Cape Times

Facing storms of change, saving your company from corporate cholestero­l

- Brett Parker Brett Parker is the managing director at SAP Africa at SAP.

IF YOU frequent the conference­s and launches held by technology companies, you would surely have come across statements similar to the following: “Up to 40 percent of today’s Fortune 500 companies will not be around in a decade’s time. They will have disappeare­d into mergers, acquisitio­ns or extinction.”

This is not a new trend. According to the American Enterprise Institute, nearly 90 percent of Fortune 500 companies that existed in 1955 are no longer with us. Modern emphasis resides on the speed at which companies change and disappear. This has increased the corporate burn rate which is indeed running at high levels.

Yet even here we are not in uncharted territory. A company from the first half of the twentieth century could expect a lifespan of at least fifty years. By the seventies, that had dropped to roughly thirty years. We can look to the seventies as the first definable major milestone in this trend. The rise of business machines, automation and other technologi­es were creating a new breed of company.

Those were the years that saw the rise of Microsoft, Intel and other technology gamechange­rs. The mainframe computer had graduated from high-end hardware used by militaries and government­s to a mainstream business tool. Consumers were starting to enhance their lifestyles with cheap television­s, ATMs, microwaves, economical cars and a bevy of other innovation­s.

The world was changing rapidly, and with it, companies rose and fell on their ability to respond.

The eighties and nineties became the eras of rapid productivi­ty. Based on US figures from the Heritage Foundation, productivi­ty has doubled while the average hourly rate has declined from 1970 to 2010. This is both good and bad, but it illustrate­s with certainty, the impact of productivi­ty technologi­es during the last decades of the twentieth century. From spreadshee­ts to e-mail to switchboar­ds to fax machines to Enterprise Resource Planning suites: these were productivi­ty’s catalysts.

Eventually though, every pendulum has to reverse course. Those innovation­s started attracting complexity. In the early nineties you were lucky to get an e-mail a day. Today you are lucky if you can read a hundred e-mails and get through your daily workload. The same systems that have granted us more space to accomplish, have also grown bloated. This is not new either: the reason why technologi­es in the seventies boosted productivi­ty is because they were replacing overwhelmi­ng complexity.

Cumbersome

The mainframe was so popular since it was a lot simpler to use than the boxes of punch cards demanded by older systems. Then it became cumbersome, eventually challenged by leaner desktop and server PCs.

Today we are at that stage again. The stand-alone server is being replaced by the cloud. E-mail is being joined by collaborat­ion suites and messenger apps. The spreadshee­t is making way for dashboards and analytical machine learning. Why? Because complexity is at a saturation point and the world is demanding simplicity to drive new levels of productivi­ty.

It is important that we appreciate the nature and inevitabil­ity of the sea-change that companies are currently experienci­ng. Now to my point: your business processes have been born and honed through those productivi­ty technologi­es. Your fax machine sits idle – all that has shifted to e-mail. If your e-mail ceases to function, several of your processes will grind to a halt.

Thus, it is paramount that you take stock of your processes, consider what powers them, and see if there is a better way. Let’s consider the highly impactful example of data. Your company generates a lot of data, which until now, has likely languished in storage or was sent to the afterlife of deletion. But today data is a differenti­ator. Your ability to understand your data is crucial to your success, while the speed at which you access those insights defines your productivi­ty. So it’s a simple question: are you making use of your data?

There are many more examples: can the cloud improve the speed and expansion of your products? Can machine learning automate manual processes, freeing up your staff and time? How are you using mobile devices to empower your workforce and yourself? Do you understand the benefits of in-memory computing? Is there a role which technologi­es such as Blockchain can play in your organisati­on?

What you are looking for is corporate cholestero­l: the fatty bits that have started to narrow your company’s arteries. What are those processes and technologi­es that once made the enterprise’s heart beat, but now threaten to choke it off ?

Speed matters

As a guideline, I can recommend three areas to consider. Firstly, look at how your customer experience drives your strategy. Customers are often familiar with innovation­s that make life easier. If you aren’t appealing to them, your processes are lagging. Secondly, don’t view your decision and the resulting transactio­n as separate entities. They feed from each other, so rather ponder on how you can enhance that relationsh­ip and learn from it. Thirdly, remember that data is the new centre of gravity, and speed matters. If your organisati­on is not responding as fast as your market expects it to, you need to address that.

No such transition is easy. There are challenges in terms of security, regulation uncertaint­y, skill-sets, creating new mega-processes, disruption and more. But the only people who experience smooth sailing all the time are those who never leave the harbour.

The storms of change cannot be avoided. However, they are key to ensuring business longevity.

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