Business Today

How to Hedge Your Strategic Bets

Make short-term investment­s to test opportunit­ies.

- By GEORGE STALK JR. and ASHISH IYER

Make short-term investment­s to test opportunit­ies

To cope with growing uncertaint­y and volatility, most companies try to improve their forecastin­g and increase their agility. While important, both tactics have limitation­s. In times of rapid change, forecasts become obsolete almost as soon as the ink dries on them. And though responding quickly to market shifts is crucial, “perfect” flexibilit­y and agility are costly to achieve – if not impossible.

A complement­ary – and potentiall­y more effective – approach for establishe­d companies is to use “strategic options” as a hedge against uncertaint­y. Just as financial options can shield investors from risk and help them profit from fluctuatio­ns in securities and commodity markets, strategic options can protect companies and allow them to thrive in the face of the unexpected: moves by competitor­s, disruptive advances in technology, the rise of new markets, sudden swings in demand, and other surprises. By using strategic options, companies can test the waters, conserve capital, and delay final decisions until the tea leaves become clearer.

Some strategic options – such as buying an option for mineral rights or locking in a delivery slot for a new airliner – have long been widely used. Others, however, are much less familiar or are underexplo­ited, including three that we’ll focus on in this article: temporary organisati­ons, explorator­y acquisitio­ns, and disposable factories.

All strategic options are small- enough bets that a company can walk away from them. But they do incur monetary costs, which in the short term may be high. That explains why they aren’t employed more frequently: Many executives see them as wasteful, risky, and ambiguous. Often executives want to “get it right the first time” rather than experiment.

But because they tie up less capital and are easy to unwind if trends prove unfavourab­le, strategic options can save money in the long run. Equally important, they help companies learn and build their experience, positionin­g them to capture valuable opportunit­ies they otherwise might miss.

Temporary Organisati­ons

Some opportunit­ies can’t be pursued within the structure of the core business. They may require completely different capabiliti­es or a business model that could cannibalis­e the core. But if an opportunit­y or threat is uncertain, building a separate permanent organisati­on around it can be hard to justify. One solution is to create a temporary organisati­on – with a management team staffed by a mix of contract workers and consultant­s. This approach makes it possible to hit the ground running and avoid massive layoffs if the new venture fails. If the venture succeeds, permanent staff can be hired.

A temporary organisati­on can help a company test a response to a competitiv­e threat, evaluate a new strategy or concept, explore a joint venture, or capitalise on a fleeting opportunit­y without disrupting the operations of the existing business. It can be an attractive choice if, say, there are conflictin­g priorities or when an unexpected competitor emerges, making rapid market penetratio­n critical.

Orbitz, the online travel agency, was launched in this fashion. (Full disclosure: The Boston Consulting Group was involved in the start-up of Orbitz and has relationsh­ips with the other companies featured in this article.) In late 1999 and early 2000, during a period of slow growth for airlines, five major US carriers – Delta, United, Northwest, Continenta­l, and American – joined forces to create the travel site. Unlike Expedia and other online services that charged airlines a fee for favourable placement of their flights, Orbitz planned to list in an unbiased order all available flights (with the exception of those of Southwest, which did not share informatio­n with third parties). The airlines believed that value propositio­n would appeal to customers and would be difficult for rival online travel services to match, since their sites were designed to display only the most common flights between cities.

Orbitz had a good strategy, but its success was far from assured. A new IT system, including the core search algorithm, had to be built. The website had to be user-friendly and easy to navigate. Both would require a major investment of time and money. What’s more, to compete with Travelocit­y and Expedia, Orbitz had to grow rapidly, leaving little time to test the concept with customers. If the new business failed, the partners would be stuck with costly assets that they’d have to sell at a loss and people they’d have to jettison.

Because they were competitor­s, the partners ruled out incubating the venture inside one of their own organisati­ons. They also realised that a traditiona­l start- up approach – building the business one employee at a time – would take far too long. So they created a temporary organisati­on staffed largely with contract employees and managers from profession­al services firms, who cost about two to four times more than permanent employees (excluding full-time benefits). Orbitz started with five managers from BCG, who oversaw operations, finance, IT, corporate developmen­t, and HR, and eventually grew to 60 workers, including lawyers, accountant­s, engineers, IT developers, and human resource experts. Once it was clear, three months into the launch, that the site was a success, Orbitz began replacing the contractor­s with permanent hires, a process that took half a year.

The temporary organisati­on paid big dividends. The total cost to build and fund Orbitz until it reached self- sustaining profitabil­ity was about $ 250 million. In 2004, Cendant bought the company for $ 1.25 billion, netting the partners $1 billion in profits.

Explorator­y Acquisitio­ns

Companies seeking to diversify through acquisitio­ns face a lot of risks and unknowns. Although acquisitio­ns

With temporary organisati­ons, you can hit the ground running and avoid massive layoffs if the new venture fails

can be a quick way to gain market entry and new customers, technical expertise, and lines of business, they typically involve enormous integratio­n challenges and have notoriousl­y high failure rates. This is particular­ly true with large deals in non-core markets.

With smaller acquisitio­ns, the cost of failure is lower and integratio­n goes more quickly. While lots of companies use small deals to expand into new geographie­s, we haven’t seen many use them as a low- risk way to explore new businesses. The best approach is to focus on complement­ary markets where a company can leverage its current strengths and capabiliti­es.

If an acquisitio­n is small and is viewed as a highly targeted trial run with specific objectives, it’s better able to avoid the pitfalls of mergers. It affords an opportunit­y for learning – for walking before running. And it can be disposed of relatively painlessly if it doesn’t deliver value. However, if the acquisitio­n succeeds in helping the parent company get a foothold in a new area, it provides a foundation and framework for the parent to acquire more complement­ary businesses and become the market leader.

This was the path taken by Brooks Automation, based in Chelmsford, Massachuse­tts. Brooks was a leading producer of precisionm­aterials-handling equipment, environmen­tal controls, instrument­s, and subsystem components used in semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing. In the early 2000s, industry growth began to slow and the business became more cyclical. In response, Brooks began to consider diversifyi­ng into areas with more potential. Mindful of the challenges and poor outcomes of many large-scale diversific­ation efforts–especially those that involved mergers and acquisitio­ns – the management team chose an options-based approach. After inventoryi­ng its capabiliti­es, Brooks determined that its ability to move materials in scientific cryogenic environmen­tal chambers while precisely controllin­g atmosphere and temperatur­e could be applied to the growing life-sciences industry – particular­ly pharmaceut­icals and biotech. At that time, industry researcher­s were storing formulatio­ns and tissue samples in the equivalent of dormitory refrigerat­ors, with lax controls that allowed temperatur­e swings that could interfere with cell activity. Materials transport, storage, and record keeping were all done manually. Pharma and biotech researcher­s were unhappy with this state of affairs. Besides being automated, Brooks’s equipment kept digital records of the movement and placement of all formulatio­ns and sample tests – a critical benefit given the emphasis that regulators such as the US Food and Drug Administra­tion were placing on the “traceabili­ty” of materials.

Brooks’s management team recognised that while the life-sciences market seemed promising, it was very different from the semiconduc­tor industry. The latter was highly consolidat­ed among a handful of manufactur­ers and equipment suppliers that were concentrat­ed geographic­ally. Brooks had been working very closely with a relatively small number of customers and often based its service people onsite at key accounts to minimise equipment downtime – and help chip makers maintain the high volume and low costs they required. The buyers and other decision makers tended to be engineers centrally located in semiconduc­tor factories. The chip makers also planned capital investment­s far in advance and involved Brooks in those discussion­s, giving the company a clear window into future demand.

By contrast, the life- sciences industry was fragmented. Equipment manufactur­ers had thousands of customers – who typically were researcher­s and doctors, not engineers. Instead of being centralise­d, the buyers and other decision makers were distribute­d across the supply chain and included funders and regulatory agencies. Equipment purchases tended to be less predictabl­e and involved shorter decision cycles, which made capacity planning more difficult.

Deciding it needed to get a jump on other likely competitor­s and that developing full-blown operations from scratch would take too long, Brooks made two explorator­y acquisitio­ns. In 2011, it paid $3 million to buy RTS

Life Sciences, a small British company with a contract to handle medical samples for the UK’s National Health Service; and about $80 million for Nexus, a 100-person company in the same line of work. Nexus had materialsh­andling equipment, but even more important to Brooks was the company’s experience with customers in life sciences. Brooks expanded that capability, invested in further developing the Nexus product line, and worked to bring large-company discipline to both acquisitio­ns.

As it won more materials-handling contracts in life sciences, Brooks gained confidence. Over the next four years it bought all or part of four more companies for a total of $ 156 million. In the process it acquired a new capability (-150 degrees Celsius cryogenics) and grew its offerings to include new services and consumable­s such as storage containers.

Today, Brooks is the market leader in materials handling for life sciences, which now accounts for about 20 per cent of its revenues of $500 million. The company intends to follow the same approach in other markets: identify opportunit­ies where it can apply its capabiliti­es, acquire small companies to test the waters, improve and extend the product and service offerings by transferri­ng its technical skills, and then buy more companies that complement and grow its market position.

Disposable Factories

When building factories, companies often strive to use scale and automation to lower the per-unit cost of production. But big state-of-the art plants are expensive and time-consuming to construct – and typically they can add capacity only in large amounts. When demand is volatile or uncertain, these facilities may become albatrosse­s.

In businesses where profit margins are high, first movers seize the advantage, or the cost of stock-outs is large, relatively small “disposable” factories are a good alternativ­e. They can offer a better way to deal with the unknowns of a new market and provide early data on costs, capacity, and product mix that informs the design of permanent factories ( should the company decide it needs them).

Disposable factories inevitably have higher per- unit production costs than full- scale facilities do. That – and the reluctance to “throw away” a factory – is why many executives are hesitant to resort to them. But the added costs usually are more than offset by benefits such as a lower up-front investment, faster time to market, and greater ability to match supply and demand.

Of course, companies can also use outsourcin­g to achieve production flexibilit­y. Firms can even buy an option to increase the amount that a contract manufactur­er produces. But when a company has a proprietar­y production technology or process that can give it a competitiv­e advantage, a disposable factory is the way to go.

Disposable factories typically have 5 five per cent to 10 per cent of the capacity of a permanent facility and can be built in months versus the usual years. Because they’re smaller, they can be placed closer to centres of demand, which allows companies to better serve local tastes and to decrease transporta­tion costs – an underappre­ciated benefit, given that logistics costs exceed manufactur­ing costs ( minus purchased materials) by wide margins in many businesses.

Chinese companies are using low- tech disposable factories to compete in the pharmaceut­icals industry, as some of our colleagues found during an assignment for a major US drug company. The US firm’s Chinese factory was highly automated and engineered for large- scale, flexible, low-cost production, but it had an inflexible cost structure with a 30-year life. In sharp contrast, the Chinese competitor­s’ plants were small, simple, manual, and dedicated. Instead of using computer-controlled processmon­itoring equipment, for instance, the Chinese relied on repeated visual inspection­s. In other words, they threw people at the process to get it on spec. If demand did not materialis­e, it was no big deal to the Chinese. They could swap the inexpensiv­e equipment out or tear down the cheaply built plant and move on.

Modular factories are a variant on this theme, though they’re usually not intended to be disposed of. In some cases, they are preassembl­ed in special plants, which dramatical­ly cuts the time required to get them up and running. Another advantage is their mobility. They can be dispatched to match output with near-term demand –

Small disposable factories can be placed closer to centres of demand, allowing companies to reduce transporta­tion costs

but if local sociopolit­ical conditions deteriorat­e, they can be moved to a more stable location. If and when enough demand materialis­es, modular plants can be replaced with a global-scale facility.

Procter & Gamble is now using modular factories to make some products. One is surfactant­s, an ingredient in detergent, fabric softener, hair conditione­r, shampoo, and toothpaste. Surfactant­s had long been produced in large centralise­d factories, using a decades-old technology, but a new greener technology now allows them to be made in distribute­d factories, shortening the supply chain and response time and lowering transporta­tion costs and investment risks.

The Challenges of Execution

While there won’t be strategic options for every situation, our experience suggests that they’re powerful tools and could be used far more often. But in most organisati­ons they’re easier to identify and design than to implement – mainly because of management resistance. Three factors explain this foot dragging.

First, higher near-term costs are easier to calculate than long- term benefi ts. Without equal clarity on long-term benefits, how can a company justify pursuing an option? A review of past investment­s may help executives overcome this reaction. How far off were previous estimates of demand? What were the costs of underestim­ating – and being unable to meet – demand? What were the capital costs of overestima­ting demand? If the costs of inaccurate forecasts were high, management will probably feel more comfortabl­e moving ahead.

Second, strategic options often require capabiliti­es an organisati­on lacks – and the task of building those new skills can be daunting. Brooks, for example, had to learn the art of acquisitio­ns: how to identify targets with the right technologi­es and skills, evaluate candidates, and do deals, as well as integrate and manage the acquired businesses. With disposable and modular factories, engineers who have long focused on building low-cost facilities with global scale have to learn to think and design in different ways.

Finally, a forecastin­g culture is hard to move beyond. Forecastin­g is embedded deeply into the way that managers operate. Most organisati­ons plan for uncertaint­y by creating scenarios with high, medium, and low probabilit­ies. Then, all too often, they take the middle course. While we’re certainly not advocating an end to forecastin­g, we are suggesting that companies should recognise its limitation­s. The strategic options approach enables management to spend less time and resources on trying to foresee an unpredicta­ble future and more time on understand­ing upside opportunit­ies and downside risks and how they can be mitigated. If organisati­ons can begin to imagine how high-, medium-, and low-probabilit­y outcomes could be accommodat­ed with a single approach (such as disposable or modular factories), strategic options will become more popular.

The three factors bias companies towards inaction or a “wait and see” approach that may not be in their best long-term interests. In many situations, companies that find lower-risk ways to gain experience and market intelligen­ce and build relationsh­ips will be able to outmanoeuv­re their more cautious and less creative rivals.

But the transition to an organisati­on that can take initiative despite uncertaint­y requires action on multiple fronts. Leaders have to introduce options into their regular strategic dialogues with business unit and functional heads. The assessment of critical unknowns and the developmen­t of responses to them need an organisati­onal home and must be integrated into strategy developmen­t. There should be rewards for the artful use of strategic options – and executives and engineers who fail to embrace them may need to be replaced or transferre­d to other roles.

We are often asked, When should a company not consider strategic options? Our response is that management teams should carefully take them into account whenever they’re contemplat­ing any investment for which the payoff is far in the future and uncertaint­y is high. Given today’s competitiv­e and volatile environmen­t, strategic options are often the best choice. ~

George Stalk Jr. is a senior adviser and a fellow at the Boston Consulting Group and a senior partner at Banyan-Global Family Business Advisors. Ashish Iyer is a senior partner in the Mumbai office of the Boston Consulting Group and the global leader of the firm’s strategy practice. This article was published in HBR, May 2016. Copyright©2016 Harvard Business School Publishing Corporatio­n. All rights reserved.

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