Beat the odds with a bold strategy
We've all seen hockey stick business plans before. A future where results sail confidently upward, but with a dip coinciding with next year's budget.
CEOs usually rely on their experience and business smarts to figure out which of those hockey sticks are real, and which are fake. But all too often getting to a "yes," competing for resources, and striving to claim credit, cloud the hard decisions. Another strategy framework? No thanks, we already have plenty of those, and they don't fix the real problem: the social dynamics in your strategy room.
Mining the data from thousands of large companies, McKinsey Partners Chris Bradley, Martin Hirt and Sven Smit open the windows of that room, and bring an "outside view." They found three discrete groups of companies: the bottom quintile with massive economic losses; the long, flat, middle 60 percent with practically no economic profit; and the top 20 percent to whom all the value accrues.
Some companies do achieve real hockey stick performance: but just 1-in-12 jump from the middle tier to the top over a ten year period. This does not happen by magic--there is an empirically-backed science to improve your odds of success by capitalizing on your endowment, riding the right trends, and most importantly, making a few big moves.
To make these big moves happen, you're going to have to break through inertia, gamesmanship and risk aversion. You're going to have to mitigate human biases and manage group dynamics. Eight practical shifts can help you do this, and unlock bigger, bolder, better strategies.
This is not another by-the-book approach to strategy. It's not another trudge through frameworks or small-scale case studies promising a secret formula for success. It's an irreverent, fact-driven, and humorous take on the real world of strategic decision making.
PRAISE FOR STRATEGY BEYOND THE HOCKEY STICK
> ?JANE FRASER, CEO, Citigroup Latin America
> ?MARTIN LAU, President, Tencent Technology
> ?FRANS VAN HOUTEN, CEO, Royal Philips N.V.
"Sustaining institutions long-term often means determining what must evolve. Strategy Beyond the Hockey Stick provides a roadmap for strategic evolution and a toolkit for identifying big moves that will take already strong organizations to the next level of performance."
?WENDELL WEEKS, Chairman and CEO, Corning Incorporated
"Every once in a while, a genuinely fresh approach to business strategy appears. Strategy Beyond the Hockey Stick delivers exactly that. Its analysis of the human elements in strategy-making?social, psychological, and political?cuts to the heart of why most strategies are banal and fail to focus action. If you want to break out of the rut, get this book."
?PROF. RICHARD RUMELT, UCLA Anderson School of Management
"The great contribution of this book is that it joins the 'hard data' side to the equally crucial?and largely ignored?arena of social dynamics and human leadership. It is this rare combo of the 'hard' and the 'soft' that makes Strategy Beyond the Hockey Stick so distinctive."
?PROF. ROBERT KEGAN, Harvard Graduate School of Education