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INSIDEROUT­SIDER

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As an accomplish­ed chemist, she was an insider to the pharmaceut­ical industry. She knew the activists were unlikely to succeed unless they were involved in the industry’s major drug developmen­t decisions. As outsiders to the industry, the activists would only succeed if they knew what the insiders knew. If they were not “as expert as the experts, they could always be patronised and marginalis­ed, and they would all die”. She understood that “[f]or the battle to be won... people with AIDS had to learn what drugs were being developed, how clinical trials operated and how to get drugs into bodies fast”.

Iris told the activists she would teach them. And they listened. And they learned. As a result, by the time the new drug AZT was available in 1987, the activists knew how to make an informed evaluation. They then intervened to compel the regulators to lower the dose that was typically administer­ed to patients. The lower dose was as effective, had fewer side effects, and cost less (AZT was reported at that time to be the costliest prescripti­on drug in history). It marked the “first time... the medical establishm­ent had taken the activists seriously”.

The activists finally convinced the insiders because they had become outsiders who knew the industry inside out. They succeeded because they were now insider-outsiders.

The value of insider-outsiders is not an unfamiliar one. Take the business classic for example. The narrative is often remembered as one where new business entrants (i.e., outsiders) to the small peripheral segments of the market can eventually out-compete the establishe­d incumbents (i.e., insiders) and take over the whole market. The fear of that disruption is why large incumbent companies now aggressive­ly work with startups. In some cases, they even acquire them. They want to blend the outside to their inside, instead of being disrupted by them.

Similarly, in company boards worldwide, outsiders are actively sought to bring valuable external expertise into the companies. Such independen­t and foreign directors are growing. This is happening even in cultures that have tended to look inside than outside — the Nikkei Asian Review reported that 2019 was the first time “independen­t directors account for more than 30 per cent of board members at Japan’s publicly traded companies”.

But knowing and practicing is insufficie­nt. It must also be practiced well. This is where the practice of insider-outsiders is wanting. Despite all the effort and enthusiasm poured into nurturing, partnering, and acquiring startups, the results remain mixed. The number of startups promising technologi­cal innovation­s has accelerate­d, but productivi­ty has paradoxica­lly slowed. Economist Robert Gordon has even concluded, “the pace of innovation since 1970 has not been as broad or as deep”. Investor Peter Thiel put it more pithily with his now oft-quoted phrase, “We wanted flying cars; instead, we got 140 characters.”

Similarly, having more outsiders on corporate boards does not seem to have prevented significan­t crises and scandals – such as the Great Financial Crisis or the recent Wirecard debacle. When seen together with other shenanigan­s such as emissions fraud, data breaches, and corruption conviction­s, there is mounting evidence that governance standards are slipping.

Leaders often argue that all this reflects the increased complexity of today’s economy and society. But that is just too convenient an excuse that absolves those in charge of their responsibi­lities. Instead, the poor performanc­e of such practices likely is because insiders resist the outsiders. Like antibodies swarming around a foreign body, outsiders – whether they are emerging startups, external board members, or just new ideas – are often rejected and ejected by the insiders. The value one could gain from insider-outsiders dissipates quickly as a result.

How then can we reap the full benefits of an insider-outsider?

We must ensure that the outsider has friends on the inside. A character in the Pixar movie Ratatouill­e puts it best: “The world is often unkind to new talent, new creations. The new needs friends.”

These friends must, however, be more than friends. They must be allies who are prepared to defend and fight the cause together. In the case of corporate boards, researcher­s at the University of Minnesota, Peking University, and the China Internatio­nal Capital Corporatio­n Limited found that outsider board members who had studied and worked outside of China “were more effective in promoting CSR” when they had allies on the boards who also had external experience. These allies helped “push the opposition into conceding”.

That was what Iris did for the AIDS activists. As a former insider, she was prepared to teach and guide them, and to fight the cause with them. She was a friend who was also an ally. To the credit of the AIDS activists, they were prepared to be taught and to change course.

It is easy to miss that while Iris was an industry insider, she was an outsider to the AIDS activists. There is thus one more lesson in all this. To reap the full benefits of an insider-outsider, we must first embrace an outsider to be our insider first.

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