Source: Y Combinator |
Professor Michael Roberto's Blog
Musings about Leadership, Decision Making, and Competitive Strategy
Monday, September 09, 2024
Founder Mode: Should Entrepreneurs Reject the Conventional Wisdom about How to Manage Their Companies?
Thursday, August 29, 2024
How Do We Select Managers? Where Self-Promotion Goes Awry
Source: https://www.aihr.com/blog/hiring-manager/ |
Do people who want to be managers perform well in the job? We explore this question by randomly varying the manager selection mechanism in our experiment. After describing the expected tasks and compensation structure of the manager and worker roles, we elicit participants’ eagerness to be a manager on a 1-10 scale. Half of groups were randomly assigned to a “self-promotion” treatment where participants with the strongest preferences became managers. Managers were assigned randomly in the other half of groups. We find that self-promotion is worse than choosing managers randomly. Teams with self-promoted managers perform 0.1 standard deviations lower than teams with randomly assigned managers. This magnitude is roughly equivalent to being assigned a manager with fluid IQ one standard deviation lower. We show that self-selection can lead to mistaken inferences about the characteristics of good managers. People who prefer to be in charge– who we call ‘self-promoters’– have characteristics that differ from the broader population. For example, we find suggestive evidence that self-promoters tend to overestimate their own social skills relative to an objective test of emotional perceptiveness called the Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test (RMET). Among self-promoted managers, we find a negative relationship between self-reported people skills and managerial performance. In contrast, randomly selected managers do not tend to overestimate their social skills, and we find no negative relationship between self-reported people skills and managerial performance.
Naturally, more work needs to be done to examine how these dynamics play out in actual organizations rather than experimental settings. Yet, intuitively, the findings resonate with me. Considering the implications for hiring process should be top of mind for those leaders tasked with selecting managers for their teams.
Monday, August 19, 2024
Three Critical Questions for the New Starbucks CEO Brian Niccol
1. How much customization can Starbucks offer to its customers? Give the customers what they want, right? Customers clearly love to customize their drinks (in far more complex ways than Chipotle faces). However, it has become abundantly clear that many Starbucks cafes are unable to effectively handle their throughput each day, particularly given the intense amount of customization they must deliver. We've read about or experienced long wait times, abandoned orders, and incorrect drink orders. Mass customization only works if a company can actually deliver on its promises. One might argue that Niccol simply has to figure it out, and that he has to improve operational efficiency so that Starbucks can offer abundant customization. However, Niccol also has to think about the practical implications of this strategy. Should he curtail customization at all while he tries to figure out the operational challenges in the cafes? I'm reminded of the story of Lego's turnaround twenty years ago, led by CEO Jorgen Vig Knudstorp (see HBS case study by Jan Rivkin and Stefan Thomke for details on this story). He took charge when Lego faced the prospect of bankruptcy. The number of parts produced by the company had doubled in the late 1990s, leading to numerous manufacturing and supply chain problems. Knudstorp reduced the number of parts substantially so as to help the company gets its operations back in order. At the same time, he invested heavily in innovation. Lego came roaring back stronger than ever. Niccol might want to study that turnaround as he considers the customization challenges at Starbucks.
2. How will the design (or redesign) of cafes balance worker efficiency vs. customer comfort/needs? Longtime Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz envisioned the cafes as a "Third Place" where people could gather with others either to enjoy a friendly conversation or to get work done. However, many of the cafes were designed to handle much less volume than they currently receive. Workers are in each other's way, and they lack the equipment needed to handle as many orders as they receive. In one of my local Starbucks cafes, they have renovated completely. Now, the workers have more equipment (two espresso stations rather than one) and more space. Undoubtedly, the set-up is much more efficient, and wait times will hopefully decline as a result. However, customers have less places to sit and gather with others. No tables are within reach of outlets at this point, reducing the ability to work at the cafes. You can clearly see the tradeoffs that Starbucks must grapple with in their design choices. Niccol has to determine the appropriate balance here between enhanced efficiency vs. "Third Place" dynamics.
3. How will Niccol handle the shadow of longtime CEO Howard Schultz? We all know the story by now of how Schultz has returned twice after his initial resignation as CEO in 2000. We also know that he has opined about the challenges his successors have faced, and he's done so in a very public way at times. Most recently, he took to LinkedIn to criticize the efforts of CEO Laxman Narasimhan. Niccol will have to think about how to engage Schultz. He clearly has a great deal of influence, though he no longer serves on the Board of Directors. Niccol can't allow Schultz to dictate strategy, but he cannot ignore him completely.
Friday, August 16, 2024
Are We Aligned? If Not, Why Not?
Source: Superbeings |
1. Leaders did not repeat their message using different media and in different forums/channels. They articulated the goals once or twice, and they expected others to hear them, understand them clearly, and embrace them fully. You have to say it again and again, but using different modes of communication. Some read their emails, and others do not. Some listen at the town hall meetings, while others multi-task the entire time. Some watch the 15-minute video you circulated, while others stop watching after 3 minutes.
2. Leaders established too many goals and objectives, and employees experience too many instances of competing priorities. Employees don't know what really matters. Employees draw disparate conclusions about what is most important.
3. Leaders did not build buy-in. They didn't engage enough people in the process of determining those goals. Therefore, employees do not feel a sense of collective ownership of the organization's plans and objectives.
4. Leaders have established goals that do not seem attainable to those doing the actual work. As a result, employees become frustrated and start to make judgements about what is reasonable and achievable. Those conclusions may be quite different across the organization.
5. Leaders create goals that do not match the needs and pain points of customers. Thus, front-line employees perceive a mismatch between what customers want and what senior leaders would like to achieve. Employees either address the customer needs and frustrate managers who don't see actions that fulfill their plans, or employees pursue the goals set out by top management while frustrating their customers.
Monday, August 05, 2024
What Can We Learn From Olympic Fencing Stars?
Source: Sports Illustrated |
Jeff Haden, writing for Inc.com, points out that there's a lesson for all of us from these Olympic fencing competitors. He argues that we can CREATE a frequency dependent advantage in our careers. He writes, "Want to build a business? Be willing to do a few things your competition will not. Want to build a career? Be willing to do a few things the people you work with will not." What terrific advice! Haden has identified a key source of career success. You can bet on your ability to do the same thing others are doing, but just better. You might be successful, but that could be challenging. Or, you could do things others aren't willing to do, or haven't chosen to invest time and effort into mastering to this point. That might be a more fruitful way to propel your career forward at times.
Thursday, August 01, 2024
Should Senior Managers Learn about AI from Younger Employees?
https://michaelmauro.medium.com |
Monday, July 29, 2024
What Can We Learn from Nike's Struggles?
Source: Runners World |
The company has made a number of key strategic mistakes in recent years. I'd like to focus on one key blunder. Nike focused a bit too much on the allure of driving growth by selling lifestyle-oriented shoes and apparel. As a result, it didn't invest enough in innovation for the hard-core athlete, particularly runners. Upstarts such as Hoka and On seized upon this opportunity, brought innovations to market, and grabbed market share. For years, Nike had led with innovation for the serious athlete, and then used its brand credibility to appeal to more casual athletes and lifestyle customers.
The Nike story is not a new one. Many companies begin by appealing to a targeted market segment with innovative products, then expand their reach to the mass market. However, many firms stumble by failing to protect the core, as well as failing to innovate sufficiently. They begin to lose their hard-core customers, and ultimately, that damages the brand. The loss of brand equity ultimately makes it harder to succeed in the mass market.
How can companies avoid this trap? First, they need to think about how every move to extend a brand or reach the mass market will affect the hard-core loyalists that were at the core of the initial success? How will they perceive each particular growth strategy? Are they diluting the brand, or damaging their reputation for technological preeminence? Second, they need to invest substantially in customer research that focuses on the pain points and unfulfilled needs of their hard-core customers. Third, they need to make sure incentives within the firm don't over-emphasize growth at the expense of succeeding with the narrow market niche that formed the heart of the firm's initial success. Finally, they need to scan the external environment voraciously to examine trends that might lead to a change in consumer preferences among their hard-core brand loyalists. These steps can help a firm make sure that it doesn't leave itself exposed to innovative upstarts.