Preparing your organization for growth

Here is an excerpt from an article written by  Martin Dewhurst, Suzanne Heywood, and Kirk Rieckhoff for the McKinsey Quarterly, published by McKinsey & Company. To read the complete article, check out others, learn more about the firm, and sign up for email alerts, please click here.

* * *

Companies that address their organizational weaknesses as they implement growth strategies give themselves an advantage.
Most senior managers pay close attention to the strategic side of growth—the “wheres,” “whens,” and “hows.” Yet many underestimate the importance of organizational factors in translating a growth strategy into reality. This oversight can dampen a company’s growth plans: organizational processes and structures that are well suited to today’s challenges may well buckle under the strain of new demands or make it impossible to meet them. Likewise, key employees may lack the skills needed to cope with the additional complexity that growth brings. By reviewing the experiences of three organizations that faced the stresses imposed by new growth initiatives, this article seeks to illustrate such “pain points” and suggests some approaches for coping with them.

1. Stifling structures

Well-defined organizational structures establish the roles and norms that enable large companies to get things done. Therefore, when growth plans call for doing things that are entirely new—say, expanding into new geographies or adding products—it’s well worth the leadership’s time to examine existing organizational structures to see if they’re flexible enough to support the new initiatives. Sometimes they won’t be.

A European retailer, for example, decided to expand beyond its base of small-format stores in urban areas by including a number of large-format stores in suburban ones. To serve suburban customers, the new stores would require a new mix of products, including adult clothing, larger housewares (such as furniture), and additional electrical appliances. The new stores would also offer lower prices than the old ones. All this meant that the new stores would have special supply chain requirements and that the stores’ managers would need to focus more intently on price and cost than had been customary for the retailer.

As the company’s senior executives planned the new stores, they began questioning whether to operate them as part of the existing organizational structure or at arm’s length. Although launching them within the existing structure would be simpler, the executives concluded that doing so would deny the new stores the unique resources needed to become a meaningful growth platform. The executives were concerned, for example, that the company’s existing team of store designers would have difficulty making the new format’s essential trade-offs, such as working with unfamiliar, lower-cost flooring and lighting products. Likewise, the executives were concerned that the existing supply chain would not cope easily with larger products, items with a short shelf life (such as adult fashion clothing), or the demands of new suppliers.

So the company launched the large-format stores as a separate business unit, with its leader reporting to the CEO. The new stores’ management team was independent of the parent company and included mostly newcomers who would not seek to replicate its culture or processes. Still, the retailer also set the goal of bringing the new business unit back into the original structure once the first six new stores were up and running and the new retail concept was firmly established.

The new stores’ managers developed their own local distribution centers and store designs, at a significantly lower cost per square meter than the company’s other stores had achieved. They also found new suppliers; modified some existing systems, such as IT; and created a different overall customer experience that was more focused on lower costs. The stores therefore had fewer floor employees per square meter, for example, and larger shelves that needed to be refilled less frequently.

Keeping the new stores separate helped get them up and running quickly but also made some processes at the corporate level more complex than they might have been. The IT systems supporting the new stores, for example, handled a number of processes differently, including store-level profit-and-loss statements. It was therefore difficult to consolidate sales figures, cost of goods sold, or wages across both types of stores.

Nonetheless, in just two years, six of the new-format stores were firmly established and meeting their financial targets. At this point, as planned, the parent company integrated all of the stores—large and small—into a single business unit. Because the new stores were past the start-up phase, executives determined that the benefits of using common systems and processes outweighed those of maintaining an entrepreneurial subculture. Therefore, many of the larger stores’ modified processes, such as the amended financial and supply chain systems, were replaced by those the parent company used. The only remaining operational difference was the local distribution centers because the company’s overall product mix was easier to handle through them even in the longer term.

In our experience, such separated approaches work best when a company can develop a convincing business case that existing structures and processes will make it very difficult to launch a new undertaking. This can be true when, for example, the new model is inconsistent with the old one (as with the European retailer) or could cannibalize it—say, if a high-tech firm introduces a new generation of technology. Companies need to decide how much, and when, local customization should trump global standards and the benefits of scale, taking into consideration factors such as the product or service being created, market conditions, internal culture, and the skills of the managers involved. In some cases, the necessary customization can be as minor as enabling people to work in a local language; in others, as large as creating a whole new business unit with different suppliers and customers.

Deliberately making these approaches temporary, as the European retailer did, is critical. In our experience, two to three years is usually enough time for new operations to gain sufficient maturity to hold their own within the organization. It is also crucial for companies to reintegrate these innovative pockets before they reach substantial scale, or they will simply create an additional layer of complexity that makes the company as a whole harder to manage and could inhibit its next growth spurt.

* * *

The specific organizational challenges companies face as they grow will differ according to their growth strategies. By managing organizational complexity early, however, any company can improve the odds that its growth plans will succeed—while making it less difficult than ever to get things done.

* * *

Here is a direct link to the complete article

 

Posted in

Leave a Comment





This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.