Showing posts with label Influence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Influence. Show all posts

Thursday, 4 June 2009

Phoenix or Leopard?

This morning the New York Times made the most promising noises yet, that the recession may be about to end. Unemployment is down, house prices are rising, productivity is up; all positive indications that things are improving. President Obama gave a stirring speech in Cairo committing to greater efforts for peace. GM’s Chief has told Congress “it’s our obligation to be open and transparent in all we do to reinvent G.M.”

It seems that we are on the brink of a new era. New thinking, new goals, new plans….change. A chance for us all to make that ‘New Year’s resolution”. Who of us has consistently stuck to their resolutions?

So there is the rub. What has business learned over the last 18 months and what will be the commitment to be different in the future?

The meaning of the phoenix in Mitchell Phoenix is derived from ancient mythology; the sacred firebird. The phoenix is a bird with beautiful gold and red plumage. At the end of its life-cycle the phoenix builds itself a nest of cinnamon twigs that it then ignites; both nest and bird burn fiercely and are reduced to ashes, from which a new, young phoenix arises. The bird was also said to regenerate when hurt or wounded by a foe, thus being almost immortal and invincible. The phoenix is a symbol of rebirth, regeneration and renewal.

If we view the recent past as a cathartic experience, emerging purged and refreshed, we have tremendous opportunities to be even stronger as a business. We can seize the moment to Govern Change, pro-actively operating in different ways at higher levels. It is also possible to let out a huge sigh of relief as we emerge from the bunker into watery sunlight, hand shielding the eyes, squinting at the sky. “Right! Where were we?” is the first phrase spoken on the road ahead.

What is the old saying about a leopard and spots? Be a phoenix instead.

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Thursday, 16 April 2009

Off Track: How Many of the Tech 100 Will Survive?

When the Sunday Times Microsoft Tech Track 100 was published in September last year, Lehman Brothers had just collapsed, $85 billion had been spent bailing out AIG, and the UK government was just over a week away from announcing their £400 billion rescue plan for the British banking system.

Against an economic background like this the unspoken question was: which of these companies will still be in the top 100 next time around?

Many of these businesses are growing fast because they have a powerful idea which they have made into a profitable business. To maintain their momentum, especially in a recession, they will need more ideas – about both their core business and also about how they run the rapidly growing organization which has built up around it.

“When companies grow to a certain size,” says Kevin Yates, Managing Director of Mitchell Phoenix, “they can no longer rely on a handful of individuals at the top of the company for all of their innovative thinking. They need to create a culture of innovation and the capability to implement those new ideas throughout the whole business.”

Yates argues this is even more important during a recession. “In difficult times the quality of ideas can make or break a business,” he explains, “after all, ideas and the ability to put them into practice is all that separates companies from their competition. Now is the time to ensure that your business is set up to foster and implement innovative thinking.”

When faced with recession in the early 1990s Microsoft, which now sponsors the Tech Track 100, invested in developing the culture and the people within the organization.

“Mitchell Phoenix did extensive work on individual and team capability and performance development,” comments David Burrows, Managing Director in Government Industry at Microsoft. “There was a good focus on delivering usable value to the business, and a willingness to adjust to accommodate client need.”

“Microsoft understood that it was important to place innovation and the implementation of new ideas at the centre of their culture,” says Yates. “They knew that a high performance environment is only developed consciously and deliberately, and they set out to do just that. In many ways this was one of the foundation stones for their success.”

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