Business, Culture and Entrepreneurship

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

A Stake in the Outcome - Building a Culture of Ownership

These last six months, I have been doing a good deal of reading; on average maybe two books a week - at least one of which has been a business book! I have gone back to reading books that have been in my library a long while such as Paul Hawken's Growing a Business as well as reading new (to me) ones such as A Stake in the Outcome by Jack Stack and Bo Burlingham.

I ran across A Stake in the Outcome (ASitO) while browsing business books at the Easy Library (a great online library with a brick & mortar presence in Bangalore). Having read and been influenced by Bo Burlingham's more recent Small Giants, I began browsing ASitO at the library itself. As the saying goes, "When the student is ready, the Master will appear!" Certainly that's how I felt as I scanned the book quickly right there and subsequently brought it home to read.

Chapter 3 titled The Design of a Business, begins:

Most people, I know, don't think about the company they're designing when they start out in business. They think about the products they're going to make, or the services they're going to provide. They worry about how to raise the money they need, how to find customers, how to deal with salespeople and suppliers, how to survive. It never occurs to them that, while they're putting together the basic elements of the business, they're also making decisions that are going to determine the type of company they'll have if they're successful.
I felt someone had just hit me on the head with a two-by-four. Every week I meet someone who is thinking about starting something. Nearly every last one of them talks about their product or service idea and if at all they talk about their company, its only when they intend to "flip-it" ("Built-to-flip" as Jim Collins speaks of as does Sramana Mitra in a recent blog entry). Jack Stack in contrast, states clearly that

Ownership Rule #1
The company is the product
It is worth pausing here and reflecting on his assertion. All too often I see entrepreneurs, young and not-so-young, pitch their businesses as I have heard Hollywood scriptwriter's do! "Think Netflix but for Indian movies," "Waiter.com meets iTunes," "Google but for contextual search." I'll refrain from speculating whether the internet bubble begat this or this begat the bubble and what role VCs had to play in this. This focus on what a company does, rather than what a company will be, Stack asserts misses the opportunity to explicitly design your business from ground up. If you haven't figured it now by now, I agree whole-heartedly.

In many ways, the practices of visionary companies that Jim Collins and Jerry Porras discuss in their book Built to Last have been explicitly operationalized in Stack's company Springfield Remanufacturing (SRC). The big difference is that Stack's direct writing style and first-hand experience makes this a gripping read rather than an dry business book. Also unlike most business books that appear to document management's clever (often infallible) strategies, Stack walks us through both the good and poor decisions they made, as they set out to remake SRC. In the end (in fact in the epilogue), Stack quotes Herb Kelleher, cofounder and former CEO of Southwest Airlines responding to The Wall Street Journal's question on what he meant when he said Southwest's culture was its biggest competitive advantage.

"The intangibles are more important than the tangibles," Kellher replied. "Someone can go out and buy airplanes from Boeing and ticket counters, but they can't buy our culture our espirit de corps."

ASitO walks us through SRC's journey of building such a culture of ownership from that day in 1982 when Stack and his managers did a management buy-out of their struggling engine remanufacturing factory to twenty years hence when their 10cent stock was worth $86 (since then has grown to over $136). Most importantly the authors don't romanticize the journey and are explicit in periodically setting our expectations with insights such as "Stock is not a magic pill" (ownership rule #4) and "Ownership needs to be taught"(OR #7).

ASitO is a must-read for any one contemplating starting a company or looking to effect change in their organizations through employee participation and a culture of ownership.

A much more detailed summary of the book itself can be found here