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The Lean Post / Articles / Repurpose Before You Restructure

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Executive Leadership

Repurpose Before You Restructure

By James (Jim) Womack, PhD

April 9, 2009

One of my favorite questions when meeting with senior leaders of enterprises is, "What is your organization's purpose?"

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One of my favorite questions when meeting with senior leaders of enterprises is, “What is your organization’s purpose?” The typical and immediate response is, “To make money and grow.” “But,” I respond, “this answer has nothing to do with your customers, who provide the money your organization needs to profit and grow.” I then repeat my question, but elaborate, ‘What does your organization do to solve customer problems better than competitors so that customers old and new will pay good money for your services and goods and buy more over time?'”

In recent years a fashionable alternative to “make money and grow sales” was that organizational purpose was to steadily grow shareholder value. But now the king of shareholder value, General Electric’s retired chairman Jack Welch, has acknowledged – thank goodness – that this is a result, not a strategy for achieving this result. Now that investors as well as customers are on strike during the great financial crisis, the whole management world is being forced to rethink purpose from the standpoint of the customer.

Confusion about purpose is particularly painful to watch in the collapse of General Motors because this organization was so brilliant for so long in clearly defining its purpose. On June 9, 1921, GM’s great leader Alfred Sloan produced a simple memorandum on the topic of “Product Policy” that defined General Motors’ purpose for generations to come.

Sloan stated that General Motors would provide a carefully configured range of products for “every purse and purpose”, from used Chevrolets at the lower end of the market (with dealer financing on these traded-in vehicles) to a “fully loaded” Cadillac at the top end. This simple memo rationalized GM’s chaotic product line-up so its vehicles would not overlap in the market. Instead, they would each have a clearly defined place in a status hierarchy and would always be more refined, a bit “classier” with a higher price, than competitor products in each market segment.

This memo about market policy was much more than the now familiar market segmentation and value proposition for each segment. Sloan did something much more important by defining GM’s central purpose as creating an aspirational escalator for every customer through the life cycle, from the used Chevrolet as their first purchase to the fancy Cadillac as their last (often concluding with a Cadillac hearse on the way to the cemetery!) And it worked brilliantly. General Motors was probably never as efficient in production as Ford and it was rarely a technology leader. But it provided a clear product pathway on the customer’s life journey. Customers embraced this purpose and opened their wallets to pay higher prices for more refined products within each market segment. Within a few years of Sloan’s memo GM had became the largest and most successful corporation in the world and in the history of the world.

Moving forward to the present moment, it is saddening to read the viability plan GM recently proposed to the US Automotive Task Force. With the exception of the plug hybrid Volt (an unproven technology for an unproven market to be produced at tiny volume in the early years), the plan is entirely about “restructuring” and shrinking, about what General Motors isn’t. It isn’t Saab or Hummer or Saturn. It won’t have nearly as large a dealer network. It isn’t a manufacturer with a significant North American footprint outside of Michigan and Ohio. Etc.

The natural instinct of senior managers in any crisis is to restructure and downsize. But the question is always, “Restructure and downsize toward what?” No customer cares about a company’s structure. No customer cares about downsizing. Customers only care about a company solving their problems along life’s path.

So here’s my advice to new GM CEO Fritz Henderson or whoever may follow after him. Before you restructure, restate GM’s purpose. Today no one knows. Do it in a simple memo. Indeed, do it in a single-page A3 format. Sloan needed three pages in 1921, so practice continuous improvement to get down to one! And remember that no amount of restructuring without a clear and compelling purpose will save this stricken giant (or any other failing enterprise.)

Best regards,
Jim

James P. Womack
Founder and Chairman
Lean Enterprise Institute

P.S. Toyota has gotten off lighter than GM in the current crisis, but it faces the same confusion about purpose. Until the mid-1990s the clear purpose of Toyota was to be the best organization in the world at providing refined, durable “value” products in all market segments with few delivered defects to customers. The assumption was that growth would naturally follow, and it did. But then the purpose seems to have shifted to becoming the biggest auto company as rapidly as possible by adding capacity everywhere, a purpose that no customer cares about. At the same time competitors, led by Hyundai, have closed the gap on Toyota’s original purpose and everyone is doing hybrids where Toyota initially took the lead. An A3 on re-purposing Toyota is surely what new president Akio Toyoda needs as well. My fear is that he will only focus on cost reduction and restructuring.

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Written by:

James (Jim) Womack, PhD

About James (Jim) Womack, PhD

Widely considered the father of the lean movement, Womack has been talking and publishing about creating value through continuous innovation around deep customer understanding for many years. In the late eighties, he and Dan Jones led MIT’s International Motor Vehicle Research Program (IMVP), which introduced the term “lean” to describe…

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