Leveraging Advantage
Far too often, corporate executives fall prey to the cult of startups. Sure, a smart young company with a new bold new idea is exciting and glamourous, but success takes a lot of luck. Ambition, skill and bravado are never enough. Once you make it, you end up having many of the same problems of those corporate behemoths that you used to condemn.
It’s true that small, agile firms can move fast, but larger enterprises have the luxury of going slow. They have loyal customers and an abundance of resources. They can see past the next hot trend and invest for the long term. The next truly big thing never emerges whole from a flash of insight or a brainstorming meeting. It takes years of painstaking work.
IBM and Microsoft are unusual in that they both invest in basic research. That allows them to explore horizons 5, 10 and 20 years out. It’s also why both are thriving concerns even today, long after their initial markets have declined. Blockbuster’s management found a way to make retail stores, which many assumed to be a liability, into a valuable asset.
Established enterprises don’t get anywhere by wishing they could operate like startups. The key to success in any business is leveraging the assets you do have instead of whining about the ones you don’t.