August, 2002
Financial Services
Industry Newsletter
Strategies for Success

How Good Companies
Become Great
Last week I was in Key West for a seven days of fishing,
diving and relaxing. I had my summer reading with me -- an old Ludlam
thriller, the latest Elmore Leonard mystery, and Jim Collins' book,
Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap...and Others Don't.
Think about some
of the lessons from this book as you start developing your strategic
plans for 2003 and beyond.
Collins evaluated
the 15 year performance of over 1,400 companies to select those which
had grown from average -- or even mediocre -- performance to achieve
industry leading growth in revenue and ROE. These were average
companies which ended up delivering long term cumulative stock returns
6.9 times the market (that's double the performance of GE under Jack
Welch, which many considered to be the best led company in America).
He, and his
research team, tried to assess the managerial and leadership criteria
that enabled these companies to make the leap from just good, to great
performance. Here are just a few of the key findings -- they should not
be a surprise to our clients, or readers of past
newsletters:
-
Get
the right people on the bus.
If you don't have the right people
(skills, motivation, leadership) to accomplish your objectives, you
are bound to fail.
-
Be
realistic, or as Collins
states, "confront the brutal facts". Then make the changes necessary,
or assign the resources required, to accomplish your goal.
-
Focus. This is where we see
many institutions fail. Great companies organize around a core
competency they can perform better than their competition, which is
key to their economic model, and which ignites the passion of their
employees. Too many companies try to pursue many ends -- many good
ideas -- at the same time, and never become great at any one of them.
-
Build a culture of execution.
We've said this before: the best performing organizations implement
rapidly and effectively. Good ideas, good intentions, are of no value
if they can't be effectively executed.
So...why not be the
best. The best division in your company? The best bank in your market?
The best mortgage company in the US?
Please give us your
feedback.
David Kerstein is
President of Peak Performance Consulting Group®.
