The definitive management ideas of the year from
Harvard Business Review.
2017
HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW PRESS
Boston, Massachusetts
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Contents
Copyright
Editorsâ Note
Collaborative Overload
by Rob Cross, Reb Rebele, and Adam Grant
Algorithms Need Managers, Too
by Michael Luca, Jon Kleinberg, and Sendhil Mullainathan
Pipelines, Platforms, and the New Rules of Strategy
by Marshall W. Van Alstyne, Geoffrey G. Parker, and Sangeet Paul Choudary
What Is Disruptive Innovation?
by Clayton M. Christensen, Michael Raynor, and Rory McDonald
How Indra Nooyi Turned Design Thinking into Strategy
An interview with Indra Nooyi by Adi Ignatius
Engineering Reverse Innovations
by Amos Winter and Vijay Govindarajan
The Employer-Led Health Care Revolution
by Patricia A. McDonald, Robert S. Mecklenburg, MD, and Lindsay A. Martin
Getting to SĂ, Ja, Oui, Hai, and Da
by Erin Meyer
The Limits of Empathy
by Adam Waytz
People Before Strategy: A New Role for the CHRO
by Ram Charan, Dominic Barton, and Dennis Carey
Beyond Automation
by Thomas H. Davenport and Julia Kirby
About the Contributors
Index
Editorsâ Note
âPeople are the ultimate source of sustainable competitive differentiation,â write Ram Charan, Dominic Barton, and Dennis Carey in their article âPeople Before Strategy: A New Role for the CHRO.â But it may not always be so. Take the growing tension between man and machine: To what extent will knowledge workersâ jobs be replaced by smart products? What is the role of a human professional in a world of big data and predictive algorithms?
In this volume we showcase this and other critical themes highlighted by our authors from the past year of Harvard Business Review. Many of these articles stress the continued need to elevate employeesâ work to new levels and unleash their innovative energy. Our authors explore big trends in businessâlike the increased focus on collaboration and empathyâthat emphasize distinctly human skills. Executives and academics alike reengage with design thinking, explaining how to build products, processes, and platforms around usersâ experiences. Other authors highlight the need to retool models and metrics for a world where human interactions have become the major source of value. All these ideas highlight that even as technology marches forward, human knowledge and expertise remain critical to strategy and performance.
We begin this collection with a piece that studies how individuals work together. Collaboration has become a hot topic in recent years, and indeed it offers organizations a host of benefits. But it also poses risks: The most productive contributors often burn out from carrying the weight of their teams. In âCollaborative Overload,â professors and researchers Rob Cross, Reb Rebele, and Adam Grant present practical ways to manage collaboration effectivelyâby redistributing work evenly and rewarding efficient effortsâfor high performance without exhaustion.
Like collaboration, big data provides organizations with tremendous opportunityâbut also has its limitations. In âAlgorithms Need Managers, Too,â professors Michael Luca, Jon Kleinberg, and Sendhil Mullainathan explain what questions algorithms canâand canâtâanswer, so companies will be able to use them more effectively. While algorithms can identify patterns in data and generate insights at incredible speed and scale, the authors illustrate, through examples from Netflix movie recommendations to Google ads, how algorithms can also produce unintended consequences if designed too literally or without accounting for all critical goals. It takes managerial know-how to clarify cause and effect, identify risks, and make important decisions.
Our next piece, âPipelines, Platforms, and the New Rules of Strategy,â redefines strategic advantage. For years managers have relied on Michael Porterâs five forces model of competition. But with platform businesses such as Uber and Alibaba, the distinctions among the forces are less clear, and new competitive factors come into play. Itâs now imperative to understand ânetwork effectsââto facilitate interactions between consumers and producers, and to incorporate those interactions into metrics of success. In this article professors Marshall W. Van Alstyne and Geoffrey G. Parker and executive adviser Sangeet Paul Choudary explain the new keys to competitive advantage and how traditional pipeline companies can develop the core competencies to survive in a platform world.
Porterâs five forces isnât the only classic management concept to be reexamined in HBR this year. Two decades ago Clayton M. Christensen introduced the theory of disruptive innovation, but since then, journalists, researchers, and business practitioners have misinterpreted its concepts and misapplied its principles. Uber, for instance, has been highlighted as a shining star of disruption, but does it truly fit the definition? In âWhat Is Disruptive Innovation?â Christensen and his coauthors, Michael Raynor and Rory McDonald, provide a primer on the theory, explain how it has evolved, and correct common misperceptions. Their article will help managers to understand how firms innovate successfully and to predict which new models will succeed.
The next piece is an interview with a top business leader: âHow Indra Nooyi Turned Design Thinking into Strategy.â HBR editor-in-chief Adi Ignatius asks the CEO of PepsiCo hard-hitting questions about how the company is using design to improve products and customer experiences. Moving beyond the basics of color choice on labels, Pepsi has examined how different segments of its customer base are responding to and using its products. Nooyiâs story is less of a tale of product design, however, and more about managing change in an organization while creating a platform that encourages customer interaction.
Identifying and understanding the needs of customersâthis time, consumers in the developing worldâis a key element of Amos Winter and Vijay Govindarajanâs McKinsey Awardâwinning article, âEngineering Reverse Innovations.â In 2009, Govindarajan first described the concept of âreverse innovation,â in which Western multinationals create products and services for emerging markets first and then export them to developed countries. This article explains how to escape the five traps companies often fall into while attempting to innovate for the developing world, drawing on the experiences of a team that built a successful low-priced wheelchair.
The cost of goods may be a major concern in poorer countries, but for companies in the United States, the amount spent on health care is even more challenging. âThe Employer-Led Health Care Revolution,â by Patricia A. McDonald, Robert S. Mecklenburg, and Lindsay A. Martin, describes how Intel and a health care institution teamed up to transform the local health care system. By using its purchasing power and working directly with care providers, health plan administrators, insurers, and other employers, Intel was able to streamline health care operations, creating low-cost options for both employers and patients. In this article the authors identify the ingredients of this successful experiment, in the hope that other large employers can follow its example.
Negotiations are an everyday event in business, whether theyâre about prices from a vendor or schedules for clients. But when they take place between people from different cultures, the dynamics become much more complex and miscommunication is more common. Itâs all too easy to damage relationships irreversibly. Our next piece, âGetting to SĂ, Ja, Oui, Hai, and Daâ by INSEAD professor Erin Meyer, provides five rules of thumb for negotiating across cultures. From building trust with your counterpart to understanding the subtle messages in emotional outbursts, Meyerâs advice illuminates how to strike the right balance and reach that final agreementâand make it stick.
Empathyâthe art of understanding othersâ needs and responding with compassionâis essential to motivating colleagues, calming upset customers, and designing innovative products. But frequent demands for empathy can exhaust your workersâand even cause them to make unethical decisions. In âThe Limits of Empathy,â Adam Waytz of the Kellogg School of Management suggests simple strategies to encourage your team to empathize in a more healthy, sustainable way.
âBusinesses donât create value; people doâ is a popular adage among CEOsâbut often those same CEOs are dissatisfied with the human resource officers who manage the organizationâs workforce. In âPeople Before Strategy: A New Role for the CHRO,â business advisers Ram Charan, Dominic Barton, and Dennis Carey argue for a new C-level leader whose sole responsibility is to think strategically about an organizationâs talentâfrom identifying and creatively engaging high potentials to developing new performance metrics that better support business goals. This piece provides practical ideas on how to implement this change and ensure that people remain the ultimate source of competitive advantage.
The last article in this volume takes us back to the tension between man and machine. âBeyond Automation,â by Thomas H. Davenport and Julia Kirby, taps into the fear many white-collar employees feel as new technologies make more jobs obsolete. The authors assert that human employees will still be necessary in the futureâbut theyâll have to find ways to proactively partner with machines. The article identifies five ways humans can thrive at work in the future.
Despite all the amazing advances new digital tools have brought, people still matter. Businesses need individuals who can exercise intuition and judgment, who can see the gaps in data, who can assess new ideas. Most of all, they need leaders who can inspire employees and set them up for success. Competitive advantage lies not in the latest smart devices but in the way we effectively combine the potential of both technology and people.
âThe Editors
Collaborative Overload
by Rob Cross, Reb Rebele, and Adam Grant
COLLABORATION IS TAKING OVER the workplace. As business becomes increasingly global and cross-functional, silos are breaking down, connectivity is increasing, and teamwork is seen as a key to organizational success. According to data we have collected over the past two decades, the time spent by managers and employees in collaborative activities has ballooned by 50% or more.
Certainly, we find much to applaud in these developments. However, when consumption of a valuable resource spikes that dramatically, it should also give us pause. Consider a typical week in your own organization. How much time do people spend in meetings, on the phone, and responding to e-mails? At many companies the proportion hovers around 80%, leaving employees little time for all the critical work they must complete on their own. Performance suffers as they are buried under an avalanche of requests for input or advice, access to resources, or attendance at a meeting. They take assignments home, and soon, according to a large body of evidence on stress, burnout and turnover become real risks.
Whatâs more, research weâve done across more than 300 organizations shows that the distribution of collaborative work is often extremely lopsided. In most cases, 20% to 35% of value-added collaborations come from only 3% to 5% of employees. As people become known for being both capable and willing to help, they are drawn into projects and roles of growing importance. Their giving mindset and desire to help others quickly enhances their performance and reputation. As a recent study led by Ning Li, of the University of Iowa, shows, a single âextra milerââan employee who frequently contributes beyond the scope of his or her roleâcan drive team performance more than all the other members combined.
But this âescalating citizenship,â as the University of Oklahoma professor Mark Bolino calls it, only further fuels the demands placed on top collaborators. We find that what starts as a virtuous cycle soon turns vicious. Soon helpful employees become institutional bottlenecks: Work doesnât progress until theyâve weighed in. Worse, they are so overtaxed that theyâre no longer personally effective. And more often than not, the volume and diversity of work they do to benefit others goes unnoticed, because the requests are coming from other units, varied offices, or even multiple companies. In fact, when we use network analysis to identify the strongest collaborators in organizations, leaders are typically surprised by at least half the names on their lists. In our quest to reap the rewards of collaboration, we have inadvertently created open markets for it without recognizing the costs. What can leaders do to manage these demands more effectively?
Precious Personal Resources
First, itâs important to distinguish among the three types of âcollaborative resourcesâ that individual employees invest in others to create value: informational, social, and personal. Informational resources are knowledge and skillsâexpertise that can be recorded and passed on. Social resources involve oneâs awareness, access, and position in a network, which can be used to help colleagues better collaborate with one another. Personal resources include oneâs own time and energy.
These three resource types are not equally efficient. Informational and social resources can be sharedâoften in a single exchangeâwithout depleting the collaboratorâs supply. That is, when I offer you knowledge or network awareness, I also retain it for my own use. But an individual employeeâs time and energy are finite, so each request to participate in or approve decisions for a project leaves less available for that personâs own work.
Unfortunately, personal resources are often the default demand when people want to collaborate. Instead of asking for specific informational or social resourcesâor better yet, searching in existing repositories such as reports or knowledge librariesâpeople ask for hands-on assistance they may not even need. An exchange that might have taken five minutes or less turns into a 30-minute calendar invite that strains personal resources on both sides of the request.
Consider a case study from a blue-chip professional services firm. When we helped the organization map the demands facing a group of its key employees, we found that the top collaboratorâletâs call him Vernellâhad 95 connections based on incoming requests. But only 18% of the requesters said they needed more personal access to him to achieve their business goals; the rest were content with the informational and social resources he was providing. The second most connected person was Sharon, with 89 people in her network, but her situation was markedly different, and more dangerous, because 40% of them wanted more time with herâa significantly greater draw on her personal resources.
We find that as the percentage of requesters seeking more access moves beyond about 25, it hinders the performance of both the individual and the group and becomes a strong predictor of voluntary turnover. As well-regarded collaborators are overloaded with demands, they may find that no good deed goes unpunished.
The exhibit âIn demand, yet disengaged,â reflecting data on business unit line leaders across a sample of 20 organizations, illustrates the problem. People at the top center and right of the chartâthat is, those seen as the best sources of information and in highest demand as collaborators in their companiesâhave the lowest engagement and career satisfaction scores, as represente...