As anyone who has read my blog may have gathered, I love businesses that continually pursue new ideas and believe organizations need to embrace change in order to remain competitive in the long run. A few days ago I got e-mail from Bain Insights on a subtle approach to business change called Repeatability. Bain and Company have set up a website containing articles and research on this topic in support of a new book by two of their partners Chris Zook and James Allen called ‘Repeatability: Building Enduring Businesses for a World of Constant Change.’
The Idea:
The authors recognize that while 80% of high performing companies have differentiation at the heart of their corporate strategy, such differentiation can become excessively complex. As a company becomes more complex they may lose a sense of who they are and what they are good at, as they continually pursue radical change in order to stay ahead of the competition. Such an approach Zook and Allen’s strategic research suggests may not be sustainable in the long run.
The Concept:
Zook and Allen advocate a simple repeatable business model that can be applied to new products and changing markets. The concept requires an organization to constantly adapt over time building on their differentiation in a way that reinforces their strategic advantages and keeps everyone on the same page. Under this concept all employees should know what the company’s key success factors are and change is constant rather than radical and disruptive. This quote from the authors’ Harvard Business Review article sums up the repeatable business model concept:
In addition, learning systems are put in place to ensure continuous improvement can occur constantly.
Repeatability in Practice:
Organizations with repeatable business models do three things:
- They understand what their customers want.
- They translate their strategy into clear business principles that can be easily understand and adopted by employees and leaders from all levels of the hierarchy.
- They are wired to connect and respond to feedback, adapting accordingly to keep learning.
Lego is an example of a company with a repeatable business model in place. After years of strategic errors Lego developed clear principles and metrics in order to replicate and improve on past successes, while adapting to new markets and the changing business environment. Using their repeatable business model Lego were able to increase their profit margins by 40% creating additional value for the company, which they hope to sustain.
For more information on the repeatable business model check out Chris Zook and James Allen’s book: Repeatability: Build Enduring Businesses for a World of Constant Change.
The success of using a repeatable business model depends on the product you offer, its longevity and the consumers. In most instances, innovative thinking is the key to ongoing prosperity.
Thanks for your comment Jordan.
I too typically believe ongoing innovative thinking is key to long-term profitability, but was intrigued by Zook and Allen’s theory which both agrees and slightly contradicts this thinking.