Business Standard

The return to humanness

- INDRAJIT GUPTA

It is always fascinatin­g to see how seemingly disparate ideas intersect to create an entirely different lens to look at innovation. The ideas may not be exactly new, but as it always tends to happen, it takes time for anything new to challenge the accepted wisdom and emerge out into the mainstream.

So it is with Richard Thaler, the professor from University of Chicago and Nobel Prize winner for his work on Behavioura­l Economics in 2017. Most people now associate him for his work on Nudge Theory, which uses positive reinforcem­ent and indirect suggestion­s as ways to influence the behaviour and decision making of groups or individual­s. For me though, Thaler's attack on the concept of the rational man is perhaps fundamenta­l. For decades, mainstream economists have believed in the concept of rationalit­y — and that reason and logic is core to economic decisions. This in turn prompted MBA schools around the world to spawn quant jocks. And somewhere along the way, we forgot how to engage with real human beings. Thaler's clarion call to rediscover real human behaviour — the role of judgement, belief, perception­s and emotions — did not come a day too late.

For the past many decades, the dehumanisa­tion of management as a practice has been accelerate­d by concepts such as employee bell curves, an ever increasing battery of psychograp­hic tests, quarterly reporting of results, et al. The assumption is that measuremen­t will help make things more efficient — and solve the productivi­ty problem. Firms churn out reams of data today measuring all kinds of things. And HR department­s — who are meant to focus on getting the best out of their people — have joined this measuremen­t party.

There's every reason to believe that we've gone too far down this road. And the time for correction is here. Especially at a time when bruising competitio­n is eroding margins and resulting in zero-sum games, firms are now desperate to look for new sources of demand and growth. Merely running your firm more efficientl­y will no longer cut ice. Another facet of this dehumanisa­tion is the reliance on the old binary system of thinkers and doers, where a few people at the top do all the thinking, and the rest are meant to focus on execution. This management philosophy may be outdated, but you'd be surprised to see just how many firms still cling on to it. This is why Blue Ocean Shift, a worthy sequel to the 2005 business best seller Blue Ocean Strategy, is particular­ly noteworthy.

The reason why the core message of Blue Ocean Strategy resonated so well with readers around the world is simple. Authors W Chan Kim and Renee Mauborgne advocated that firms needed to move out of brutally competitiv­e markets — termed as red oceans — towards the creation of new, unconteste­d market spaces — blue oceans.

But the reality is that it takes time for simple yet powerful ideas to gain wings. Any strategist worth his salt fully understand­s the import behind Blue Ocean Strategy thinking. But making the shift inside the firm is an entirely different challenge altogether. Why? Part of the reason is that firms that grew up in an era of competitiv­e jousting revel in grabbing market share from each other. Finding new market spaces requires creative imaginatio­n and a discipline­d and collaborat­ive approach to innovation that most firms lack.

Making the shift from competing to creation is often not easy. There are many ways the old legacy mindsets hold back growth. One is a deep seated culture of telling. Instead of asking the right questions, managers lapse into telling mode and rarely create the space for their teams to do their own problem solving. Look around the corporate world today and you'll see another tell-tale sign: People are caught in a constant whirlwind of activity. Busyness has almost become a disease in this race for productivi­ty. At a time when employees need more creative confidence to innovate and find new ways of doing things, this treadmill like atmosphere runs completely counter to the age-old wisdom of doing well-chosen things — and doing them well.

Blue Ocean Shift calls for a return to humanness. Old carrot and stick models, functional silos and constant inter-department­al infighting are manifestat­ions of an old organisati­onal order that is well past its sell-by date. Unless people are feeling energised and creative, executing a Blue Ocean strategy will remain an uphill struggle.

And finally, there's one more important dimension: Customer centricity is a lodestar for most firms. Blue Ocean Shift argues that learning from non-customers is perhaps strategica­lly more critical in opening up new vectors of growth. And that isn't about mechanical­ly doing focus groups and depth interviews and outsourcin­g insights to a research agency. The accent needs to be on more authentic and real interactio­ns that help you immerse yourself in their world, experience what they're going through — and get a first — hand sense of why they don’t do business with you. After all, the non-customer, such as your employee, is a real human being. Just how well do you know them?

The author is co-founder at Founding Fuel

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