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Replacing old-Fashioned Infrastructures and the Power of Identity
Two new titles from marketing pioneer yoram (Jerry) Wind and organizational design guru John Kimberly
Competing in a Flat World: Building Enterprises for a Borderless World
By Victor K. Fung, William K. Fung and Yoram (Jerry) Wind
In the “flat world,” success is less about
what the company can do itself and
more about what it can connect to. In Competing in a Flat World: Building
Enterprises for a Borderless World, Victor
and William Fung team with Jerry
Wind, author of the best-selling The
Power of Impossible Thinking, to reveal
how “old-fashioned” infrastructures and
huge employee bases can be replaced with fluid, ever-changing networks that
can design, manufacture, and deliver
almost anything, anywhere.
The authors provide specifics from
the company that pioneered “flat
world” success, Li & Fung, which produces
more than $8 billion in garments
and other goods for the world’s top
brands and retailers—without owning
a single factory.
Success in this world is based on a
set of principles that are based on Li
& Fung’s “network orchestration,” described
for the first time in Competing
in a Flat World. The authors examine
how these principles can be applied in
manufacturing, services and other industries, and make the case that networked,
global enterprises—from
Wikipedia to open-source software to
manufacturing supply chains—are
fluid and complex. These network orchestration
principles are what holds
these loosely linked enterprises together,
allowing companies to balance
firm-centric and network-centric views
and build value through specialization.
Li & Fung’s experience with companies
such as Ecko Unlimited, The
Limited and Gymboree are highlighted
throughout the book as examples
of how to employ this strategy.
Examples from companies such as eBay,
Wikipedia, Boeing, and Build-A-Bear
Workshop further demonstrate the
orchestration model.
Co-author Victor K. Fung is the
Group Chairman of the Li & Fung
group of companies, which includes
major subsidiaries in trading, distribution
and retailing, including
publicly listed Li & Fung Limited,
Integrated Distribution Services
Group Limited and Convenience
Retail Asia. He also is chairman of
the Greater Pearl River Delta Business
Council, the Hong Kong Airport
Authority and the Hong Kong
University Council.
William K. Fung is Group Managing Director of Li & Fung
Limited, and has held key positions in
major trade and business associations.
He is the past chairman of the Hong
Kong General Chamber of Commerce,
the Hong Kong Exporters’ Association
and the Hong Kong Committee for
Pacific Economic Cooperation Council
(PECC). Fung is a member of the
Trade Development Council.
Yoram (Jerry) Wind is the Lauder
Professor and Professor of Marketing
at Wharton. He joined the Wharton
faculty in 1967, with a doctorate from
Stanford University. He is founding
director of the SEI Center for
Advanced Studies in Management,
the founding academic director of
the Wharton Fellows Program and
founding editor of Wharton School
Publishing. He has published more
than 250 papers and articles and over
20 books including The Power of
Impossible Thinking in 2005. Wind has
consulted and conducted research for
more than 100 companies.
The Soul of the Corporation: How to Manage the Identity of Your Company
By Hamid Bouchikhi and John r. Kimberly
In the burgeoning Age of Identity, competitive
advantage is shifting from what
a product is to the identity of the firm
that markets it. More than ever, a firm’s
identity shapes the results it can achieve. The Soul of the Corporation: How to
Manage the Identity of Your Company by Hamid Bouchikhi and John R.
Kimberly offers managers a systematic,
accessible, management-oriented way to
understand, control and leverage their
organization’s identity.
Drawing on stories from organizations
such as McDonald’s, Lenovo,
Ford and the Catholic Church, The
Soul of the Corporation argues that while
identity can be an extraordinarily valuable asset, it can also become a huge liability
if not managed well. Using the
strategies illustrated by the authors,
managers will discover how their organization’s
identity is related to and
different from its organizational culture,
brand positioning and reputation.
Methods for managing the unconscious
shared beliefs that give an organization
coherence as well as how to face the
identity challenges that arise in mergers,
alliances, spin-offs and acquisitions
are also addressed.
The Soul of the Corporation offers business leaders a set of actionable ideas
and guidelines that can be used to enhance
their ability to diagnose and
manage identity issues. Business leaders
should be aware of the following,
for instance:
- Be sure that the organizational
identity projected through branding
efforts is real. If it is not real, if it is
mere sloganeering, competitors or
other unfriendly stakeholders may
turn these branding efforts against
you. Failure to observe this rule
has exposed the British Petroleum
Company (BP) and its top management
to a storm of criticism
since the 2005 explosion at the
Texas City, Texas, refinery where
15 workers lost their lives.
- Ensure the consistency of corporate
branding efforts targeted at various
stakeholders. The risk of adapting
each message to its recipients is
that multiple, and sometimes conflicting,
images may be projected,
leading to confusion in the marketplace.
- Carefully align your own behavior
and decisions with the organizational
identity claims you make inside and
outside the firm.
- Strive to realize synergies between
handling identity at the level of the
organization as a whole as well as at
the level of individual brands under
which your firm’s products and services
are marketed.
Co-author Hamid Bouchikhi is a
professor of strategy and management
and the director of the New Business
Center at ESSEC Business School
in Cergy-Pontoise, France. John R.
Kimberly is the Henry Bower Professor
of Entrepreneurial Studies at Wharton
as well as professor of management,
health care systems and sociology.
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