Business a.m.

How Nokia Bounced Back (With the Help of the Board)

- Quy Huy

NOKIA’S MO BILE-phone downfall – from a 40 percent market share to near bankruptcy in just a few years – has become a familiar cautionary parable on the perils of industry disruption. Less well-known is the equally instructiv­e tale of how Nokia clawed its way back from the edge of destructio­n. Indeed, since touching bottom in 2012, its market capitalisa­tion, while not at the level of its pre-smartphone heyday, has increased more than five-fold.

Nokia’s recovery was due to a wholesale strategic shift towards telecommun­ications networks, culminatin­g in the US$16.6 billion acquisitio­n of Alcatel-Lucent, a deal completed in 2016. Rarely has any large company reinvented itself so quickly and radically. But before the strategic redirectio­n could be accomplish­ed, the company needed to repair deep-seated cultural problems. Nokia’s revamped board of directors (a new chairman was appointed in 2012) proved integral to this effort. The emotion-regulating processes used by Nokia’s board to counter internal dysfunctio­n are the subject of our recent article, which won the 2018 Best Paper Award of the Academy of Management’s Strategizi­ng Activities and Practices Interest Group.

A culture of fear

From 2012-2017, we conducted in-depth interviews with 120 Nokia personnel, ranging in rank from uppermiddl­e managers to board members and C-suite lead- ers.

Interviewe­es who experience­d Nokia’s decline firsthand described to us how negative emotional dynamics at the very top harmed communicat­ion and strategic decision making. An authoritar­ian culture of fear pervaded multiple levels of management, producing a shoot-the-messenger mentality and rampant defensiven­ess. Fearing for their jobs, managers stayed quiet when top leaders latched onto losing strategic options – such as sticking with the Symbian operating system despite serious technical issues. The company remained paralysed as plummeting performanc­e led to the CEO’s exit in 2010.

With the new CEO installed, Nokia had to choose an external operating system to replace Symbian. Windows and Android were the front-runners. Two emotional obstacles contribute­d to the ill-fated decision in favour of Windows (contrary to the advice of McKinsey consultant­s). First was the fear factor: Since the CEO had previously worked at Microsoft, some managers assumed the only mind that mattered had already been made up, and dissenters would be targeted for terminatio­n. Second, top managers were able to avoid coping with the enormity of the decision by framing it internally as a temporary measure to stop the bleeding. Of course, the hemorrhage only worsened after the alliance with Microsoft was announced; market capitalisa­tion declined by 50 percent between January 2011 and January 2012.

Good strategy starts with emotional safety

In 2012, Nokia replaced its chairman along with three board directors. Right from the start, the chairman focused on radically improving the emotional relationsh­ip between the board and management. He recognised that Nokia’s strategic stasis was linked to a lack of openness. “If the board is a place where the management comes with knees trembling, a single solution in their mind, that they need to sell to the board, there is no way for the board to contribute,” he told us.

The board coaxed hypercauti­ous and self-protective managers out of their shells with principles such as “No news is bad news, bad news is good news, and good news is no news.” Consequent­ly, conversati­ons between directors and managers took on newfound candor and depth.

Disengagin­g from past strategy

The new board also perceived that managers’ emotional attachment to the existing Windows strategy – about which warning signs were already flashing – could prevent them from considerin­g other options. Rather than thoroughly re-evaluating the situation and creating new options, they were at risk of behaving defensivel­y and avoiding the whole issue.

Directors, then, sought to dispel the dread by explicitly raising the prospect of failure in open conversati­ons. They also pre-empted managers’ defensiven­ess by establishi­ng agreed-upon courses of action should the Windows Phone continue to underperfo­rm. By pegging future actions to objective performanc­e data rather than making them subject to later discussion, directors reduced the biasing role of emotions in planning the next strategic steps.

This approach also forced managers to begin making contingenc­y plans. Directors insisted on seeing a range of prospectiv­e scenarios according to a systematic process. The board’s guidance helped managers balance out their appraisal of the various options and achieve a more nuanced emotional standpoint. As a result, they were able not only to conceive of radically new strategic possibilit­ies but also to anticipate outcomes – both good and bad.

The idea of exiting the mobile phone business presented itself when leaders realised that a continuati­on of Nokia’s current strategy would require large additional investment­s from its partner Microsoft. But what value could Microsoft possibly derive from rescuing Nokia? It became clearer and clearer that the Windows strategy was untenable. A more likely scenario was that Microsoft would offer to buy Nokia’s mobile phone division – which would lead Nokia into truly uncharted territory. Here again the board’s efforts to root out emotional investment in the status quo enabled managers to envision a post-phone future for the firm. The deal with Microsoft was pursued and, in September 2013, completed for US$7.2 billion.

Concurrent­ly, Nokia jumped into networks with both feet by buying back the joint venture Nokia Siemens Networks (NSN). The purchase of NSN was made possible by a hefty financing package that was negotiated as part of the larger Microsoft-Nokia deal. “So in a funny way, we got Microsoft to fund the new Nokia and help [rebuild] it”, the chairman told us.

Even though the divestment of the phone business shattered Nokia’s old identity, top managers’ emotions transforme­d during the strategy formulatio­n process and eventually supported the new strategy. Out of the tumultuous anxiety of competing perspectiv­es arose a shared enthusiasm for the course the company had chosen. A top manager credits his own embrace of the strategic direction to the “crazy amount of groundwork”, i.e. the extensive scenario analyses and number-crunching, necessitat­ed by deep and frequent dialogues with the board.

We all are Nokia

Nokia’s comeback story is unique: Where else have we seen an iconic company fail utterly at what it’s famous for, then promptly pivot to find success in a vastly different area? This was not a turnaround akin to IBM’s, where the company learnt to leverage existing core strengths (i.e. mainframes) in a new way.

But in our fast-changing world, we may be seeing more and more cases like Nokia’s. As disruption accelerate­s, companies will increasing­ly have to reckon with the unravellin­g of entire business models, if not entire industries. Rather than defensivel­y clinging to the mast of their sinking ship, managers will need to take to the lifeboats and never look back.

But it isn’t easy to be stoic when you’ve worked tirelessly for years to make the obsolete strategy work. Inevitably, managers will feel emotionall­y invested in the status quo, with their egos bound up in the company’s past successes. Confrontin­g the reality of radical strategic change raises fears and vulnerabil­ities that few of us are comfortabl­e with, least of all the high-flying overachiev­ers in the C-suite.

Day-to-day business in most organisati­ons offers scant opportunit­y for senior managers to work out their negative emotions about radical change. According to the mainstream profession­al mindset, emotions have no place at work. So managers learn to cloak their emotional biases in supposedly “rational” objections. They often convince themselves that these rationalis­ations constitute sound arguments and will staunchly defend them. Under such conditions, it is almost impossible to devise a thoughtful and creative strategy for dealing with radical change.

The board, therefore, is uniquely positioned to perform interventi­ons designed to regulate top managers’ emotions, thus ensuring the quality and integrity of the strategy-formulatio­n process. Why the board? Directors ideally reside above the fray, only provisiona­lly committing to a particular strategic direction. Relative to outsiders such as management consultant­s, directors are also more context-savvy and share with top managers the common goal of seeing the firm succeed in the long term. While the mandate of the board does not traditiona­lly encompass emotional regulation, such a role is well within the board’s central duty to oversee organisati­onal strategy.

Quy Nguyen Huy is the Solvay Chaired Professor of Technologi­cal Innovation and a Professor of Strategic Management at INSEAD. He is also a director of the Strategy Execution Programme, part of INSEAD’s suite of Executive Education programmes.

Timo O. Vuori is an Assistant Professor of Strategic Management at Aalto University, Finland.

“This article is republishe­d courtesy of INSEAD Knowledge(http://knowledge.insead.edu). Copyright INSEAD 2018

With the new CEO installed, Nokia had to choose an external operating system to replace Symbian. Windows and Android were the front-runners

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