BUILT TO LAST V.2 – Two things are necessary to begin the journey.

This is according to research for over 6 years by a team led by Jim Collins.  The details of the research materials are in my previous blog.

First concept, clock building, not time telling.  Second concept, “preserve the core, stimulate progress.”

You know your business, markets, industry, the current economic climate, threats to your business, stock market activity, risks and more.  Do you know if your company is built to last?

Innovation Advantage LLC analysis includes the determination if both concepts are part of the client’s business.  In addition, the compass heading analysis also reviews if the client’s compass heading is growth or decline. Any company planning should be based on if the company is built to last, if its compass heading is growth or decline.  Otherwise, the strategic plan and operations plan could be flawed from the start.

Built to last concepts are:

Clock building characteristics are:

  • Leaders “concentrate on building an organization” (p. 23).
  • Tinker.
  • Opportunistic.
  • Build a company that prospers beyond its founder through multiple product life cycles.
  • “Founders persistent, never, never, never give up. Be prepared to kill, revise or evolve an idea, but never give up on the company” (p. 20).
  • “Ultimately, creation of the company, not execution of a specific idea or capitalize on timely market opportunity (a fad)” (p. 20).
  • “Products and services make useful and important contributions to customers’ lives. Do something useful” (p. 31).
  • Chief executives at built to last companies “overcome significant obstacles, attracted dedicated people (right people, right seats), influencer, achieved goals” (p. 31).
  • “Bring on people who share the leader’s vision (passion) and entrepreneurial spirit” (p. 35).
  • Leaders at built to last companies value change, experimentation, constant improvement and create organizations with mechanisms to drive change and improvement, (p. 36).
  • Create organizations that would evolve and change on its own (p. 37).
  • Greater attention is given to developing the company and its capabilities than to products (p. 38).
  • Invest in in-house university – orient, train, indoctrinate in core values and all it takes to build a company to last (p. 40).

The result of clock building as described by Jim Collins’ research:

  • “Building a company that can prosper far beyond the presence of any single leader and through multiple product life cycles” (p. 23).
  • “Shift from seeing the company as a vehicle for the products to seeing the products as a vehicle for the company” (p. 28).
  • “See the company as the ultimate creation” (pp. 28 – 34).

Not time telling characteristics are (pp. 31 – 39)

  • Company began with a great idea.
  • Charismatic leader.
  • Hot market just at the right time, visionary product, idea, ride the curve of attractive product life cycle.
  • Organizationally not able to pivot, continually change, evolve beyond the existing product life cycles.
  • Leaders build upon their egos; limelight is on them.
  • No creativity.
  • Organization is not developed to do anything on its own.
  • Tight controls.

According to Jim Collins’ research, built to last companies are most likely the ones that are clock builders.  To know if your company is a clock builder requires research of the company’s beginning and what has developed since.

This leads to the second concept for a company to be built to last – “preserve the core, stimulate progress.”

Core ideology alone can’t make a company built to last.  It is the framework to begin.  Core ideology is made up of core values and purpose.  Core values are defined as “the organization’s essential and enduring tenets – a small set of general guiding principles; not to be confused with specific cultural or operational practices; not to be compromised for financial gain or short-term expediency” (p. 73).

Purpose is defined as “the organization’s fundamental reasons for existence, beyond just making money – a perpetual guiding star on the horizon; not to be confused with specific goals or business strategies” (p. 73).

Do you know your company’s core values and purpose?  Are these documented, circulated, reviewed regularly with all employees?  How many times in the past 3 months has leadership or you communicated or promoted these?  With changes in leadership, have these ever changed?  How has your company’s core ideology guided decision making?

Let’s review a short list of examples of core ideology (pp. 81, 82)

  • HP – “respect and concern for individual employees.”
  • Wal-Mart – “exceed customer expectations.”
  • 3M – “respect for individual initiatives.”
  • A previous employer – family, have fun.

The next piece of the second concept – stimulate progress.  What does it look like?  See if any of these are present where you work.

  • Built to last companies have a “relentless drive for progress that impels change and forward movement in all that is not part of the core ideology. The drive for progress arises from a deep human urge to explore to create, to discover, to achieve, to change, to improve” (p. 82).
  • Drive for progress “is an internal force” (p. 84).
  • “Drive to go further, to do better, to create new possibilities needs no external justification” (p. 84).

The combination of clock building, not time telling and preserve the core, stimulate progress are the basic framework elements for built to last companies.

Does your company have these?  If not, what should be done?  Any corporation wants to avoid risk.  This is one path to avoid the risk of not being built to last.

Seventeen of the eighteen companies listed in Built to Last by Jim Collins as companies built to last, continue today. There are no guarantees.

All the best in your journey to be built to last in 2022 and beyond.

BUILT TO LASTV.1 – Is your company built to last?

One key element to understand, the existing business and what’s next – innovation is inseparable.

Did you take the built to last self-assessment shown in my previous blog?   The self-assessment includes some elements that Jim Collins presented in his book Built to Last.

Here is the self-assessment in my previous blog.

Jim Collins identified 18 visionary companies that he recognized as built to last.  The 18 companies began in 1812 to 1946.  The research behind these was extensive as he explained in his book.

  • “100 books
  • Over 3,000 individual documents (articles, case studies, achieve materials, corporate publications, video footage)
  • Reviewed over sixty thousand pages of material, the actual number is probably closer to one hundred thousand pages
  • Filled three shoulder height file cabinets
  • Four bookshelves
  • Twenty megabytes for financial data and analysis”
  • The team that conducted the research and completed the book numbered over 30
  • Copy writes for book are 1994, 1997 and 2002, total pages 342

Consider what corporations face today that were not present then or as developed as in 2021.

  • Global scale for most businesses, supply chain, customers, employees, operations, sales and marketing
  • Technological changes and the pace of change
  • Inflation the highest since 1990
  • Cyber threats to steal your data on customers, employees, IP, financial resources, hold hostage any organization for financial gain
  • Possibly expanding government regulation
  • Political correctness
  • Social media
  • Work from home or choose not to work creating labor shortages, increasing labor costs
  • 24/7 news reporting, apps on phone reporting constant business information
  • Climate change
  • Pandemic

Do these make built to last a more challenging proposition today?

There were also 18 comparison companies, one for each of the 18 visionary companies.  Is there a comparison company to yours?  How do you compare?

Do you think your company is built to last?  What would you base your answer on?

For this blog series, I will attempt to provide information for you to determine if your company has what it takes to be built to last.

The list below includes the 18 visionary companies and 18 comparison companies that Jim Collins completed in his research for the book Built to Last.

Visionary Year Began Comparison Year Began
Citicorp 1812 Chase Manhattan 1799/1877
Proctor & Gamble 1837 Colgate 1806
Philip Morris 1847 RJR Nabisco 1875
AMEX 1850 Wells Fargo 1852
J & J 1886 Bristol-Myers Squibb 1887
Merck 1891 Pfizer 1849
General Electric 1892 Westinghouse 1886
Nordstrom 1901 Melville 1892
3M 1902 Norton 1885
Ford 1903 GM 1908
IBM 1911 Burroughs 1892
Boeing 1915 McDonnell Douglas 1920
Walt Disney 1923 Columbia 1920
Marriott 1927 Howard Johnson 1925
Motorola 1928 Zenith 1923
Hewlett-Packard 1938 Texas Instruments 1930
Sony 1945 Kenwood 1946
Wal-Mart 1945 Ames 1958

As you review the lists of companies, you will recognize some and not others.  Some have come and gone.  We can start on a macro view of the visionary companies.  What are some elements, characteristics, issues that they experienced and still operate?

  • Founders came and went
  • Multiple generations of leadership
  • Product life cycles begin and end
  • Recognized as a leader in its industry
  • Admired by others
  • Impact their local community and globally
  • They failed and rebooted
  • Faced cash-flow problems
  • Layoffs of a significant number
  • Stock price declines
  • Experienced significant profit losses
  • Lived through business collapse, depressions, recessions
  • Near bankruptcy
  • Lawsuits from stockholders, customers, employees, governments
  • Products/service an integral part of global society
  • Touched the lives all over the world
  • Managed business startup to continuing operations after 50, 100, 150, 200 years
  • A great place to work
  • Started with a plan, an idea
  • Started without a plan, a general idea
  • Do whatever to pay the light bill

Any of these in your history?  How did you manage through them? How did your company come out?  What have you learned?  What changed as a result?

There is no formula to ensure that your company is built to last.  Why are companies that are over 200 years old still operating?  Let’s examine some specific reasons.  This will be the topic in the next blog.

The year 2022 is upon us all – Happy New Year.

We are all on a journey to build our company, all the best.