Worth a Try
Who knows what's going to work? So put as many ideas as you can to the test.
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2003/february/58878.html
When Neil Franklin began offering round-the-clock telephone
customer service in 1998, customers loved it. The offering fit the
strategic direction Franklin had in mind for Dataworkforce,
his Dallas-based telecommunications- engineer staffing agency, so
he invested in a phone system to route after-hours calls to his 10
employees' home and mobile phones.
Today, Franklin, 38, has nearly 50 employees and continues to
explore ways to improve Dataworkforce's service.
Twenty-four-hour phone service has stayed, but other trials have
not. One failure was developing individual Web sites for each
customer. "We took it too far and spent $30,000, then
abandoned it," Franklin recalls. A try at globally extending
the brand by advertising in major world cities was also dropped.
"It worked pretty well," Franklin says, "until you
added up the cost."
Franklin's efforts are similar to an approach called
"portfolio of initiatives" strategy. The idea, according
to Lowell Bryan, a principal in McKinsey & Co., the New York
City consulting firm that developed it, is to always have a number
of efforts underway to offer new products and services, attack new
markets or otherwise implement strategies, and to actively manage
these experiments so you don't miss an opportunity or
overcommit to an unproven idea.
The portfolio of initiatives approach addresses a weakness of
conventional business plans--that they make assumptions about
uncertain future developments, such as market and technological
trends, customer responses, sales and competitor reactions. Bryan
compares the portfolio of initiatives strategy to the ship convoys
used in World War II to get supplies across oceans. By assembling
groups of military and transport vessels and sending them in a
mutually supportive group, planners could rely on at least some
reaching their destination. In the same way, entrepreneurs with a
portfolio of initiatives can expect some of them to pan out.
Making a Plan
Three steps define the portfolio of initiatives approach. First,
you search for initiatives in which you have or can readily acquire
a familiarity advantage--meaning you know more than competitors
about a business. You can gain familiarity advantage using low-cost
pilot programs and experiments, or by partnering with more
knowledgeable allies. Avoid businesses in which you can't
acquire a familiarity advantage, Bryan says.
After you identify familiarity-advantaged initiatives, begin
investing in them using a disciplined, dynamic management approach.
Pay attention to how initiatives relate to each other. They should
be diverse enough that the failure of one won't endanger the
others, but should also all fit into your overall strategic
direction. Investments, represented by product development efforts,
pilot programs, market tests and the like, should start small and
increase only as they prove themselves. Avoid overinvesting before
initiatives have proved themselves. The third step is to pull the
plug on initiatives that aren't working out, and step up
investment in others.
A portfolio of initiatives will work in any size company.
Franklin pursues 20 to 30 at any time, knowing 90 percent won't
pan out. "The main idea is to keep those initiatives
running," he says. "If you don't, you're slowing
down."
Austin, Texas, writer Mark Henricks has covered business and
technology for leading publications since 1981.
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