set of ideas, then move quickly. Chances are that your competitors alos see the opportunity and are fixing to move. This requires speed, resolve, and agility.

Tip
Don’t wait for perfection to move. Do so when you’re approximately ready. As my mentor Alan Weiss says, “Move when you’re 80% ready. The last 20% is not worth the time or effort because you’ll have to change it anyway.”

Richard Martin is a consultant, speaker, and executive coach. He brings his military and business leadership and management experience to bear for executives and organizations seeking to exploit change, maximize opportunity, and minimize risk.

© 2013 Richard Martin. Reproduction and quotes are permitted with proper attribution.