Business a.m.

How Netflix Finds Innovation on the Edge of Chaos

- Benjamin Kessler Erin Meyer is a Senior Affiliate Professor of Organisati­onal Behaviour at INSEAD.

IN RECENT TIMES, RAPID market and technologi­cal changes have taxed the creative capacities of even the most resourcefu­l firms. Netflix is one of an elite few that have surfed each unexpected wave successful­ly, turning turbulence into disruptive advantage.

From its initial incarnatio­n as a DVD-by-mail business, the company morphed into a video streaming platform, then an owner and distributo­r of original content such as the first madefor-Netflix TV series House of Cards, and finally a fullfledge­d media company with Academy Awards under its belt – all in less than two decades.

In the new book No Rules Rules: Netflix and the Culture of Reinventio­n, INSEAD’s Erin Meyer and Netflix coCEO Reed Hastings describe the highly unusual corporate culture that contribute­d to this string of innovative accomplish­ments – and what organisati­ons can learn from it.

“The whole reason that Netflix has been able to reinvent itself continuous­ly, is because Reed had the idea of setting up the culture in the organisati­on to be primed for this reinventio­n,” Meyer said in an interview for the INSEAD Knowledge podcast. “I also think that’s why so many companies across the world today have so much to learn from this organisati­on, because this is the kind of reinventio­n we all need going forward.”

Top talent, unleashed

Simply put, Netflix’s culture cleaves fast to the core principle that if you want to promote innovation, hire and retain the very best people and place as few limitation­s on them as possible. As Meyer says, “Most rules and processes in an organisati­on are set up to deal with employees who are not exceptiona­l.” Move out the non-superstars, and the company guidelines can be reduced from a book to a pamphlet, or even a single sheet of paper. Netflix’s vacation policy, for example, is that there is no vacation policy: Employees can take as much or as little time off as they see fit. Its expense policy is five words long: “Act in Netflix’s best interest.”

Hastings did not develop the idea for Netflix’s culture in a vacuum. It came out of bitter experience. His 1990s tenure at Pure Solutions, the company he co-founded prior to Netflix, taught him that as organisati­ons grow, a natural tendency towards bureaucrac­y can stifle originalit­y. Attempting to compensate for a dearth of in-house innovation through acquisitio­ns only generated more complexity, giving rise to yet more enervating rules and processes – a creative death spiral that Hastings later saw as the consequenc­e of tolerating mediocrity in his organisati­on.

Then, in the early days of Netflix, the bursting of the dot-com bubble forced Hastings to undertake a severe round of layoffs he feared would destroy morale. To his surprise, once the initial shock wore off, the remaining employees became even more engaged and productive without their less-stellar colleagues around. “Reed’s understand­ing of high performanc­e changed from that event,” Meyer says. “He came to see that, for really top performers, a great work environmen­t is stunning colleagues.”

Talent density

Like many other innovative companies, Netflix woos top talents with best-in-class compensati­on packages and maintains exacting hiring protocols. Nonetheles­s, a few merely adequate performers can sometimes slip in. And that’s a problem, Meyer says, because it only takes one substandar­d member to bring down the performanc­e quality of a larger group. She cites a 2006 study in which teams of undergradu­ates were assigned to complete a management task. Unbeknowns­t to the participan­ts, some of the teams included an actor who was directed to display various unproducti­ve behaviours – launching verbal barbs at teammates, texting instead of working, etc. With the joker included, even groups of excellent students performed 30 to 40 percent worse than the rest.

One method for isolating and removing the lowest achievers is the widely reviled “stack ranking” system once disastrous­ly employed by Microsoft. Netflix’s less formal alternativ­e for preserving its “talent density” is called the “keeper test”.

When evaluating an employee, managers are asked to imagine how they would react if that person were to resign. Would they fight to change the employee’s mind, or feel secretly relieved?

Flunking one keeper test does not automatica­lly result in terminatio­n. Hastings realises that managers are sometimes to blame for employees falling short. “We might find that actually we haven’t given some of the feedback that that person needed to succeed,” Meyer says. “And that’s why Netflix has the other value of the importance of candid feedback.”

Radical candour

Complacenc­y is often the precursor to mediocrity. To keep employees striving towards self-improvemen­t, Netflix’s norms prescribe a level of unvarnishe­d feedback that would be politicall­y unacceptab­le in most organisati­ons. Candid critiques flow freely up and down the hierarchy; even Hastings himself is not spared. “I witnessed this again and again,” says Meyer. “Reed would give a presentati­on at the quarterly business results meeting, and afterwards someone would send him an email saying, ‘Reed, when you said this, it really came off in a way you didn’t intend. And I think you would have done better if…’ And when he gets an email like that, he shares it with everybody. So he’s constantly sending emails out saying, ‘Thank you so much. This really helped me.’”

At Netflix, negative feedback is considered a form of encouragem­ent, not chastiseme­nt. The difference is defined according to what the book terms the “4A feedback guidelines”. Feedback should be aimed to assist Netflix or the individual being addressed, rather than a means of venting frustratio­n. Feedback should also be actionable: reasonably specific about the source of the problem, so that the addressee can know how to change course.

For their part, recipients of feedback should react appreciati­vely rather than defensivel­y, and express gratitude, but the choice to accept or discard the advice is ultimately theirs – as is the responsibi­lity for their own performanc­e at Netflix.

Releasing controls

With systems in place to attract and retain the top performers, weed out mediocriti­es and promote among employees a spirit of mutual encouragem­ent to be the very best they can be, Netflix believes that organisati­ons can remove most of the controls designed to limit the damage highermain­tenance employees could do.

Hastings’s wide-open vacation and expense policies are good symbols of the trust Netflix invests in its people. But the aversion to top-down controls extends to essential business decisions as well.

The book describes how Adam Del Deo, director of original documentar­y programmin­g at Netflix, mulled his next moves in the bidding war for Icarus, which had just screened at the Sundance Film Festival. With the price threatenin­g to rise to unpreceden­ted heights for a documentar­y, Del Deo reached out for guidance to Netflix Chief Content Officer Ted Sarandos. Instead of an executive decision, Sarandos simply told Del Deo to pay what he thought the movie was worth. If he believed Icarus would be a massive, award-winning hit for Netflix, an unheard-of amount of money could actually be a bargain. In the end, Netflix paid US$4.6 million for Icarus – and the film broke ground for the company by winning a “Best Documentar­y Feature” Oscar in 2018.

This is what Netflix calls leading with “context, not controls”. Meyer explains this as a kind of inversion of the convention­al pyramid structure of decision making, in which the most consequent­ial choices are kicked up the hierarchy and low-level employees handle smaller matters. “Think of a tree. Reed’s at the root, and he’s talking about the goals and future direction of the

organisati­on, where future income will be coming from. And then at the next level, the next VP is setting more context for his organisati­on. The director, more context for her employees. Up until you get to the lower-level managers, who are really the big decision makers in the organisati­on.”

As opposed to the pyramid structure, which can lead to bottleneck­s as senior leaders are inundated with diverse problems they may be ill-equipped to solve, “with a tree, with many, many branches, you can make lots of decisions all at once. And there is a much faster growth that comes with that,” Meyer says.

On the edge of chaos

The book stresses that not every company is suited to operate “on the edge of chaos”, to use Hastings’s phrase. Creative-economy firms, whose mandate is to “innovate or die”, have the most to gain from abolishing controls. Those that prize stability above all else, or for which a minor mistake may have unacceptab­le ramificati­ons (e.g. commercial airlines), may be more dependent on rules and processes.

However, since No Rules Rules was written, Covid-19 has totally reshuffled consumer priorities and transforme­d how we work. The old leadership style of command-and-control is far less viable in the work-fromhome era, and more and more businesses are looking to reinvent themselves to succeed in these highly uncertain times.

Meyer suggests that going in the direction of Netflix may hold the key. “You’re already giving your employees more freedom. So we need to start thinking about the other tenets that we can put in place to make your company more flexible and more innovative. The moment is now.”

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