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Tuesday 22 January 2013

Prophets & Prophet Warnings – What HMV, Comet and the other troubled brands all missed

You would have to have been locked in a skiing lodge or hidden away on a very exotic Caribbean island for the last few months not to be aware of the slew of high street mainstays (Comet, HMV, Jessops, Blockbuster etc) that have fallen into administration either side of Xmas.

At the risk of stating the obvious and sounding very trite, these businesses – despite their very recognisable brands – have not adapted quickly enough, or thoroughly enough to the changing economic and technological climate.   Sadly 1,000s of very real people have consequently been made redundant and many members of the public and small suppliers will be out of pocket and feel aggrieved.   That said, this is not a new or unique situation.  Enough “big brand names” go to the wall on a fairly regular basis for us all to be aware of the fact that brands – even big ones – go under when they fail to adapt. 

The good news is that I am not going to spend the rest of this blog nostalgically bemoaning the loss of the recognisable UK high street brands associated with warm fuzzy memories, nor am I going to forensically pick apart the economic whys and wherefores of the passing of these once strong businesses – both of these angles have been extensively covered already.  Instead what I want to do is a bit of thinking about how to avoid going into receivership and in particular make an appeal to all CXOs to take the time to find and listen to a corporate prophet.

The corporate prophet?  Yes the corporate prophet.  Corporate Prophet – an individual with genuine and vital insight(s) relating to the future health of the corporationcf. Freeman 2013

Throughout historic literature the role of the prophet / shaman / guru / oracle etc has always been to deliver difficult and challenging messages to the leaders of a faulty society.  The wise leaders are the ones able to see beyond their own position, sense the wisdom in the prophet’s message and call their society to action.  Sadly all too often the historical prophets are ignored and in many cases are ridiculed and/or tortured and killed by leaders keen to maintain the status quo.  Inevitably by ignoring the prophet’s warnings the leader and the society usually suffer a suitably painful demise.  Now I’m not saying that the CXOs of HMV et al deliberately ignored or disregarded the prophets sent their way but a raft of personal experience, supplemented by a cruise through the biographies of famous corporate leaders, reveals how the CXOs of the recent corporate casualties could easily have missed out on some timely wisdom from a corporate prophet.  Here’s why:
1) Corporate prophets are not easy to come by in the Boardroom
2) They are painful/no fun to be around and
3) Corporate prophets don’t often come with a label and can be disguised in a range of shapes and forms. 

So if you are a CXO with a desire to be a wise corporate leader my advice, based on the points made above is simple a) Take time on a regular basis to be with and talk with people who are not your direct reports, b) Work on asking people open questions and be prepared to listen to their answers – you won’t hear anything useful if you act defensively and/or aggressively to what others say. C) Look out for your corporate prophets in some unusual places.  The corporate prophet may be the employee who’s asking the difficult questions, they may be the former customer who took the time to complain or they may even be from one of those “fluffy” futurist consultancies.

So hands up all those CXOs who are humble/mad enough to seek out people who are angry at them/disagree with them/won’t pander to their ego.  If you’ve still got your hand up and are still reading – well done – hopefully you will find the insights you deserve.   When you look at the challenges associated with tuning into a corporate prophet it’s perhaps not surprising that CXOs often miss the difficult messages.  Here’s hoping you don’t miss this one.

Thursday 3 January 2013

Bionics – What the six million dollar man can teach us about the art of digital transformation

The very words “Steve Austin...a man barely alive; we can rebuild him...we have the technology” is enough to send a warm wave of nostalgia surging through me.  For those of you who, like me, were young/old enough to spend your early Saturday evenings during the late 1970s glued to the exploits of the six-million-dollar man you’ll already be hearing the theme tune and replaying in your mind that faux mechanical sound that was generated when Steve used his bionics – a sound that Michael Bay seemed to appropriate ad nauseam for the Transformer movies (but I digress).

For those of you who need reminding – Steve was an astronaut who was badly injured on his return to earth from space.  His right arm, both legs and left eye are replaced by "bionic” technology implants that enhance his strength, speed and vision far above human norms: he can run at speeds of 60 mph (97 km/h), his eye has a 20:1 zoom lens and infrared capabilities while his limbs all have the equivalent power of a bulldozer. He’s also very cool.

For me, the six-million-dollar man (over $30M in today’s money), is a great metaphor that exemplifies what effective digital transformation is actually all about.   It’s a great example of using the latest technologies to upgrade your current capabilities in a way that appears seemless, sexy and magical.   The latest Capgemini/MIT research shows that those who are digitally “bionic” (the Digirati) are 26% more profitable than their non-bionic peers.

What is fascinating is that the Capgemini/MIT research goes on to outline the key elements that the Digirati have in place – effectively describing the Digirati’s digital central nervous system (CNS).  The first element is the ability to use digital capabilities (social, mobile, web) to develop a much deeper and richer awareness of whom your customers are, what they value and why they would buy from you.  The second is the ability to process and interpret this welter of data and turn it into meaningful and actionable insights (data, analytics).  The third is the ability to respond (service, fulfillment, or sales) in real time (or very close) to the customers’ needs with the requisite empathy.  All whilst maintaining an ostensibly human face (just like Steve Austin).

Ostensibly the Digirati have finely tuned “digital senses” deeply attuned to customer needs, sizeable and smart “digital brains” capable of analysing and making sense of large amounts of data and strong and aligned “digital spines” enabling rapid “reflex-like” responses.  All three  elements of the digital CNS are essential for firms looking to generate competitive edge but the good news is that building any of them up independently will also drive benefits.  

So the message from the research for business leaders in relation to digital transformation seems to be as follows – Which digital capabilities you choose to develop first seems to be less important than the fact that you have started developing some capabilities.  Whether its digital senses, a digital brain or a digital spine matters not – you will need all three but having one or two of the capabilities is better than having none.