The Demise of Size
The Demise of Size
In the past, an axiom of growth was that all industries consolidate as they mature, and those companies that scaled up and survived the shakeout inevitably won big. By extension, in an era of global markets, global consolidations are presumed to win very big. In fact, during the past two decades, industrial automation has moved through consolidation by acquisition and all of the automation majors have explicitly been built on the strategy of dominant size in global markets.
But big companies tend to be hierarchical and myopically self-reinforcing, organized to minimize new threats to the existing order. Management is focused inward, and resources are directed toward preserving structures based on past successes, rather than future opportunities. They develop barriers to innovation by allocating resources based on what has worked in the past instead of on what could determine the future.
The core dynamic in the failure of large companies is failure to process information effectively because of addiction to central, power-based, decision-making protocols. By contrast, small companies use radically different mechanisms—fast-acting and much more effective. The fundamental value of an organization (large or small) today is informational capacity and speed. Failure in these aspects is a severe restriction.
Leaders fade
Size as the key strategy retains a powerful hold on business thinking. But, the evidence shows that there are significant limitations to sheer size. High-performance businesses are very rarely the biggest. From automobiles to computers, most leaders dominate their industries only for a time, and then fade away as shifts in demand, technology or business models erode their base.
With today’s technology acceleration, information is the basis of competitive advantage. Strategy and execution should be organized around information, using it to gain unique market insight that can rapidly be turned into products and services. In the information economy, the relationship between strategy and agility attains great importance; most big companies just cannot be agile.
In this environment, strategy feeds off of market research, transaction data and business intelligence. Early investments in information-based strategies produce new products and services that obsolete the old frighteningly fast. High-performance companies can achieve extraordinary success by balancing growth efforts with focus on the rapid development of innovative new products and services for global markets.
Jim Pinto is an industry analyst and commentator, writer, technology futurist and angel investor. You can e-mail him at: jim@jimpinto.com. Or review his prognostications and predictions on his Web site: www.jimpinto.com.
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