Management Made Simple: Ideas of a former McKinsey Partner
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Our societies have come to the end of the road. We need a fundamental reconstruction of the systems and institutions that now govern us and redefine the roles of all the players with a stronger focus on making things work by respecting the human dimension. This is not a choice between socialism, and capitalism or any other -ism. There is no futu
Mickey Huibregtsen
Mickey Huibregtsen worked for a major part of his career with McKinsey & Company. While he continues to be involved as a member of the McKinsey Advisory Council he has redirected his efforts towards a wide variety of social initiatives. Born in Rotterdam Mickey studied in Leiden and Delft, where he obtained engineering degrees cum laude in theoretical and technical mechanics. Prior to joining McKinsey & Company in 1970, he worked several years for Stork, a diversified engineering company ultimately as General Manager of their Gas Turbine Division. With McKinsey & Company Mickey has served a large and diverse number of leading international organizations, both in the private and in the Government sector. His work covered the full range of strategic, operational and organizational issues. In addition to his work in the Benelux he has served industrial corporations and government organizations in France, Germany, Scandinavia, Turkey, the United Kingdom and the United States. Amidst a diverse range of community activities, Mickey was Board member of INSEAD, the international business school, founder and president of Topshape, a personal training company, and founder and president of The Public Cause, a broad movement in the Netherlands directed at reenergizing society and revamping the political system. He was also President of the Netherlands Olympic Committee * Netherlands Sports Federation for an eight-year period. Finally, he is co-founder and chairman of First Health United Foundation, a non-profit organization directed at funding research projects targeting blood and vector borne diseases in developing countries. Some ten years ago he founded the "Evening of Science and Society", an annual event in the Ridderzaal (Hall of Knights) directed at celebrating our top scientists and inspiring them to actively participate in shaping a national strategy. He recently initiated a movement called MaatschapWij (SocieWe) directed at rebuilding and reenergizing the main actors in society -government, citizens and organizations -bringing together the five largest national sporting federations, the five largest societal organizations - such as the Dutch equivalents of triple A, Consumers Union and the Red Cross - and five large corporations as well as a National Dotank of young professionals to help spread the mindset of a civil society to which all contribute.
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Management Made Simple - Mickey Huibregtsen
MICKEY
HUIBREGTSEN
MANAGEMENT
MADE
SIMPLE
Ideas of a former McKinsey Partner
ampThis book is dedicated to all my clients,
who taught me so much and were
such a joy to work with.
Copyright © 2018 Mickey Huibregtsen
Amsterdam Publishers, The Netherlands
amsterdampublishers.com
ISBN 13: 9789492371942 (hardback)
ISBN 13: 9789492371959 (ebook)
NUR: 780
All rights reserved. No parts of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any other means, electronically or mechanically, including photocopying, recording or by any other information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the publishers.
Editorial: Mickey Huibregtsen
Illustrations: Annushka Kamp, Kamp Quality Media
Cartoons: Marc Baaij
Design: Wentelwereld Grafische Vormgeving en Uitvoering
Ebook production: ePubStudio.nl
Contents
MANAGEMENT MADE SIMPLE
Preface
Introduction
Part 1 - Business Environment
1. The One-person Economy: explore the fundamentals of the economy
2. The Service Economy: pursue full employment
3. The Blue-Bag Opportunity: interpret outside events
4. The Power of Intangibles: focus on the intangibles
5. The Source of Prosperity: innovate forever
6. The Shifting Fundamentals: select where and how to compete
Part 2 - Strategy
7. The Delta Function: understand the nature of competition
8. The Value Proposition: choose how to compete
9. The S-curve: know where you are with your business
10. The Sustainable Competitive Advantage: search for defendable positions
11. The Double Business System: balance supply and demand
12. The Management of Options: incorporate uncertainty into planning
13. The Quantum Leap: create breakthrough value
Part 3 - Organization
14. The Napoleon Grip: control the business system
15. The DNA driven Organization: manage beyond control
16. Horizontal Value Creation: extract value across business units
17. The Nature of Knowledge: capture knowledge
18. The Organizational Flipover: turn the organization upside down
19. The Umpteen Commandments: inspire organizations
Part 4 - Leadership
20. The Brain Breaker: understand your own intelligence
21. The Leadership Paradox: explore dimensions of leadership
22. The Spider Plan: build your network
23. The AMC Model for Action: build contact with your target audience
24. The Full Body Manager: give it everything
25. The Think versus Act Challenge: understand the evolution of leadership
26. The Virtue of Guidance: offer constructive feedback
27. The Caring and Competent Boss: choose your superior
Part 5 - Management Tools
28. The Problem Pyramid: structure the problem
29. The Order Penetration Point: manage logistics
30. The Eye-opener: use metaphors
31. The Pyramid Principle: communicate clearly
32. The Value of Customer Intimacy: think customer
33. The Why-why Question: get the most out of interviews
In conclusion: why manage at all?
Acknowledgements
Mickey Huibregtsen
SOCIEWE
illustratie_22Preface
Simplification is one of the major challenges of the twenty first century. For many people the modern world has become too complicated to grasp. In a business environment that is changing faster than ever, the complexity of running an organization – business or otherwise - is overwhelming for many managers.
They feel that they are losing control over all that is going on and as a result do not know what to do when. Their leadership becomes ineffective and risk-avoidant. Visionary leadership coupled with fast and clear decision making has become a thing of the past in most organizations, apart from some start-ups. In this book, Mickey Huibregtsen passionately advocates for the simplification of companies and society. Obviously, he has thought about this a long time. His arguments are not only persuasive, they are based upon many years of experience within McKinsey & Company counseling a wide array of corporate, social and governmental clients. In addition he has founded and led several NGO’s in recent years.
I have come to know Mickey as a visionary man. He has a broad perspective on things that are going on in the business world and society at large, and couples his insights with a strong intuition that leads him to where he needs to be. He shares this broad perspective with the reader in this book. A wealth of insights is the result, and I recommend Management Made Simple to all the managers who seek to be truly effective in the leadership of their organization.
Intuition is something that cannot be taught, because it is given. But all those managers that lost their intuitive ability because the reality of their organization became too complex, can use this book to regain their perspective and control so they can bring out their leadership qualities again.
Handtekening BakasAdjiedj Bakas
, author of Capitalism & Slowbalization
Introduction
The world is increasingly more complex and this makes management at any level of any organization more challenging. The purpose of this book is to help managers deal with this complexity by offering some simple concepts, models, and ideas on topics varying from corporate strategy to organization, leadership, and management tools. The underlying assumption for the book is that the only way of dealing with complexity is to make things simple, but in the right way.
To determine whether a particular simplification is justified and pertinent calls for personal judgement. Thus the following only offers tools. These do not replace the need for a craftsman to select and apply them.
Before diving into the various ideas, it is important to understand some of the fundamental trends, and the scope for improvement in many areas, that are at the heart of the unnerving and escalating complexity that every manager is facing today as well as the desired paradigm shift that logically flows from this.
intro_01TRENDS
Many – generally very successful – books have been written about trends and the number of relevant trends is growing. To keep things simple, I will look only at those that seem most pervasive and relevant to both operational and strategic management. In my view these are:
The accelerating pace of change in virtually every dimension of management.
The increasing globalisation of business and politics.
The escalation of the role of emotions in all our actions.
The expanding role of corporations in society.
intro_02All of these have been occurring for a while but have shown some acceleration in recent decades so that their impact – once limited to incidental aspects of the business – now tends to be pervasive. These trends do not operate independently, but rather tend to feed on one another. And other factors, such as information technology, mobility, and liberalization of social and political values all interact with them.
Accelerating Pace of Change
Alvin Toffler in his 1970 book Future Shock, demonstrated exceptional visionary qualities by focussing on a topic that has since become a crucial element in everyday life: the ever-accelerating pace of change.
Change is a relative notion. What constitutes rapid change for one observer may seem like stasis to another. For managers, the pace of change in their lifetime as managers is the most relevant reference. In those terms, it can be argued that in the 1960s most factors that were critical to business managers – such as technology, market preferences, and currency rates – changed only relatively slowly. Many strategies in those days assumed a stable environment, a competitor that did not move, consumers who were constant in their preferences, and fixed logistical and financial boundary conditions.
A by-product of the accelerating pace of change we are now seeing is the greater possibility of fundamentally unpredictable outcomes, despite the most thorough investigation of facts and trends. In short: everything impacts on everything else. This is a phenomenon – just like the weather – in which science, in the form of chaos theory, has taught us to prepare ourselves in developing strategies and choosing courses of action for a wide range of possible outcomes.
A simple so-called logistic
equation as shown in the following exhibit can result in a wide range of possible outcomes Y
once the variable X
surpasses a certain value. This X
can be interpreted as a measure for the rate of change. All around us we see indications that we are far into this range of unpredictability.
Compared to yesterday’s walk through a desert, management today is a climb into the mountains. Managers can count on encountering ever-changing weather conditions and terrain. Changes can be both hard, such as currency swings, and soft, such as consumer preferences. And the continuous interaction of all these factors can make it hard to precisely identify cause and effect in particular situations.
illustratie_21It is this combination of rapid change in the competitive environment and fundamental unpredictability of future events that has totally changed the landscape of management. While Darwin’s theory of evolution allowed for hundreds, if not thousands, of generations of a species to adapt itself to a changing environment or become extinct, managers have had to adapt, in a single century, to a move from an inherently stable to an inherently unstable business environment. It is thus not surprising that both the average age of corporations and the average tenure of its leaders have tended to decline.
Royal Dutch/Shell was one of the first large multinationals to introduce the notion of scenarios – alternative external outcomes – into their planning cycle. Originally, in the 1950s, they worked with two scenarios. Now there are many with subsets. Strategic planning in general must deal with this escalating uncertainty that sometimes leads to total ambiguity.
intro_04This accelerating pace of change and increasing uncertainty of outcomes is visible in virtually all aspects of business and organization, including:
Consumer preferences
The practical ‘life’ of a technology
The business make-up of leading corporations
The political landscape
Currency fluctuations
Capital flows
intro_05The manager of today, whether in business or government or anywhere else, must deal with a factor that the human species by nature fears and tries to avoid: fundamental external change. And this in an environment in which making internal changes has become far more difficult because of ever more stringent government regulations and ever more demanding stakeholder consultation practices.
Increasing Globalization
Globalization is both a cause and a result of change. Developments in communication, transport technology, and corresponding adaptations of government regulations have opened up the world. At the same time, this more open world has contributed to a far-reaching redistribution of labour and competitive positions.
illustratie_25The reach and impact of globalization cannot be overestimated. Globalization, in combination with the emergence of new economies, will continue to reshape the economic landscape