💾 Archived View for gmi.noulin.net › mobileNews › 4949.gmi captured on 2023-09-08 at 17:51:02. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

⬅️ Previous capture (2023-01-29)

➡️ Next capture (2024-05-10)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Schumpeter - It s complicated

2013-11-29 07:38:28

Management thinkers disagree on how to manage complexity

THERE can be few better places to talk about complexity than Vienna. This was

the capital of the most complicated political organisation yet seen: the

Austro-Hungarian Empire. It was also the centre of some of the most convoluted

cold-war spy games. On November 14th and 15th hundreds of management

enthusiasts converged on the Austrian capital to debate the subject. They had

little interest in the complexities of the Habsburgs or the cold war. They were

preoccupied instead by two points: that business is more complicated than ever

before; and that managing complexity is at the top of businesspeople s agenda.

Whether they were right about the first point is debatable. In the 18th century

it took six months for letters to travel from East India House in London to

Calcutta and back. Today, supply chains can be managed in real time, and masses

of data can be crunched instantly at the touch of a button. But they were right

about the second. Businesspeople are confronted by more of everything than ever

before: this year s Global Electronics Forum in Shanghai featured 22,000 new

products. They have to make decisions at a faster pace: roughly 60% of Apple s

revenues are generated by products that are less than four years old.

Therefore, they have a more uncertain future: Harvard Business School s William

Sahlman warns young entrepreneurs about the big eraser in the sky that can

come down at any moment and wipe out all their cleverness and effort .

The Vienna conference the fifth in an annual series to celebrate Peter Drucker

s work produced two starkly different solutions to the complexity problem

(Schumpeter is, of course, simplifying to avoid unnecessary complexity). The

first is to recognise and accept that complexity is just a misnomer for a new

sort of order. Don Tapscott, of Wikinomics fame, argued that the information

revolution is replacing one kind of management (command-and-control) with

another (based on self-organising networks). John Hagel of Deloitte talked

about the growing disconnect between linear institutions and the non-linear

world that is developing around us .

Organisations built for this new world may look complex and unwieldy but they

have an inner logic and powers of self-organisation. Global networks such as

Kiva, a crowdfunding website, and CrisisCommons, which musters tech volunteers

to help out in disasters like the Philippines typhoon, can mobilise thousands

of people with little top-down direction. Accelerate, a call-centre company,

employs 20,000 people but has no call centres: they work from home. Such

outfits suffer from complexity only when managers apply command-and-control

techniques to them.

The second, rival solution to dealing with complexity is to impose simplicity.

The bosses of Tupperware Brands and Tata Consultancy Services could hardly face

more different challenges. Tupperware has 3m freelance salespeople, working

everywhere from plush Austrian suburbs to Indian slums. TCS employs almost

300,000 people to solve complex technological problems. Rick Goings of

Tupperware and Natarajan Chandrasekaran of TCS agreed that the only way to

avoid being blinded by complexity is to concentrate on the few simple things

that can give their businesses focus and their workers direction.

What to make of these two contrasting views of complexity? The first argument

contains a kernel of truth. Massive computing power and fast internet speeds

make it easier to create networked, devolved organisations like Kiva and

CrisisCommons. But it is easy to get carried away. The most striking

development of the past couple of decades is how well monolithic companies have

survived the technological storm: the internet is now dominated by a handful of

giant problem-solvers like Google, with its mission to organise all the world s

information.

The second view is more persuasive. It is striking how many of the world s most

successful businesses thrive on simplicity of some sort. German Mittelstand

companies are doing well by focusing on narrow niches. Built-to-last companies,

such as Coca-Cola, are masters of distilling their corporate identity into a

simple formula which employees can internalise and customers can easily

recognise. McDonald s is a global success because its business model is so

simple and replicable. Tim Brown, the boss of IDEO, argues that design

companies like his are enjoying success by showing organisations how to design

complexity out .

Simplistic about simplicity

The pursuit of simplicity can certainly be taken too far if it is applied in a

simple-minded way. Focusing on simple targets can be counter-productive: for

example, British police, told to improve their overall clear-up rates, have

been criticised for devoting too much time to relatively minor offences such as

speeding rather than more difficult crimes such as sexual assaults and

gang-related killings. And applying the simplicity mantra to some kinds of

businesses can be silly: there is no way that Boeing can engineer the

complexity out of producing its Dreamliner jet.

However, there are good reasons why sensible CEOs like Mr Goings think as they

do. The biggest threat to business almost always comes from too much complexity

rather than too much simplicity. The conglomerates of the 1960s crumbled

because they tried to manage too many businesses in too many different

industries. Enron imploded because the company abandoned old-fashioned

command-and-control in favour of fashionable ideas about running energy

companies as if they were financial organisations. The banks were so bedazzled

by complex mathematical formulae (and corrupted by greed) that they lost sight

of the simplest principles of banking. That old US Navy saying, Keep it

simple, stupid , is not a bad rule for management too, simple-minded though it

may sound.