Your Choice of Focus Makes a Big Difference in Accomplishing 20 Times as Much
by Donald Mitchell
Many people choose what to work on solely based on their enthusiasm for the subject. For example, salespeople may feel more energized by redesigning the compensation system than they do by finding more leads. Why? The compensation system shift can increase their pay from the current effort. There's no necessary connection between finding more leads and any personal benefit. But in an organization that has too few leads, finding lots of good leads could create more compensation gains than changing the compensation system. You have to watch out for what will help you achieve the most at an individual level before picking a 2,000 percent solution focus.
The same problem applies to entire organizations. Leaders need to fully consider potential benefits before selecting a focus as well. Let's consider an example of how the choice of creating a 2,000 percent solution can make a large positive or negative difference for an organization. In Apple Computer's early days, the organization set its focus on having a superior operating system and user features that would make it very appealing to do advanced computing on an Apple Macintosh. For many years after the IBM PC standard was set, users consistently reported preferences for Apple's offerings. The only aspect where the PC standard did well compared to Apple was in having more application software available for PCs. Microsoft was a much smaller company at the same time, and also had an objective of providing a superior operating system for personal computers. Microsoft focused its attention on improving its software and the frequency of upgrades in creating its 2,000 percent solutions for its computer users. Apple continued to work on all aspects of computing that affected its hardware or software. If Apple instead had selected the Microsoft focus, Apple could have chosen to make its proprietary operating system work on the PC standard as well. Microsoft would have continued to do well on IBM-built personal computers, but Apple could have gained leadership with most of the clone PC makers who soon dominated the market. If successful in that focus, Apple would now be the world's most valuable company and would probably have stopped providing its own computing hardware.
As you can see from this example, it's important for organizations to think about the benefits that current customers and stakeholders receive. But it's even more important to think about the benefits that potential stakeholders will obtain as well. In addition, how will your change affect the competitive balance in the market place? Can you, like Apple might have, cut off a powerful future competitor by concentrating your focus where it will do you the most good?
Copyright 2007 Donald W. Mitchell, All Rights Reserved
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