IndustryWeek.com
Leadership in Manufacturing
ADVERTISE  |   NEWSLETTERS  |   RSS  IndustryWeek magazine
FORUMS  |   VIDEOS  |   WEBINARS  |   WHITE PAPERS  |   EVENTS
IndustryWeek Forums  

Go Back   IndustryWeek Forums > IndustryWeek Blogs > MFG 2.0

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 2/16/2009, 01:06 AM
Brad Kenney Brad Kenney is offline
Contributing Editor
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 362
Brad Kenney is quite profitable
Default MBA 101: Four Ways To Power Through A Downturn

Donald Sull, a professor at the London Business School and an all around smart guy (see his website here), recently wrote an article in the Financial Times that urges managers to focus on the following four priorities during a downturn: instill ongoing cost discipline, force hard choices, accelerate fundamental changes and seize golden opportunities.

The whole thing is worth the read (here's a pdf link) but for the short (blog) version, here's a few examples to which manufacturers can relate.

Toyota: The Japanese automaker powered out of a downturn in 1950 by using an especially receptive workforce to negotiate fundamental changes in work practices and pioneered the Toyota Production System. They also recognized that "no company is an island," and extended this flexibility and engagement to its suppliers (who were also especially receptive at the time). Most crucially, says Sull, the company continued to use and refine these practices once the market picked back up, instead of returning to fat/happydom.

Nokia: You might not remember that Nokia used to be a diversifiedconglomerate. Facing a steep downturn, Nokia’s executives "bet the farm" on the burgeoning telecom business (which then only accounted for 10% of revenues). However, they offset that specialization by diversifying within telecom, for example manufacturing everything from handsets to telecom infrastructure equipment.

Cisco: The high-tech company was nearly flattened by the dot.com implosion, but the management team "forced the hard choices at many levels including reducing suppliers from 1,300 to 420, halving the number of channel partners, discontinuing the bottom third of products, streamlining R&D, and tightening the process for acquisitions."

Samsung: Leadership made some tough decisions through two separate downturns in order to grow from a Korean to a global company -- even though it meant divestment of long-standing, profitable businesses such as sugar and paper processes, because they couldn't give the firm global leadership. He also set his team's sights higher and began benchmarking his divisions against global market leaders, which is probably a much harder change to push through when things are going downhill than when sales are climbing.
__________________
Visit the Manufacturing 2.0 home page for more news, insight and opinion on this topic.
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 2/17/2009, 02:58 PM
Dr Stan Dr Stan is offline
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 16
Dr Stan is on the way to success
Default Re: MBA 101: Four Ways To Power Through A Downturn

While I agree with the points, the title “MBA 101” is inappropriate. It’s the B School grads who got us in this mess with their absolute single focus on the bottom line for the next quarterly report. Long term/strategic thinking is not part of their resumes.
Reply With Quote
Reply

Tags
economic meltdown, economic recovery, manufacturing, marketing

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
China Should Use 'Concentrating Solar Power' Adrienne Selko Reader Talk-Back 3 11/21/2008 01:25 AM
Power Outage In The Corridors Of Power Brad Kenney MFG 2.0 2 2/7/2008 08:15 PM
Are We Power-Hungry, Or Just Lazy? Brad Kenney MFG 2.0 0 5/14/2007 10:15 AM
The Power Of Chocolate: An Energy Solution? Frank Chloupek The Lighter Side 1 7/18/2006 01:19 PM
Downturn Reasserts Itself Michael Evans Politics & The Economy 0 1/31/2006 09:58 PM


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:28 PM.


Copyright© 1998-2009 Penton Media, Inc. All rights reserved.

Add To del.icio.us  del.icio.us
Digg this  Digg this
Googleize this post  Googleize
Save to Newsvine  Newsvine
Add to reddit  reddit
Add to MyWeb  Yahoo MyWeb