The Business Book

(Joyce) #1

102


Continued management arrogance
breeds indiscipline; decisions are
made out of greed and warning
signs are ignored. Companies at
stage 2 make indisciplined leaps
into areas where they have little
competitive advantage; diversify
into areas in which they have no
expertise; or undertake ill-conceived
mergers and takeovers. The
complacency of stage 1 turns into
the overreaching of stage 2.
By stage 3, problems begin to
mount, staff begins to question
management decisions, and
disturbing data suggest things
might not be all that they seem.
However, as Collins points out, it is
possible to be in stage 3 of decline
and not yet realize that it is
happening. Anomalies in
performance at this stage tend to be
explained away; any problems are
blamed on “difficult trading
conditions.” Management holds firm
in the view that the company is
strong and nothing is fundamentally
wrong. They believe that once the


markets pick up, their business
brilliance will ensure that the
company regains market leadership.

Now or never
Stage 3 represents the turning point.
Many companies reach this stage
but manage to avert collapse. If
management listens to the views of
its staff (especially from the front
lines, such as sales staff), heeds
shareholder concerns, and changes
strategy in line with the changing
reality, it is likely to recover. Andy
Grove famously pulled Intel back into
profitability by pursuing this strategy.
However, the same cannot be said
for Lehman Brothers. In 2007, with
its stock price at a record high, the
US investment bank ignored the
early warning signs of collapse. Even
as cracks in the US housing market
became apparent, with subprime
mortgage defaults rising to a seven-
year high, Lehman continued to
expose itself to mortgage-backed
financial products. Management,
particularly the chief executive,
Richard Fuld, were blinded by hubris
and deep in denial. They pressed on
with ill-conceived strategies and
quickly found themselves in stage 4.

Dealing with disaster
By stage 4 a company’s difficulties
become undeniable—even the
most headstrong and arrogant
manager has to acknowledge that
there are problems. The question
now is how to respond. Unfortunately,
as the Lehman example shows,
acknowledgment does not always
result in appropriate action.
As the global credit crisis
erupted in August 2007, Lehman’s
stock fell sharply. Having grown
Lehman to become the fourth
biggest bank on Wall Street, Fuld
could not accept that it was time to
adopt a new strategy. When
uncertainty started to grip the

HUBRIS AND NEMESIS


“Rogue trader” Jérôme Kerviel
claimed his company, Société Générale
bank, was aware of his dangerously
large trades, but turned a blind eye
because they were focused on profits.


bank and journalists asked
questions about its future, Fuld
was reluctant to countenance any
capital infusion. Selling parts of the
bank was not an option he felt he
could consider. Although Fuld
eventually revoked this decision, it
was too late: the bank declared
bankruptcy on September 15, 2008.
The way in which management
responds to a crisis brought about
by success and accompanying
hubris is critical. Inevitably, “band-
aid” solutions that do not address
the underlying problems rarely
succeed. Quick fixes based on the
same overconfidence that brought
crisis in the first place—such as a
bold but risky strategy, a hoped for
blockbuster product, or a “market-
changing” acquisition—usually
result in the company moving
to stage 5: capitulation to
irrelevance, or death.

Capitulating to irrelevance
In stage 5, reality finally hits home.
Expensive failed strategies erode
financial strength and accumulated
setbacks damage the individual
spirits trying to repair the damage.
Key managers generally leave the
company at this stage, and the few
customers that remain migrate to

The best leaders never
presume they’ve reached
ultimate understanding
of all the factors that
brought them success.
Jim Collins
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