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Key Takeaways
- Strategic inflection point – a time in the life of a business when its fundamentals are about to change. Every strategic inflection point is characterized by a 10x change and each 10x change leads to a strategic inflection point
- A bit of a misnomer as it is not a single point, rather a long, tortuous strugle
- Understanding the nature of strategic inflections points and what to do about them will help you safeguard your company’s well being
- Action after review – immediately review your decisions/actions and learn from them. What could you have done differently, better, earlier, etc.
- Middle manager tend to be the first people in the business to realize that the rules of the game are changing
- Everybody needs to expose themselves to the winds of change – expose selves to customers,
- Six forces affecting a business – competitors, suppliers, customers, potential customers, substitutes, the force of complementors
- Transitions in business have no party, no celebration, they are subtle, gradual changes
- Difficult/impossible to know “right” steps to take in these situations, judgement and instinct are all you have
- As an industry becomes more competitive, companies are forced to retreat to their strongholds and specialize in order to become world class in whatever segment they end up occupying
- By learning from the painful experiences of others, we can improve our ability to recognize a strategic inflection point that’s about to affect us. And that’s half the battle
- Whether a company is a winner or a loser depends a large part on its degree of adaptability
- No surefire way to determine what is a signal or simply noise
- Is your key competitor about to change?
- Is your key complementor about to change?
- Do people seem to be “losing it” around you?
- Cassandras – early warning system
- Avoid the trap of the first version – can’t judge the significance of strategic inflection points by the quality of the first version
- Broad and intensive debate the most important tool to draw out strategic inflection points
- Fear, fear of speaking out, voicing your opinion, debating bosses, etc., may be the most detrimental culture within a company
- How management reacts emotionally to a crisis is one of the best tellers for how the company will deal with strategic inflection points
- Inertia of success – senior people in a company have gotten where they are due to some characteristics but some of these characteristics may hold them back and cause them to fail during a strategic inflection point
- Takes a strong person to admit the magnitude of the problem you are struggling with
- Strategic dissonance – saying one thing and doing another
- Must form a mental image of what the company will look like when you “get to the other side” – clear, crisp so you can communicate it to others. Must also define what the company will not be
- For anybody, but especially mangers, how you spend your time has enormous symbolic value
- The most effective way to transform a company is through a series of incremental changes that are consistent with a clearly articulated end result
- Your tendency will almost always be to wait too long to take action. Being an early movers entails risks but the rewards often outweigh the risks
- Take one major task on at a time – doing one thing well requires all your focus and energy
- Only the paranoid survive – people are always chasing you so commit to one direction and run as fast as you can
- The greatest danger is standing still
- Almost impossible to over communicate or oversimplify – especially with large groups. Don’t worry, you’re not repeating yourself, your reinforcing the strategic message
- You can’t change a company without changing its management
- Avoid random motion
- Improvement almost always only comes through small, consistent steps with clarity and conviction
- Looking back is tempting but terribly counterproductive
What I got out of it
- Interesting and telling story of Andy Grove and Intel – the battles they went through, how many times they could have gone out of business or missed a major trend. Really good lessons for anybody in the business world
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