Dygest logo
Google logo

Google Play

Apple logo

App Store

Gary Hamel & Bill Breen

The future of management

The essence of enduring business success isn't found in operational efficiency, technological advancements, or innovative business models, as these can be eclipsed by competitors. The real driver of sustained success is management innovation - the pursuit of novel ways to engage talent, manage resources, and strategize. Traditional management principles, focused on control and efficiency, are outdated in today's dynamic and creative business environment. It's crucial to envision and shape the future of management, moving beyond old paradigms to foster management practices that meet the demands of our times. Management, having stagnated like the combustion engine, needs evolution for better resource coordination and goal achievement. This evolution is vital, as the limitation of an organization is not its operational or business model, but its management model. The aim is to guide you in becoming a pioneer of 21st-century management, innovating in management to secure a lasting competitive edge for your company.

The future of management
The future of management

book.chapter Significance of management innovation

Management stands as the cornerstone of all organizational achievements and operations. It's a logical deduction, then, to posit that for businesses to flourish amidst the tumultuous markets of the 21st century, innovative and superior management methodologies are imperative. The only strategy to outmaneuver newcomers and competitors is for companies to discover more effective management techniques. A novel management paradigm is essential. In comparison to the significant transformations witnessed in the marketplace, the domain of business management appears to be ensnared in a temporal stasis. Little has evolved since the dawn of the 20th century, which elucidates the ease with which CEOs transition between companies. Despite a widespread consensus on the functions of management, historical evidence underscores that whenever an organization, or even a nation, has innovated in management, it has thrived at the expense of its competitors. For instance, General Electric pioneered the integration of sound management with scientific discovery in the early 1900s, securing more patents than any other American company throughout the first half of the 20th century. DuPont revolutionized the concept of return-on-investment calculation in 1903, enabling it to emerge as one of America's industrial behemoths. Procter & Gamble, in the early 1930s, institutionalized brand management, thereby transforming into a consumer brands powerhouse. Toyota's relentless pursuit of efficiency through employee engagement propelled it to the pinnacle of the automotive industry. Visa innovated by creating the world's first "virtual" company, a network facilitating competition among banks while sharing a common infrastructure, standards, and brand, processing over $2 trillion annually. It is evident that management innovation is crucial, often significantly impacting a company's fortunes. It represents the most valuable form of innovation because operational innovation, often derived from superior IT infrastructure, is challenging to sustain as competitors eventually acquire similar IT capabilities. Product innovation can rapidly elevate companies from obscurity, but without patent protection, products can be easily replicated or even surpassed by newcomers. Strategy innovations, involving new business models, are valuable but can be decoded and countered with relative ease. In contrast, management innovation can create enduring advantages that are difficult for competitors to replicate. A single radical management breakthrough can yield indefinite dividends, especially when it is systemic, ongoing, and builds upon previous innovations. Despite the clear benefits of management innovation, surprisingly few companies today boast of being successful management innovators. This phenomenon can be attributed to three primary reasons. Firstly, managers often do not view themselves as innovators, leaving innovation to technologists and seeing their role as translating others' ideas into growth and profits. Secondly, many executives doubt the feasibility of bold management innovations, thus not investing effort in seeking new management breakthroughs. They believe in the limitations of what can be achieved, rendering the search for innovative management practices futile. Lastly, the majority of managers perceive themselves as pragmatists rather than visionaries, a perspective shaped by the selection, training, and reward systems that focus on current performance rather than future possibilities. This collective mindset results in a form of "management myopia," where the absence of management innovation becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. Managers, assuming that dramatic breakthroughs in management practices are unattainable, cease to aim for transformative changes. They settle into the belief that management practices will evolve slowly and incrementally, rather than through revolutionary leaps that could significantly alter their scope and impact. This outlook stifles the potential for management innovation, hindering organizations from achieving what they are truly capable of and from navigating the future's unpredictable and dramatic changes with agility and foresight.

book.moreChapters

allBooks.title