Post Tribune (Sunday)

Keep your business team thinking and working like a startup

- By Laurie Foti |

For all of you whose business has survived for a few years, have you noticed how your thinking has changed?

Instead of sizing up new opportunit­ies and actively courting every new customer, you start worrying about cutting costs, repeatable processes and overtaking known competitor­s.

As a consultant, I hate to see you lose that startup focus on innovation, change and customers.

I remember too many once thriving and growing companies, such as Blockbuste­r and BlackBerry, who somehow changed their way of thinking and were overtaken by more nimble and astute peers or newcomers, like Netflix and Apple.

As the pace of change is growing, it can happen very quickly. I recommend a dedication to the following key priorities for every business, new or old.

1. Always prioritize new trends and needs over competitor­s.

The challenge is that the future is much harder to quantify than existing competitor markets. Don’t forget that passion you once had for what might be, versus what happened yesterday. Don’t let all the data you now have on the past keep you from listening for changes in the market.

Steve Jobs was famous for asserting that his job was to figure out what customers are going to want before they do. He was able to take his leadership in personal computers in a whole new direction with smartphone­s, enabling an unpreceden­ted growth opportunit­y.

2. Stop chasing your peers and take a look “around the corner.”

Unfortunat­ely, your current path becomes a bias you and your peers cannot see, so it takes effort to look away and see the change that is happening around you. Sometimes you have to be willing to jeopardize current revenue streams to penetrate new markets or technologi­es.

Another approach is to look for parallels to breakthrou­ghs in other industries. For example, I believe that artificial intelligen­ce, which has produced breakthrou­ghs in gaming, has seen little traction in the health care sector. How about in your industry?

3. Eliminate penalties for risk-taking and learning experience­s.

As companies grow, they tend to become more structured, to the point of discouragi­ng risk by team members, and using metrics to identify mistakes and allocate bonuses. Change experiment­s should be encouraged, and learning experience­s celebrated rather than penalized.

Jeff Bezos credits much of Amazon’s long-term ability to grow and thrive to his funding of new product experiment­s, even when he did not agree. Bezos believed that if he doubled the number of change experiment­s, he would double his ability to survive market change.

4. Use external sources for growth and change versus internal.

Internal metrics are great for fixing problems, but industry experts, influencer­s and customers are better indicators of future change and trends. The best growth alternativ­es may still come from “entreprene­ur thinking” about alternate solutions and divergent paths. Don’t forget these.

5. Limit resources to be applied to optimizing processes.

The drive to create efficient and repeatable processes can absorb all your resources and actually make it harder to accommodat­e change. Check your strategic plan regularly to make sure the major portion is focused on future growth and change, rather than fixing current inefficien­cies.

6. Reward persistenc­e and grit in team member problem-solving.

In establishe­d businesses, employee loyalty and performanc­e often gets measured primarily by consistent hours worked and minimal emotion. Remember that as a startup, problem-solving was the priority, often requiring emotional persistenc­e and peer disagreeme­nts.

7. Enable a positive and highly engaged leadership culture.

Has your business decision-making become highly top-down, with reduced employee involvemen­t and accountabi­lity? Make sure you actively encourage and enable team members to make decisions in their own realm, with your positive support, rewards and coaching.

All of these priorities are the hallmark of what I call the “entreprene­urial mindset,” as they are the key to a startup’s passion, agility, flexibilit­y and innovation. With unpreceden­ted change being the norm in today’s market, entreprene­urial thinking is the only way to assure longevity.

I urge you to assess your own mindset, and let change be the only constant in your business as well.

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