The Business Book

(Joyce) #1

196


I


t is often easier for people
outside a company to spot
complacency than it is for those
inside; executives are sometimes
blind to it until their company
plunges into a downward spiral.
Research in Motion (RIM),
manufacturer of the once-iconic
BlackBerry, developed the idea of
sending and receiving emails on
mobile phones, and their innovation
helped them to become the market
leader. However, RIM rested on its
success instead of continuing to
innovate, and did not notice or
foresee the direction in which
Apple’s products were developing.
The rival technology company’s
iPhone delivered mobile emails and a
range of other features. RIM quickly
went from being the market leader
into a period of decline, because it
had become complacent instead
of remaining alert to technological
change, or threats from competitors.
It is human nature to relax when
things are going well, but history
shows this is the very moment to
be wary. Former CEO of Intel, Andy
Grove, believes that “Success
breeds complacency. Complacency
breeds failure. Only the paranoid
survive.” The latter phrase was

AVOIDING COMPLACENCY


IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Business change

KEY DATES
1979 Michael Porter writes
How Competitive Forces Shape
Strategy, saying that managers
must always be aware of what
the competition is doing.

1994 In The Empty Raincoat:
Making Sense of the Future,
Charles Handy uses a graph
to illustrate how organizations
have to be alert and respond
to threats.

1996 Andy Grove writes Only
the Paranoid Survive.

2010 In The Black Swan:
The Impact of the Highly
Improbable, Nassim Nicholas
Taleb explains that we cannot
predict the future from the
past, so must expect (and
prepare for) the unexpected.

Only the paranoid survive.


Grove’s Five Questions


Do you
think your
competition
has changed?

Is your old rival
no longer the
biggest
threat?

Are you
relying on a
complementary
company to make
your company
attractive?

Is everyone
talking about
someone new?

Where would
you point a
gun if you
had one?

framed by five questions (see
below), and became the title of one
of Grove’s books. Grove had fled the
communist regime in Hungary, and
learned from a young age that
paranoia could be a useful survival
skill. Many years later, when he
joined Intel, he transferred the skills
of watching out for himself to
monitoring the company, steering
it safely through a series of threats.

Strategic inflection point
Every business faces change.
Occasionally change can be massive,
and positions once taken for granted
can shift dramatically. Grove calls

A strategic inflection point is
a time in the life of a business
when its fundamentals are
about to change.
Andy Grove
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