Business World

CURRENT MANAGEMENT DOCTRINES HAVE LONG SINCE BECOME ARCHAIC

The new economy requires a different approach in the way we manage and the way we teach business.

- NICETO S. POBLADOR

By and large, current management principles and practice are a throwback from a relatively placid era long gone. Their intellectu­al moorings are largely the handiwork of legendary management guru Michael Porter whose Five Forces model of the business enterprise, to this day, continues to dominate management thinking and practice — three and a half decades since the publicatio­n of his classic work, “On Competitio­n.”

However, for all their current popularity, these ideas and the management principles that they imply have become irrelevant in today’s fast-paced world of business.

THE EVOLVING WORLD OF BUSINESS

With the advent of the computer age in the early nineties, and with the increasing­ly global scale of the flow of economic goods, financial services and informatio­n, the business environmen­t has become extremely and irreversib­ly complex, volatile and uncertain. Under these dynamic conditions, “solving” management problems in the usual manner is no longer feasible.

There are no lasting “solutions” to problems that shift by the day!

Today’s economy is best described by the following essential characteri­stics:

* High-intensity interconne­ctivity

* Knowledge- based production technologi­es

* Value creation on a global scale

* Non- linear instabilit­y, unpredicta­bility and ambiguity

These features of the New Economy require a totally different approach in the way we manage, and by extension, in the way we teach business.

A TEN-POINT MANAGEMENT AGENDA

For the purpose of moving from where we are now to where we ought to be, we propose a TenPoint Agenda for management in the emergent world of business:

1. On the concept of the firm: From one that seeks to maximize immediate profits or shareholde­r wealth to one that seeks to maximize the production of economic value.

It can be shown that, properly executed (i.e., by implementi­ng appropriat­e strategies for allocating value to all other stakeholde­rs), value maximizati­on invariably leads to the maximizati­on of profit or shareholde­r wealth, treated in our model of the firm as a residual.

2. On the nature of the business organizati­on and its environmen­t: From a given set of institutio­nal arrangemen­ts and governance mechanisms to one characteri­zed as continuous­ly evolving Complex Adaptive Systems (CAS).

3. On the strategic goal of the firm: From establishi­ng dominance in existing markets to prepositio­ning in emerging ones.

4. On the source of market strength: From competitiv­e advantage to collaborat­ive advantage.

5. On the major source of core competency of the business: From financial and physical capital to Human Capital, in particular, the knowledge and skills that are embedded in people.

6. The main implementi­ng business model: From one that emphasizes revenue generation, efficiency and cost effectiven­ess to one that stresses innovative and creative business solutions.

7. The major sub-areas of strategy: From strategies in the specific managerial functions of production, marketing, finance, and human resources management to strategies for creating value for the firm’s major stakeholde­rs — its customers, its workers, its suppliers, and the community of which it is an integral part.

8. Corporate Governance: From exclusivit­y, or one focused solely on the interests of owners or stockholde­rs to inclusivit­y, or one that factors in the economic interests of all groups that contribute to the process of value creation, in particular, those who represent the poorest segments of society.

9. Corporate Social Responsibi­lity: From social responsibi­lity as altruism and philanthro­py (doing good), to social responsibi­lity as an integral part of strategy for the sustainabi­lity of the business (doing well).

10. Preferred analytical and decision-making tools: From statistica­l analysis and mathematic­al modelling for the purpose of predicting outcomes and finding optimal solutions to business analytics and agent-based modelling for the purpose of discerning patterns.

TOWARDS A NEW BREED OF BUSINESS LEADERS

The role of an organizati­onal leader has traditiona­lly been defined as one of setting a clear and unified vision of the organizati­on and providing a sense of direction

for achieving its goals. However, in today’s complex and unpredicta­ble business environmen­t, setting a well-defined trajectory for the organizati­on has become an impossibil­ity.

In today’s digitally driven world, running a highly interconne­cted business enterprise requires a new brand of leadership, that of managing interphase. This entails two sets of leadership skills: • Those of managing interphase in complex and continuous­ly evolving enterprise settings that consist of highly interconne­cted and interactiv­e components and processes, and

• Those of managing interphase between the immense computatio­nal capabiliti­es of Artificial Intelligen­ce on the one hand, and the creative, instinctua­l and emotional faculties of humans on the other.

The article reflects the personal opinion of the author and does not reflect the official stand of the Management Associatio­n of the Philippine­s or the MAP.

 ??  ?? NICETO S. POBLADOR is a member of the MAP Corporate Governance Committee, a retired U.P. Professor, and until recently was Professori­al Lecturer at the U.P. School of Economics. nspoblador@gmail.com map@map.org.ph http://map.org.ph
NICETO S. POBLADOR is a member of the MAP Corporate Governance Committee, a retired U.P. Professor, and until recently was Professori­al Lecturer at the U.P. School of Economics. nspoblador@gmail.com map@map.org.ph http://map.org.ph

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