The Business Book

(Joyce) #1

191


The yin-yang symbol reflects
the dual nature of visionary companies,
according to Collins and Porras. They
suggest replacing the “tyranny of the
‘OR’” with the “genius of the ‘AND.’”

See also: Take the second step 43 ■ How fast to grow 44–45 ■ Effective leadership 78–79 ■
Investment and dividends 126–27 ■ Accountability and governance 130–31 ■ Profit versus cash flow 152–53


WORKING WITH A VISION


In 1994, James Collins and Jerry
Porras studied companies such as
General Electric, Marriott, and 3M
that had been in business for more
than a century and that consistently
outperformed the stock market.
They used the Chinese yin-yang
sign—symbolizing complementary
opposites—to explain how
successful businesses maintain
control of both the short- and long-
term. The organizations they
studied were able to manage
contradictory ideas at the same
time, by focusing on “both ... and
...” rather than “either ... or ...”
They also demonstrated the
concept by performing well both in
the short-term and in the long-term.


Public and private
In a private limited company (Ltd),
managers can plan for different
time horizons without scrutiny from
shareholders. Sir Anthony Bamford,
for example, runs JCB, a privately
owned British company. JCB was
started by his father, Joseph Cyril
Bamford, who began making
agricultural tipping trailers in 1945.


Today JCB is the third-largest
manufacturer of earth-moving
machinery in the world, with 22
factories in Europe, Asia, and North
and South America. Bamford can
invest when and where he chooses.
He decided to invest in India by
opening a factory in 1978, a long-
term prospect that paid off; JCB
is now market leader there. In 2012,
JCB opened a factory in Brazil.
Unlike many CEOs, who hold a
post for a few years then move on,
Bamford saw that balancing the
short- and long-term is critical. His
dual focus has paid off: despite the
worldwide recession, JCB sales
grew 40 percent in 2011 and topped
£2.75 ($4.3) billion in 2012.
In contrast, a typical public
limited company (plc), owned by
shareholders and quoted on a stock
exchange, is under greater scrutiny.
These investors look for returns,
in the form of dividends, on an
annual basis. This can become a
strategic issue, since institutional
shareholders may put pressure on
directors of limited companies to
return cash, rather than to reinvest

in the business, without regard to
the impact on long-term prospects.
This happened in 2013 at Apple.
To ensure the right balance
between short- and long-term,
companies often split planning
responsibility between different
management teams. This allows
the organization to manage the
immediate operation, while looking
ahead for growth and innovation. ■

Jack Welch Born in 1935, John F. Welch
studied chemical engineering at
the University of Massachusetts,
then gained an MSc and PhD in
chemical engineering from the
University of Illinois. In 1960, he
joined General Electric (GE), rising
to become the company’s
chairman and CEO from 1981 until
his retirement in 2001. During this
time, Welch increased the value
of the business from $13 billion
to several-hundred billion. His
management skills became
legendary; he had little time for
bureaucracy and managers were
given free reign as long as they

followed the GE ethic of
constant change and striving
to do better. In 1999, Fortune
magazine named him Manager
of the Century, and the
Financial Times claimed he
was one of the three most
admired business leaders in the
world. He founded the Jack
Welch Management Institute at
Strayer University, US, in 2009.

Key works

2001 Jack: Straight from the Gut
(with John A Byrne)
2005 Winning

Preserve
the core

Stimulate
progress
Free download pdf