Built To Last - Summary of Key Points  Written by James Collins & Jerry Porras 
 
 
  About this book: 
This summary of Built to Last is  included because if one is going to change an organization, one needs to  know what to change towards.  This book is one of the best we know of  that answers that question.  It is one of the best pieces of research  done on why certain organizations are more successful over time than  others.  
 
  Introduction: 
The book makes a comparison of  Visionary Companies to a comparison group of  good companies.  The lessons of the Visionary Companies  can be learned and practiced at all levels of the organization.  
 
  What is a Visionary Company? 
For the purpose of this study they: 
- were the premier leader in their industry, widely admired 
 
- made an indelible mark on the world 
 
- have multiple products and have had multiple CEO's 
 
- are at least 50 years old 
 
 The authors compared 18 Visionary  Companies to 18 comparison companies.  The comparison companies have  done more than twice as well as the stock market since 1926, while the  Visionary Companies have done 15 times as well as the stock market.  The  comparison is through the end of 1990.  Think of the comparison  companies as the bronze medalists.  Most of the Visionary Companies have  had problems, but have displayed a remarkable resiliency in overcoming business challenges. 
 |      A dozen common myths were shattered: 
- It takes a great idea to start a great company.  In fact,  having a great idea to begin with is negatively correlated with becoming a great company. 
 
- Great companies require charismatic leaders.  In fact,  charismatic leaders can be detrimental to the long term health of the  organization.  The leaders of Visionary Companies sought to be clock  builders not time tellers. 
 
- The most successful companies exist to maximize profits.   In fact, maximizing profits has not been the dominate theme in the  Visionary Companies.  They pursue a number of objectives, sort of like  the balanced scorecard.  Clearly, profit is one of their objectives. 
 
- They share a common ("right") set of core values.  The  core values don't have to even be enlightened (Philip Morris), though  they often are enlightened.  What's most important about core ideology  is how deeply the company  believes in its ideology and to what extend  it is aligned with it. 
 
- The only constant is change.  The Visionary Companies  have maintained their core values for many years.  But they are  adaptive, everything but the core values is subject to change. 
 
- The companies are conservative.  In fact, they are not.  They are willing to engage in BHAG's (big hairy audacious goals). 
 
- These companies are comfortable places to work.  In fact, only those comfortable with the core ideology are comfortable working there. 
 
- Visionary Companies make their best moves by high level successful strategic planning.  In fact, they progress by trying a lot of stuff and keeping what works. 
 
- Companies should hire outsiders as CEO's to breath new life into the organization.   The authors found that only 4 of 113 CEO's in Visionary Companies came  from the outside.  The comparison companies go to the outside 6 times  more frequently. 
 
- Visionary Companies focus on beating the competition.  In fact, they focus on beating themselves.  Always striving to be the best. 
 
- You can't have your cake and eat it to.  The Visionary Companies believe in the genius of "the and" and abhor the tyranny of "the or." 
 
- Visionary Companies become visionary by writing vision statement.  While they tend to write them, this is only one of thousands of things they do to be visionary.  
 
   Clock Building not Time Telling: 
Clock building allows a visionary  company to exist long beyond the founder.  Leaders of Visionary  Companies take an architectural approach to building the company.  These  leaders try to build a company.  For example, Hewlett & Packard had  no great concepts for products, they just wanted to build a company.   HP went a year before it sold anything.  Sony's first products were not  very good.  J.W. Marriott's first business was an A&W Root Beer  stand in Washington DC,  3M  started as a failed corundum mine.  In  fact, only 3 of 18 Visionary Companies started off successfully  (J&J, Ford & GE).  However, 11 of the comparison companies  started out successfully with a great idea.  The companies with early  success are much more likely to stick with these products long after  they should have been replaced by new products or abandoned. 
For example, George Westinghouse  was much more brilliant than Coffin at GE.  Coffin's major contribution  to GE was the development of the world's first industrial lab. 
When David Packard was asked about  HP's greatest innovation, he responded by talking about the HP way.   The article's headline read, "Packard executive develops company by  design, calculator by accident." 
The comparison companies were just  as likely to have had strong leadership in their formative years.  What  the authors are describing is leadership at the Visionary Companies  that is interested in socialized power not personalized power. 
The contrast between Disney and  Columbia Pictures is a good example to illustrate the differences  between clock building and time telling.  Tape goes into good details. 
   The Tyranny of the "Or": 
Visionary Companies do not accept  that you have to chose between things, i.e. you can have quality or low  cost.  As F. Scott Fitzgerald pointed out, "The sign of a first rate  mind is that it can hold two opposing ideas at the same time and be able  to function." 
   More than Profits: 
Clock builders at Visionary  Companies build clocks with a purpose, with a human spirit.  The sense  of purpose goes beyond just making money.  Their values fix a stake in  the ground, this is what we stand for, this is what we are all about.   Profitability was not the driving force in the Visionary Companies, but  seen as necessary.  Profits are like oxygen, food and water.  You can  not live without them, but they are not the purpose of life.  In  seventeen of eighteen pairs the Visionary company was more ideologically  driven than their counterpart.  This was one of the strongest  correlation in the study.  For example, in examining TI the comparison  to HP, the authors could not find one single statement that linked TI to  anything other than trying to maximize shareholder return.  They looked  at over 40 articles, studies etc. on TI. 
The authors give the example of  Merck's decision to develop a product to cure river blindness, an  illness that affects millions in third world countries.  While they knew  there was not much profit in it, they also knew that they would  probably get a lot of free and good publicity.  George Merck 2nd, "If we  focus on helping cure people through medicine, the profits will be  there." 
Not one core value was common  across the eighteen companies.  There is no set of core values one needs  to have to be a visionary company.  What is key is the authenticity of  the core values and the alignment to those core values.  For example,  Walmart's key core value is customer service.  Sam Walton would say if  you are not serving the customer or helping someone to serve the  customer we don't need you. 
Core values are the things the  company holds self evident.  Core values exist independent of the  business environment.  Purpose is the fundamental reasons the company  exists beyond making money.  You should never be able to complete or  achieve your purpose.  As Walt Disney said, "Disneyland will never be  completed as long as there is imagination left in the world."  GE can  never complete the task of improving the quality of life through  technology and innovation. 
 
   Preserve the Core/Stimulate Progress: 
The central concept of the book is preserve the core/stimulate progress.   The only sacred cow in a company should be its philosophy of  doing  business.  Companies must be able to adapt and change to thrive.   Boeing's being on the leading edge of aviation technology is core,  however, building a 747 Jumbo Jet is a strategy that can change.  Over  time competencies needed, strategies and goals all change, but the core  remains the same. The drive for change in a Visionary Company is internal, they don't  often wait for the external forces to make them change.  These companies  have a high level of achievement motive.  Visionary Companies display  an interesting mix of self confidence and self criticism.  The self  confidence allows them to set audacious goals.  Self criticism allows  them to make changes before the outside world demands them. 
Visionary Companies develop  tangible mechanisms to preserve the core and stimulate progress.  For  example, HP helps assure the HP way will continue by having a policy of  promoting  from within.  It supports that policy by tying appropriate  reinforcing criteria to selection, promotion and appraisal decisions. 
The key is to align everything to  the core .  Comparison companies frequently tolerate cynicism,  strategies, behavior and attitudes that are not aligned with the core  values. 
  Big Hairy Audacious Goals (BHAG's): 
The Visionary Companies use BHAG's  to challenge and motivate their workforce.  True commitment to the BHAG  is critical, its where the rubber meets the road.  A certain amount of  hubris is needed to set these goals.  However, the goals seem much more  audacious to those outside the company than those inside the company.   The leaders of the Visionary Companies had great faith they could do  what they set out to do.  The authors  found that 14 of 18 Visionary  Companies used BHAG's more frequently than did the comparison companies. 
As an example, they give Boeing's  decision to develop the 707 at a time when they were not the leader in  commercial aviation.  McDonnell Douglas then the commercial aviation  leader thought the future of aviation was in propeller driven airplanes.   Building the 707 was a BHAG, it required a commitment of a quarter of  Boeing's then net worth.  Its accomplishment propelled Boeing into  commercial aviation leadership, where it has stayed.  Boeing has a  history of using BHAG's.   
GE's vision statement, which is a  BHAG, is compared to Westinghouse's.  GE's vision, "Be number 1 or  number 2 in every market we serve and revolutionize this company to have  the speed and agility of a small enterprise."  Westinghouse's was,  "Total quality, market leadership, technology driven, global,  focused  growth, diversified."  The contrast is that GE's goal is clear,  compelling and exciting, and therefore, much more likely to propel  progress. 
The example of the moon mission  illustrates the motivational power of BHAG's.  Kennedy the charismatic  leader, who set the BHAG, died six years before we landed on the moon.   Yet we were able to achieve this momentous accomplish because the BHAG  itself was compelling, it took on a life of its own.  BHAG's help  Visionary Companies transition across changes in leadership. 
Paul Galvin of Motorola used  BHAG's to propel the engineers to greater achievement, Zenith did this  some in its early years, but stopped doing this with the death of its  founder.   Eugene McDonald, the founder of Zenith was a great leader,  but he was a time teller.  Galvin was a clock builder. 
An organization can have multiple  BHAG's at one time at different levels of the organization.  They need  to be very clear and very compelling.  A BHAG is a goal not a statement.   They should be outside your comfort zone.  An organization has to  watch out that once they have achieved their goal, they do not become  complacent.  One answer to complacency is to set another BHAG.  BHAG's  needs to be consist with your core ideology.  Boeing's decision to  develop both the 707 and 747 were clearly consistent with its core  ideology of being on the cutting edge of aviation technology. 
When a company develops a sense of  its ability to defy the odds and accomplish great things, it makes  people feel they belong to something unique, better.  This is a key to  high morale. 
 
  Cult Like Cultures: 
Visionary Companies are not great  places to work for everyone.  If you do not endorse the core values of a  Visionary Company, you will probably not like working there.  Visionary  Companies are not soft.  They tend to be more demanding of their people  for both accomplishment and adherence to the core ideology. 
Visionary have four things in  common with a cult: 1) a fervently held ideology, 2) indoctrination  procedures, 3) acceptance of only those who adhere to the core ideology  and 4) elitism.  They draw clear boundaries to being inside or outside  the company.  If you are inside you are part of an elite group.  The  authors are not saying that these companies are cults, just more cult  like. 
The authors use IBM and Disney as  really good examples of what it means to indoctrinate their people.  The  "In Search of Excellence" video has excellent examples to illustrate. 
 
  Try a lot of Stuff and Keep What Works: 
Many of the Visionary Companies  did their best things by opportunistic experimentation.  They tried a  lot of stuff and kept what worked and got rid of what did not work.   Examples include: 
-   J&J getting into the talc (Baby Powder) business 
 
-   Marriott's getting into the business of supplying food to the airlines. 
 
-   3M's getting into the wet sand paper and masking tape businesses. 
 
-   Walmart's people greeters system. 
 
 This is evolutionary progress.   The book argues for a Visionary Company being able to make revolutionary  progress (BHAG's) and evolutionary progress, if it is going to remain  great.  Evolutionary theory holds that changes that are adaptive to the  changing environment allow the species to survive.  "Multiply, vary, let  the strongest live and weakest die," those were Darwin's words.  RW  Johnson said, "Failure is our most important product."  Managing failure  is a key to evolutionary progress.  Many companies, try a lot of stuff.   Many are not able to get rid of things that don't work all that well.   They don't prune well. 
A 3M concept is that, "You so  often get to where you are going by stumbling, but you can not stumble  unless you are moving forward."  3M understands that big things often  come from little things, but you can not tell which little things will  blossom into big things, try a lot stuff and keep what works.  3M in  contrast to Norton installed a lot of practices that encouraged  individual initiative and experimentation, Norton did no such thing.   The saying at Norton was you could develop any product you wanted as  long as it had a hole in the middle and was round.  Norton is in the  grinding wheel business. 
Five rules to pursue to achieve evolutionary progress: 
-   Give it a try and quick 
 
-   Accept that mistakes will be made, let the weakest die 
 
-   Take small steps, its easier to accept failure when it is small 
 
-   Give people a lot room to act, allow people to be persistent 
 
-   Build that ticking clock, that is make the four points above  into a process.  3M Examples: a) researchers get 15% of their time to  research anything they want & b) turning new products into divisions  when they get to a certain size. 
 
 They found that the Visionary  Companies were less likely to stick to knitting than the comparison  companies.  The knitting in a Visionary Company is the core ideology. 
 
 
  Home Grown Management: 
The authors point out that Jack  Welch was not a savior for GE.  Welch inherited a very well managed  company.  Welch's predecessor retired as the most respect business  leader at that time.  He was CEO of the year, one year.  GE performed as  well under Jones' eight years as they did under Welch's first eight  years.  Swope, CEO in the 20's, introduced what we would call today the  Balanced Scorecard.  Welch has done a fine job at GE, but the point is  that so did Welch's predecessors at GE.  They all: 1) were management  guru's for their time, 2) changed the company and 3) outperformed the  competition.   
The Welch era is about average for  GE.  See page 280 for the data.  Also see tape for excellent  description of the succession planning process used by Jones to select  Welch.  Jones started the selection of his successor seven years prior  to the actual selection.   
Comparison companies are six times  more likely to have their CEO come from the outside.  Only about 3.5%  of CEO's (4) at Visionary Companies came from the outside and three of  them were from one company.  Its the continuity of quality leadership  that counts at the Visionary Companies.  The authors found that  continuity of leadership was better in 15 out of 18 pairs.  Continuity  of leadership is critical if you are going to preserve the core, while  stimulating progress. 
 
  Good Enough Never Is:  
A critical question at Visionary  Companies is, How can we do better tomorrow than we have done today?   Visionary Companies are tremendously demanding of themselves, i.e. they  have very high standards. 
Willard Marriott adapted what we'd  call continuous improvement principles soon after opening his first AW  Root Beer stand.  Comfort is not the objective in Visionary Companies,  they install powerful mechanisms to increase discomfort and stimulate  change before the external environment demands it.  They worry about  becoming fat, lazy and complacent.  Examples of mechanisms used to  challenge complacency: 
 
 
  The brand structure at P&G  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Merck consciously yields market share as products become older and less profitable  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Motorola stops funding products that stop improving   Comparison companies much more frequently take the easy road, milking  successful products.  Visionary Companies are much more likely to invest  in the future.  In all eight pairs where there was data, the Visionary  Companies invested more in R&D.  The Visionary Companies invested  30% more in R&D than the comparison companies.  They also invested  much more in human capital.  They were much more likely to be early  adopters of new ideas and technology.  They give a good example of  how  Philip Morris reinvested in their future trying to become number one,  while RJ Nabisco executives were spending money on self aggrandizing  monuments to themselves (excellent example of personalized power at  work). 
In 16 of 18 companies the Visionary Companies drove themselves harder  for self improvement.  They use the parable of the Black Belt to explain this ongoing quest for  self improvement. The question posed to a would be holder of the black  belt is, What is the essential meaning of the Black Belt?  The person  receiving the Black Belt must understand that they are at a beginning,  not the end of a journey.  The journey is a journey of never ending  quest for self improvement and understanding. 
  The End of the Beginning: 
To become a Visionary Company you must align objectives, strategies,  policies and mechanisms within the company.  You never really attain  full alignment.  Sweat the small stuff that paints a total picture of  alignment.  Cluster mechanisms to create alignment. don't shot gun  mechanisms.  That is, cluster reinforcing mechanisms together to deliver  a powerful punch.  Be guided by your own compass in creating your great  company.  Ask not whether this practice is good, but whether its fits  with our own ideology and ambitions.  Obliterate misalignments. 
The authors feel we should take away four key concepts from this book: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
-   Be a clock builder not a time teller, that is, an architect 
 
-   Embrace the genius of the "and" 
 
-   Preserve the core, while stimulating progress 
 
-   Seek consistent alignment. 
 
 People at all levels can help build a Visionary Company. 
 
Where to begin in building a Visionary Company?  
 
First understand your  core ideology and then build a worthwhile purpose. 
Put in place BHAG's  and mechanisms to stimulate progress. 
Then align the organization.  The biggest mistake managers make is failing to get alignment. 
 
 
 
 | 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Your Comments are INVALUABLE to Boost Our Business Oxygen