How the Mighty Fall: And Why Some Companies Never Give In
D**R
Hubris before the fall . . .
The silent creep of impending doom is the title Collins chose for the first chapter in this excellent review of how companies go astray. As usual, Collins did an in depth research to discover why companies fail and how that failure is shaped. He determined that there are five stages of decline for an organization:* Stage 1 is characterized by hubris born of success* Stage 2 is marked by undisciplined pursuit of more* Stage 3 is the peak of ascendancy and characterized by denial of risk and peril* Stage 4 begins the precipitous decline with the organization grasping for salvation* Stage 5 is the final capitulation to being irrelevant or accepting deathCollins points out that a company does not have to go through all stages of decline, they can determine when they are in decline and can turn things around with some effort and attention. He also points out that not all companies deserve to survive; it's good that some fail. To make his case on the stages of decline and the results, Collins has provided many examples from companies we might know.What stands out most in this book is how we can see that in our very success lie the seeds of our own demise. It makes Andy Grove's view of "only the paranoid survive" one that makes sense. If we are always concerned and afraid that we won't make it to the next year and that competitors are about to best us and customers abandon us then we are not too likely to become victims of hubris and excess. We can learn from that attitude.As an example of Stage 1, Collins recounts the track Motorola is on from about 1983 through the 1990's explaining that their success in growing the company from $5 Billion to $27 Billion lead to arrogance and neglect. He also traced Circuit City's demise and drives home the point that our very success leads us to be blind to the things going on around us. This is true of individuals and organizations of all makes, models and sizes!Collins provides the following as "markers" for Stage 1:* Success entitlement, arrogance* Neglect of a primary flywheel* "What" replaces "Why"* Decline in learning orientation* Discounting the role of luckIn the chapter on Stage 2, Collins discusses Ames and its undisciplined pursuit of growth starting with the acquisition of Zayers. Here he makes the distinction between overreaching and complacency. Collins points out that of the cases he studied only one had a clear cut case of complacency and that was A&P in retail. Because the acquisition of Zayers, Ames destroyed the momentum it had built up over a decade. Meanwhile, WallMart was minding its "p's and q's," relentlessly building its stores across the country. One followed their plan and was content to manage growth, the other was intent on growth for the sake of growth and overreached to the point of failure.Collins provides the following as "markers" for Stage 2:* Unsustainable Quest for Growth, confusing big with great* Undisciplined discontinuous leaps* Declining proportion of right people in key seats* Easy cash erodes cost discipline* Bureaucracy subverts discipline* Problematic succession of power* Personal interests placed above the organizational interestsMotorola makes another appearance in Stage 3. This time it is for making big bets in the face of mounting evidence that you're going in the wrong direction. But Motorola was intent on establishing satellite telephone (recall Iridium?) and disregarded all the signs that they were attacking a market that didn't exist - full on denial of risk and peril. Collins warns "audacious goal stimulate progress, but big bets without empirical validation, or that fly in the face of mounting evidence, can bring companies down, unless they're blessed with unusual luck. And luck is not a reliable strategy."In addition, Collins reviewed the issue with Challenger. "Can you prove that it's safe to launch?" was the traditional guide for a launch decision. However, the frame had inverted to "Can you prove that it's unsafe to launch." If NASA had not made that frame shift, or if the data had been absolutely definitive, Challenger very likely would have remained on the launch pad until later in the day.Collins provides the following as "markers" for Stage 3:* Amplify the positive, discount the negative* Big bets and bold goals without empirical validation* Incurring huge downside risk based on ambiguous data* Erosion of healthy team dynamics* Externalizing blame* Obsessive reorganization* Imperious detachmentAfter a successful run from 1992 through 1998, HP's CEO Lew Platt found himself being described as "struggling, perhaps even failing," as the company ran into the Internet economy. Fiorina joined HP and created a real sense of urgency. They were embarking on a Stage 4 decline where they were grasping for salvation. As a contrast, Collins brings up the Gerstner years at IBM. Gerstner took his time, analyzed what needed to be done, steadily increased profitability and revenues. Fiorina admitted in her book, Tough Choices, "I was in a hurry . . . ." Collins advises that we, "Breathe. Calm yourself. Think. Focus. Aim. Take one shot at a time." He identifies the following as "markers" for Stage 4:* A series of silver bullets* Grasping for a leader-as-savior* Panic and haste* Radical change and "revolution" with fanfare* Hype precedes results* Confusion and cynicism* Chronic restructuring and erosion of financial strengthStage 5 is characterized as being "Capitulation to irrelevance or Death." It's important to remember that a company can be profitable and bankrupt. The case study here is Scott Paper who fell so far behind P&G and Kimberly-Clark that it had little choice but to take on huge debt to reinvest in a series of last-gasp efforts to catch up. The board hired Al Dunlop who slashed 11,000 jobs including more than 70% of upper management.Collins makes it clear that no company they studied was destined to fall all the way through Stage 5. There is hope because companies have figured out that they were headed for disaster and then turned things around. It means a quick culture change, overcoming the panic, the desire for quick fixes, silver bullets and denial of the reality of the situation.This is a must read book for those in leadership and management positions.
J**I
Not as good as others from JC
Just a simple description not quite deep.
K**S
Great book, quick read
This was suggested for a business class, but I enjoyed the book. It was a nice quick read. I am now getting the rest of Jim Collins’ books
J**H
Every leader should read this
On the plane ride back from Seattle the other day, I read Jim Collins latest book How the Mighty Fall. I've always been a huge fan of his work and this one is no different. While all his stuff is written for businesses, there are a ton of applications for churches.In this book, Collins seeks to answer what leaders, companies and churches can learn from the failure of others. Is there a time that you can see a company is about to fail? Is there a path they all take? How do you know when a company/church full of energy, innovation and momentum, is there a time you know they are on the road to falling? Are there clearly distinguishable stages of decline? If so, can you spot the decline early? Are there telltale markers? Can you reverse decline, and if so, how? Is there a point of no return?The reality is that according to Collins, "There are more ways to fall than to become great."History shows that churches go through phases of this like companies do. The largest churches 50 years ago, many of them don't exist anymore or are no longer the largest, most effective churches. What happened? For many of those churches, the same as the companies that Collins talks about. They had no succession plan for leadership, they didn't develop leaders from within, and the big one, they became complex and got away from the thing they did best.The best example in the book of this was the difference between Best Buy and Circuit City. Circuit City was once the standard in that industry, but they diversified and got away from their primary flywheel, the thing they did best. Churches have the tendency to do this as they grow. They add ministries, all good things, but it often takes away from the thing that is their primary flywheel, the thing God is blessing the most, the thing they have been called to do. Staying focused and simple is incredibly difficult. According to Collins, one of the telltale signs of a company that fell was not complacency, but stemmed more from overreaching.What churches do is they are effective in something, so they add to it. They think success comes from doing things instead of asking the important question of "Do we know why we are successful, effective or healthy?" Churches are guilty of holding up practices and methods instead of the principles or theology behind what makes them effective. We have to do discipleship a certain way. The music has to be _________. We have to have this ministry or that program, even though it hasn't been effective in decades. What if instead of holding on to practices that aren't effective, we look at the principles to those practices, the Biblical practices churches are commanded to embody and live those out?As Collins points out, "The best leaders know the why behind practices and effectiveness." They are always searching for the why, followed by the how. Yet, most pastors seek the how, followed by the why.The last thing pastors can learn is have a sense of urgency. Companies that fell often lost their sense of urgency. I meet so many pastors, and church planters that do not have a sense of urgency. We, more than CEO's should have a sense of urgency. We are talking about the gospel, heaven and hell, eternity. This should keep us awake at night. Churches should be the most urgent organizations on the planet.Overall, as with Collins other books, high marks. Every leader should read everything he writes.For more reviews, see[...]
R**T
If you are in business, a book that is almost a must-read
It is difficult to think that you might read a business book that can change your life, but this book might just do that - your business life, that is. I recently bought Collins' Good to Great, but saw this and decided to read it first. Having started a business in 2004 and a second, subsidiary business just over a year ago, I wanted to find ways in which to better react to what are difficult times, with recession and a whole lot of changes and avoid the temptation just to pack it all in and retire. Collins describes 5 steps or stages of decline: Hubris born of success; Undisciplined pursuit of more; Denial of risk and peril; Grasping for salvation and lastly, Capitulation to irrelevance or death. Even over a period of 10 years, I have seen my own business go through the first four stages and am only just beginning to see some green shoots of regeneration. The book, far from being doom and gloom, offers advice and positive steps, with good examples, for how to counter risks at every stage: obviously the further down the slipery slope you are, the harder it will be to recover, but not impossible and this is the point of the book - how to start to become great again. I found myself marking pages and returning to different sections of the book and using it it to plan, train and retrain myself and others into a different way of thinking. I have read and studied many books on business and management: while much is useful, even illuminating, few have the impact, for me at least, of this book. Counter-intuitively, a book about how companies fail, might just be the thing to ensure against failure, identify with ones own mistakes and make sure they will not be repeated. If you are in business and in tough times, I heartily recommend this book: if you are enjoying good times, you might just benefit also: a great read.
K**R
Strategic planning
Book used as a basis for new corporate strategic planning with Jim Collins being a trusted source and guide. Recommended.Duplicate purchase and whilst refund request was approved and book returned, seller never refunded account.
D**E
Another Collins classic
I love this book and all other Jim Collins stuff. He studied businesses and if you're into business this is a must read.
S**.
A great read
Informative and easy to read as most of the Collins books are.
A**.
Interesting book
Interesting book.
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