week5CanYouSayWhatYourStrategyIs.pdf

    82 Harvard Business Review | April 2008 | hbr.org

    CAN YOU SUMMARIZE YOUR COMPANY’S STRATEGY in 35 words or

    less? If so, would your colleagues put it the same way?It is our experience that very few executives can honestly an-

    swer these simple questions in the affi rmative. And the compa-

    nies that those executives work for are often the most successful

    in their industry. One is Edward Jones, a St. Louis–based bro-

    kerage fi rm with which one of us has been involved for more

    than 10 years. The fourth-largest brokerage in the United States,

    Jones has quadrupled its market share during the past two de-

    cades, has consistently outperformed its rivals in terms of ROI

    through bull and bear markets, and has been a fi xture on Fortune’s

    list of the top companies to work for. It’s a safe bet that just

    by David J. Collis and Michael G. RukstadG

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    Can You SayWhat Your

    Strategy Is?

    1084 Collis.indd 821084 Collis.indd 82 3/4/08 10:14:03 PM3/4/08 10:14:03 PM

    It’s a dirty little secret: Most executives cannot articulate the objective, scope, and advantage of their business in a simple statement. If they can’t, neither can anyone else.

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    84 Harvard Business Review | April 2008 | hbr.org

    about every one of its 37,000 employees could express the

    company’s succinct strategy statement: Jones aims to “grow

    to 17,000 fi nancial advisers by 2012 [from about 10,000 to-

    day] by offering trusted and convenient face-to-face fi nan-

    cial advice to conservative individual investors who delegate

    their fi nancial decisions, through a national network of one-

    fi nancial-adviser offi ces.”

    Conversely, companies that don’t have a simple and clear

    statement of strategy are likely to fall into the sorry category

    of those that have failed to execute their strategy or, worse,

    those that never even had one. In an astonishing number of

    organizations, executives, frontline employees, and all those

    in between are frustrated because no clear strategy exists for

    the company or its lines of business. The kinds of complaints

    that abound in such fi rms include:

    “I try for months to get an initiative off the ground, and

    then it is shut down because ‘it doesn’t fi t the strategy.’

    Why didn’t anyone tell me that at the beginning?”

    “I don’t know whether I should be pursuing this market

    opportunity. I get mixed signals from the powers that be.”

    “Why are we bidding on this customer’s business again?

    We lost it last year, and I thought we agreed then not to

    waste our time chasing the contract!”

    “Should I cut the price for this customer? I don’t know if

    we would be better off winning the deal at a lower price

    or just losing the business.”

    Leaders of fi rms are mystifi ed when what they thought

    was a beautifully crafted strategy is never implemented.

    They assume that the initiatives described in the volumi-

    nous documentation that emerges from an annual budget or

    a strategic-planning process will ensure competitive success.

    They fail to appreciate the necessity of having a simple, clear,

    succinct strategy statement that everyone can internalize

    and use as a guiding light for making diffi cult choices.

    Think of a major business as a mound of 10,000 iron

    fi lings, each one representing an employee. If you scoop

    up that many fi lings and drop them onto a piece of paper,

    they’ll be pointing in every direction. It will be a big mess:

    10,000 smart people working hard and making what they

    think are the right decisions for the company – but with the

    net result of confusion. Engineers in the R&D department

    are creating a product with “must have” features for which

    (as the marketing group could have told them) customers

    will not pay; the sales force is selling customers on quick

    turnaround times and customized offerings even though

    the manufacturing group has just invested in equipment

    designed for long production runs; and so on.

    If you pass a magnet over those fi lings, what happens?

    They line up. Similarly, a well-understood statement of strat-

    egy aligns behavior within the business. It allows everyone

    in the organization to make individual choices that reinforce

    one another, rendering those 10,000 employees exponen-

    tially more effective.

    What goes into a good statement of strategy? Michael

    Porter’s seminal article “What Is Strategy?” (HBR November–

    December 1996) lays out the characteristics of strategy in

    a conceptual fashion, conveying the essence of strategic

    choices and distinguishing them from the relentless but com-

    petitively fruitless search for operational effi ciency. However,

    we have found in our work both with executives and with

    students that Porter’s article does not answer the more basic

    question of how to describe a particular fi rm’s strategy.

    It is a dirty little secret that most executives don’t actually

    know what all the elements of a strategy statement are, which

    makes it impossible for them to develop one. With a clear defi –

    nition, though, two things happen: First, formulation becomes

    infi nitely easier because executives know what they are trying

    to create. Second, implementation becomes much simpler be-

    cause the strategy’s essence can be readily communicated and

    easily internalized by everyone in the organization.

    Elements of a Strategy StatementThe late Mike Rukstad, who contributed enormously to

    this article, identifi ed three critical components of a good

    strategy statement – objective, scope, and advantage – and

    rightly believed that executives should be forced to be crys-

    tal clear about them. These elements are a simple yet suffi –

    cient list for any strategy (whether business or military) that

    addresses competitive interaction over unbounded terrain. Any strategy statement must begin with a defi nition of

    the ends that the strategy is designed to achieve. “If you

    don’t know where you are going, any road will get you there”

    is the appropriate maxim here. If a nation has an unclear

    sense of what it seeks to achieve from a military campaign,

    how can it have a hope of attaining its goal? The defi nition

    of the objective should include not only an end point but

    also a time frame for reaching it. A strategy to get U.S. troops

    out of Iraq at some distant point in the future would be

    very different from a strategy to bring them home within

    two years.

    Since most fi rms compete in a more or less unbounded

    landscape, it is also crucial to defi ne the scope, or domain,

    of the business: the part of the landscape in which the fi rm

    will operate. What are the boundaries beyond which it will

    not venture? If you are planning to enter the restaurant

    business, will you provide sit-down or quick service? A casual

    or an upscale atmosphere? What type of food will you offer –

    David J. Collis ([email protected]) is an adjunct professor in the

    strategy unit of Harvard Business School in Boston and the author of

    several books on corporate strategy. He has studied and consulted

    to Edward Jones, the brokerage that is the main example in this

    article, and has taught in the fi rm’s management-development pro-

    gram. Michael G. Rukstad was a senior research fellow at Harvard

    Business School, where he taught for many years until his untimely

    death in 2006.

    Can You Say What Your Strategy Is?

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    hbr.org | April 2008 | Harvard Business Review 85

    French or Mexican? What geographic

    area will you serve – the Midwest or the

    East Coast?

    Alone, these two aspects of strategy

    are insuffi cient. You could go into busi-

    ness tomorrow with the goal of be-

    coming the world’s largest hamburger

    chain within 10 years. But will anyone

    invest in your company if you have not

    explained how you are going to reach

    your objective? Your competitive ad-

    vantage is the essence of your strategy:

    What your business will do differently

    from or better than others defi nes the

    all-important means by which you will

    achieve your stated objective. That

    advantage has complementary exter-

    nal and internal components: a value

    proposition that explains why the tar-

    geted customer should buy your prod-

    uct above all the alternatives, and a

    description of how internal activities

    must be aligned so that only your fi rm

    can deliver that value proposition.

    Defi ning the objective, scope, and

    advantage requires trade-offs, which

    Porter identifi ed as fundamental to

    strategy. If a fi rm chooses to pursue

    growth or size, it must accept that

    profi tability will take a back seat. If it

    chooses to serve institutional clients,

    it may ignore retail customers. If the

    value proposition is lower prices, the

    company will not be able to compete

    on, for example, fashion or fi t. Finally, if the advantage comes

    from scale economies, the fi rm will not be able to accommo-

    date idiosyncratic customer needs. Such trade-offs are what

    distinguish individual companies strategically.

    Defi ning the ObjectiveThe fi rst element of a strategy statement is the one that

    most companies have in some form or other. Unfortunately,

    the form is usually wrong. Companies tend to confuse their

    statement of values or their mission with their strategic

    objective. A strategic objective is not, for example, the

    platitude of “maximizing shareholder

    wealth by exceeding customer expec-

    tations for _______ [insert product or

    service here] and providing opportuni-

    ties for our employees to lead fulfi ll-

    ing lives while respecting the environ-

    ment and the communities in which

    we operate.” Rather, it is the single

    precise objective that will drive the

    business over the next fi ve years or so.

    (See the exhibit “A Hierarchy of Com-

    pany Statements.”) Many companies

    do have – and all fi rms should have –

    statements of their ultimate purpose

    and the ethical values under which

    they will operate, but neither of these

    is the strategic objective.

    The mission statement spells out

    the underlying motivation for be-

    ing in business in the fi rst place – the

    contribution to society that the fi rm

    aspires to make. (An

    insurance company,

    for example, might

    defi ne its mission as

    providing financial

    security to consum-

    ers.) Such statements,

    how ever, are not use-

    ful as strategic goals

    to drive today’s busi-

    ness decisions. Simi-

    larly, it is good and

    proper that fi rms be

    clear with employees about ethical values. But principles

    such as respecting individual differences and sustaining the

    environment are not strategic. They govern how employees

    should behave (“doing things right”); they do not guide what

    the fi rm should do (“the right thing to do”).

    Firms in the same business often have the same mission.

    (Don’t all insurance companies aspire to provide fi nancial

    security to their customers?) They may also have the same

    values. They might even share a vision: an indeterminate

    future goal such as being the “recognized leader in the insur-

    ance fi eld.” However, it is unlikely that even two companies

    The trade-offs companies makeare what distinguish them strategically from other fi rms.

    A Hierarchy of Company Statements

    Organizational direction comes in several forms. The mission state-ment is your loftiest guiding light – and your least specifi c. As you work your way down the hierarchy, the statements become more concrete, practical, and ultimately unique. No other company will have the same strategy statement, which defi nes your competitive advantage, or balanced scorecard, which tracks how you implement your particular strategy.

    MISSIONWhy we exist

    VALUESWhat we believe in and how we will behave

    VISIONWhat we want to be

    STRATEGYWhat our competitive game plan will be

    BALANCED SCORECARDHow we will monitor and implement that plan

    The BASIC ELEMENTS of a Strategy Statement

    OBJECTIVE = Ends

    SCOPE = Domain

    ADVANTAGE = Means

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    Can You Say What Your Strategy Is?

    86 Harvard Business Review | April 2008 | hbr.org

    in the same business will have the same strategic objective.

    Indeed, if your fi rm’s strategy can be applied to any other

    fi rm, you don’t have a very good one.

    It is always easy to claim that maximizing shareholder

    value is the company’s objective. In some sense all strategies

    are designed to do this. However, the question to ask when

    creating an actionable strategic statement is, Which objec-

    tive is most likely to maximize shareholder value over the

    next several years? (Growth? Achieving a certain market

    share? Becoming the market leader?) The strategic objective

    should be specifi c, measurable, and time bound. It should

    also be a single goal. It is not suffi cient to say, “We seek to

    grow profi tably.” Which matters more – growth or profi tabil-

    ity? A salesperson needs to know the answer when she’s

    deciding how aggressive to be on price. There could well

    be a host of subordinate goals that follow from the strate-

    gic objective, and these might serve as metrics on a bal-

    anced scorecard that monitors progress for which individu-

    als will be held accountable. Yet the ultimate objective that

    will drive the operation of the business over the next several

    years should always be clear.

    The choice of objective has a profound impact on a fi rm.

    When Boeing shifted its primary goal from being the largest

    player in the aircraft industry to being the most profi table,

    it had to restructure the entire organization, from sales to

    manufacturing. For example, the company dropped its pol-

    icy of competing with Airbus to the last cent on every deal

    and abandoned its commitment to maintain a manufactur-

    ing capacity that could deliver more than half a peak year’s

    demand for planes.

    Another company, after years of seeking to maximize prof-

    its at the expense of growth, issued a corporate mandate to

    generate at least 10% organic growth per year. The change in strategy forced the fi rm to switch its focus from shrinking to

    serve only its profi table core customers and competing on

    the basis of cost or effi ciency to differentiating its products,

    which led to a host of new product features and services that

    appealed to a wider set of customers.

    At Edward Jones, discussion among the partners about

    the fi rm’s objective ignited a passionate exchange. One

    said, “Our ultimate objective has to be maximizing profi t

    per partner.” Another responded, “Not all fi nancial advisers

    are partners – so if we maximize revenue per partner, we are

    ignoring the other 30,000-plus people who make the busi-

    ness work!” Another added, “Our ultimate customer is the

    client. We cannot just worry about partner profi ts. In fact, we

    should start by maximizing value for the customer and let

    the profi ts fl ow to us from there!” And so on. This intense de-

    bate not only drove alignment with the objective of healthy

    growth in the number of fi nancial advisers but also ensured

    that every implication of that choice was fully explored. Set-

    ting an ambitious growth target at each point in its 85-year

    history, Edward Jones has continually increased its scale

    and market presence. Striving to achieve such growth has

    increased long-term profi t per adviser and led the fi rm to its

    unique confi guration: Its only profi t center is the individual

    fi nancial adviser. Other activities, even investment banking,

    serve as support functions and are not held accountable for

    generating profi t.

    Defi ning the ScopeA fi rm’s scope encompasses three dimensions: customer or of-

    fering, geographic location, and vertical integration. Clearly

    defi ned boundaries in those areas should make it obvious to

    managers which activities they should concentrate on and,

    more important, which they should not do.

    The three dimensions may vary in relevance. For Edward

    Jones, the most important is the customer. The fi rm is confi g-

    ured to meet the needs of one very specifi c type of client. Un-

    like just about every other brokerage in the business, Jones

    does not defi ne its archetypal customer by net worth or in-

    come. Nor does it use demographics, profession, or spending

    habits. Rather, the defi nition is psychographic: The compa-

    ny’s customers are long-term investors who have a conserva-

    tive investment philosophy and are uncomfortable making

    serious fi nancial decisions without the support of a trusted

    adviser. In the terminology of the business, Jones targets the

    “delegator,” not the “validator” or the “do-it-yourselfer.”

    The scope of an enterprise does not prescribe exactly what

    should be done within the specifi ed bounds. In fact, it encour-

    ages experimentation and initiative. But to ensure that the

    borders are clear to all employees, the scope should specify

    where the fi rm or business will not go. That will prevent man-

    agers from spending long hours on projects that get turned

    down by higher-ups because they do not fi t the strategy.

    For example, clarity about who the customer is and who it

    is not has kept Edward Jones from pursuing day traders. Even

    at the height of the internet bubble, the company chose not

    to introduce online trading (it is still not available to Jones

    customers). Unlike the many brokerages that committed

    hundreds of millions of dollars and endless executive hours

    to debates over whether to introduce online trading (and

    if so, how to price and position it in a way that did not can-

    nibalize or confl ict with traditional offerings), Jones wasted

    no money or time on that decision because it had set clear

    boundaries.

    Similarly, Jones is not vertically integrated into propri-

    etary mutual funds, so as not to violate the independence

    of its fi nancial advisers and undermine clients’ trust. Nor

    will the company offer penny stocks, shares from IPOs, com-

    modities, or options – investment products that it believes

    are too risky for the conservative clients it chooses to serve.

    And it does not have metropolitan offi ces in business dis-

    tricts, because they would not allow for the convenient, face-

    to-face interactions in casual settings that the fi rm seeks to

    provide. Knowing not to extend its scope in these directions

    1084 Collis.indd 861084 Collis.indd 86 3/4/08 10:14:40 PM3/4/08 10:14:40 PM

    has allowed the fi rm to focus on doing what it does well and

    reap the benefi ts of simplicity, standardization, and deep

    experience.

    Defi ning the AdvantageGiven that a sustainable competitive advantage is the es-

    sence of strategy, it should be no surprise that advantage

    is the most critical aspect of a strategy statement. Clarity

    about what makes the fi rm distinctive is what most helps

    employees understand how they can contribute to successful

    execution of its strategy.

    As mentioned above, the complete defi nition of a fi rm’s

    competitive advantage consists of two parts. The fi rst is a

    statement of the customer value proposition. Any strat-

    egy statement that cannot explain why customers should

    buy your product or service is doomed to failure. A simple

    graphic that maps your value proposition against those of

    rivals can be an extremely easy and useful way of identifying

    what makes yours distinctive. (See the exhibit “Wal-Mart’s

    Value Proposition.”)

    The second part of the statement of advantage captures

    the unique activities or the complex combination of activi-

    ties allowing that fi rm alone to deliver the customer value

    proposition. This is where the strategy statement draws

    from Porter’s defi nition of strategy as making consistent

    choices about the confi guration of the fi rm’s activities. It is

    also where the activity-system map that Porter describes in

    “What Is Strategy?” comes into play.

    As the exhibit “Edward Jones’s Activity-System Map” shows,

    the brokerage’s value proposition is to provide convenient,

    trusted, personal service and advice. What is most distinctive

    about Jones is that it has only one fi nancial adviser in an offi ce,

    which allows it to have more offi ces (10,000 nationally) than

    competitors do. Merrill Lynch has about 15,000 brokers but

    only 1,000 offi ces. To make it easy for its targeted customers

    to visit at their convenience – and to provide a relaxed, per-

    sonable, nonthreatening environment – Jones puts its offi ces

    in strip malls and the retail districts of rural areas and sub-

    urbs rather than high-rise buildings in the central business

    districts of big cities. These choices alone require Jones to

    differ radically from other brokerages in the confi guration of

    its activities. With no branch-offi ce management providing

    direction or support, each fi nancial adviser must be an en-

    trepreneur who delights in running his or her own operation.

    Since such people are an exception in the industry, Jones has

    to bring all its own fi nancial advisers in from other indus-

    tries or backgrounds and train them, at great expense. Until

    2007, when it switched to an internet-based service, the fi rm

    had to have its own satellite network to provide its widely

    dispersed offi ces with real-time quotes and allow them to

    execute trades. Because the company has 10,000 separate

    offi ces, its real estate and communication costs are about

    50% higher than the industry average. However, all those

    offi ces allow the fi nancial advisers who run them to deliver

    convenient, trusted, personal service and advice.

    Other successful players in this industry also have distinc-

    tive value propositions and unique confi gurations of activi-

    ties to support them.

    Merrill Lynch. During the fi ve-year tenure of former CEO Stan O’Neal, who retired in October 2007, Merrill Lynch

    Wal-Mart’s Value Proposition

    Wal-Mart’s value proposition can be summed up as “everyday low prices for a broad range of goods that are always in stock in convenient geographic locations.” It is those aspects of the customer experience that the company overdelivers relative to competitors. Under-performance on other dimensions, such as ambience and sales help, is a strategic choice that generates cost savings, which fuel the company’s price advantage.

    If the local mom-and-pop hardware store has survived, it also has a value proposition: convenience, proprietors who have known you for years, free coffee and doughnuts on Saturday mornings, and so on.

    Sears falls in the middle on many criteria. As a result, customers lack a lot of compelling reasons to shop there, which goes a long way toward explaining why the company is struggling to remain profi table.

    Low prices

    Selection acrosscategories

    Rural convenience

    Reliable prices

    In-stockmerchandise

    Merchandise quality

    Suburbanconvenience

    Selection withincategories

    Sales help

    Ambience

    Wal-MartSearsMom & popstores

    Customer purchase criteria*

    poor excellent

    Delivery on criteria

    Source: Jan Rivkin, Harvard Business School

    * in approximate order of importance to Wal-Mart’s target customer group

    hbr.org | April 2008 | Harvard Business Review 87

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    Can You Say What Your Strategy Is?

    developed an effective strategy that it called “Total Merrill.”

    The company’s value proposition: to provide for all the fi –

    nancial needs of its high-net-worth customers – those with

    liquid fi nancial assets of more than $250,000 – through retire-ment. While a lot of brokerages cater to people with a high

    net worth, they focus on asset accumulation before retire-

    ment. Merrill’s view is that as baby boomers age and move

    from the relatively simple phase of accumulating assets to

    the much more complex, higher-risk phase of drawing cash

    from their retirement accounts, their needs change. Dur-

    ing this stage, they will want to consolidate their fi nancial

    assets with a single trusted partner that can help them fi g-

    ure out how to optimize income over their remaining years

    by making the best decisions on everything from annuities

    to payout ratios to long-term-care insurance. Merrill offers

    coherent fi nancial plans for such customers and provides

    access to a very wide range of sophisticated products based

    on a Monte Carlo simulation of the probabilities of running

    out of money according to different annual rates of return

    on different categories of assets.

    How does Merrill intend to deliver this value to its chosen

    customers in a way that’s unique among large fi rms? First,

    it is pushing brokers – especially new ones – to become cer-

    tifi ed fi nancial planners and has raised internal training re-

    PRICEone-timecommission

    TARGET CUSTOMER

    individual

    conservative

    delegates decisions

    BRANCH SUPPORTbranch-office assistant

    PRODUCT

    blue chips

    mutual funds

    ONE FINANCIAL ADVISER PER OFFICEadvisers run their own offices

    MARKETING

    local mailings

    knocking on doors

    INVESTMENTPHILOSOPHYlong-termbuy and hold

    BROKER TYPE

    entrepreneur

    member of community

    HIRE & TRAINhire from outside industry

    internally train all financial advisers

    VALUES & CULTURE

    volunteerism

    mentoring

    OWNERSHIPpartnership, not public

    COMPENSATIONeach financial adviser is a profit center

    TECHNOLOGY

    satellite (historically)

    HEADQUARTERSSt. Louis home office for all activities

    REGIONAL STRUCTUREno regional management

    LOCATION

    rural

    suburban

    strip mall

    CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP

    face-to-face

    convenient

    trusted financialadviser

    Edward Jones’s Activity-System Map

    This map illustrates how activities at the brokerage Edward Jones connect to deliver competitive advantage. The fi rm’s customer value proposition appears near the center of the map – in the “customer relationship” bubble – and the supporting activities hang off it. Only the major connections are shown.

    88 Harvard Business Review | April 2008 | hbr.org

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    hbr.org | April 2008 | Harvard Business Review 89

    CUSTOMERS’needs

    COMPETITORS’offerings

    COMPANY’Scapabilities

    CONTEXT(technology, industry

    demographics, regulation, and so on)

    SWEETSPOT

    quirements to put them on that road.

    The certifi ed fi nancial planner license

    is more diffi cult for brokers to obtain

    than the standard Series 7 license, be-

    cause it requires candidates to have a

    college degree and to master nearly

    100 integrated fi nancial-planning top-

    ics. Second, Merrill offers all forms

    of insurance, annuities, covered calls,

    hedge funds, banking services, and so

    on (unlike Edward Jones, which offers

    a much more limited menu of invest-

    ment products). Since several of these

    products are technically complex,

    Merrill needs product specialists to

    support the client-facing broker. This

    “Team Merrill” organization poses

    very different HR and compensation

    issues from those posed by Edward

    Jones’s single-adviser offi ces. Merrill’s

    compensation system has to share in-

    come among the team members and

    reward referrals.

    Wells Fargo. This San Francisco bank competes in the brokerage busi-

    ness as part of its tactic to cross-sell

    services to its retail banking custom-

    ers in order to boost profi t per customer. (It aims to sell each

    customer at least eight different products.) Wells Fargo’s

    objective for its brokerage arm, clearly stated in a recent an-

    nual report, is to triple its share of customers’ fi nancial assets.

    The brokerage’s means for achieving this goal is the parent

    company’s database of 23 million customers, many of them

    brought into the fi rm through one particular aspect of the

    banking relationship: the mortgage. Wells Fargo differs from

    Edward Jones and Merrill Lynch in its aim to offer personal-

    ized, rather than personal, service. For example, the fi rm’s

    IT system allows a bank clerk to know a limited amount of

    information about a customer (name, birthday, and so on)

    and appear to be familiar with him or her, which is quite dif-

    ferent from the ongoing individual relationships that Jones

    and Merrill brokers have with their clients.

    LPL Financial. Different again is LPL Financial, with of-fi ces in Boston, San Diego, and Charlotte, North Carolina.

    LPL sees its brokers (all of whom are independent fi nancial

    advisers affi liated with the fi rm) rather than consumers as its

    clients and has confi gured all of its activities to provide in-

    dividualized solutions and the highest payouts to its brokers.

    This means that the vast majority of the activities performed

    by the corporate headquarters staff are services, such as train-

    ing, that brokers choose and pay for on an à la carte basis. As

    a result, LPL’s headquarters staff is very small (0.20 people

    per broker) compared with that of Edward Jones (1.45 peo-

    ple per broker). Low overhead allows

    LPL to offer a higher payout to brokers

    than Jones and Merrill do, which is its

    distinctive value proposition to its cho-

    sen customer: the broker.

    By now it should be apparent how

    a careful description of the unique ac-

    tivities a fi rm performs to generate a

    distinctive customer value proposition

    effectively captures its strategy. A rela-

    tively simple description in a strategy

    statement provides an incisive charac-

    terization that could not belong to any

    other fi rm. This is the goal. When that

    statement has been internalized by all

    employees, they can easily understand

    how their daily activities contribute to

    the overall success of the fi rm and how

    to correctly make the diffi cult choices

    they confront in their jobs.

    Developing a Strategy StatementHow, then, should a fi rm go about

    crafting its strategy statement? Obvi-

    ously, the fi rst step is to create a great

    strategy, which requires careful evalu-

    ation of the industry landscape. This

    includes developing a detailed understanding of customer

    needs, segmenting customers, and then identifying unique

    ways of creating value for the ones the fi rm chooses to serve.

    It also calls for an analysis of competitors’ current strategies

    and a prediction of how they might change in the future.

    The process must involve a rigorous, objective assessment

    of the fi rm’s capabilities and resources and those of competi-

    tors, as described in “Competing on Resources: Strategy in

    the 1990s,” by David J. Collis and Cynthia A. Montgomery

    (HBR July–August 1995) – not just a feel-good exercise of

    identifying core competencies. The creative part of develop-

    ing strategy is fi nding the sweet spot that aligns the fi rm’s

    capabilities with customer needs in a way that competitors

    cannot match given the changing external context – factors

    such as technology, industry demographics, and regulation.

    (See the exhibit “The Strategic Sweet Spot.”) We have found

    that one of the best ways to do this is to develop two or three

    plausible but very different strategic options.

    For example, fl eshing out two dramatically different alter-

    natives – becoming a cheap Red Lobster or a fi sh McDonald’s –

    helped executives at the Long John Silver’s chain of restau-

    rants understand the strategic choices that they had to make.

    They had been trying to do a bit of everything, and this

    exercise showed them that their initiatives – such as offer-

    ing early-evening table service and expanding drive-through

    service – were strategically inconsistent. (Competing on the

    The Strategic Sweet Spot

    The strategic sweet spot of a company is where it meets customers’ needs in a way that rivals can’t, given the context in which it competes.

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    90 Harvard Business Review | April 2008 | hbr.org

    basis of table service requires bigger restaurants and more

    employees, while drive-through service requires high-traffi c

    locations and smaller footprints.) As a result, they chose to

    be a fi sh McDonald’s, building smaller restaurants with drive-

    through service in high-traffi c locations.

    The process of developing the strategy and then crafting

    the statement that captures its essence in a readily communi-

    cable manner should involve employees in all parts of the

    company and at all levels of the hierarchy. The wording of

    the strategy statement should be worked through in pains-

    taking detail. In fact, that can be the most powerful part

    of the strategy development process. It is usually in heated

    discussions over the choice of a single word that a strat-

    egy is crystallized and executives truly understand what it

    will involve.

    The end result should be a brief statement that refl ects

    the three elements of an effective strategy. It should be ac-

    companied by detailed annotations that elucidate the strate-

    gy’s nuances (to preempt any possible misreading) and spell

    out its implications. (See the exhibit “Leaving No Room for

    Misinterpretation.”)

    When the strategy statement is circulated throughout the

    company, the value proposition chart and activity-system

    map should be attached. They serve as simple reminders of

    the twin aspects of competitive advantage that underpin the

    strategy. Cascading the statement throughout the organiza-

    tion, so that each level of management will be the teacher

    for the level below, becomes the starting point for incorpo-

    rating strategy into everyone’s behavior. The strategy will

    really have traction only when executives can be confi dent

    that the actions of empowered frontline employees will be

    guided by the same principles that they themselves follow.

    • • •

    The value of rhetoric should not be underestimated. A 35-

    word statement can have a substantial impact on a compa-

    ny’s success. Words do lead to action. Spending the time to

    develop the few words that truly capture your strategy and

    that will energize and empower your people will raise the

    long-term fi nancial performance of your organization.

    Reprint R0804E

    To order, see page 139.

    Leaving No Room for Misinterpretation

    Executives at Edward Jones have devel-oped a detailed understanding of every element of the fi rm’s strategy. Here is an example.

    Edward Jones’s Strategy Statement

    To grow to 17,000 fi nancial advis-

    ers by 2012 by offering trusted and

    convenient face-to-face fi nancial

    advice to conservative individual

    investors who delegate their

    fi nancial decisions, through a

    national network of one-fi nancial-

    adviser offi ces.

    ”conservative“

    Our investment philosophy is long-term buy and hold. We do not sell penny stocks, commodities, or other high-risk instruments.As a result we do not serve day traders and see no need to offer online trading.

    We charge commissions on trades because this is the cheapest way to buy stocks (compared with a wrap fee, which charges an-nually as a percentage of assets) when the average length of time the investor holds the stock or mutual fund is over 10 years.

    ”individual“

    We do not advise institutions or companies.

    We do not segment according to wealth, age, or other demo-graphics. The company will serve all customers that fi t its conser-vative investment philosophy. Brokers will call on any and every potential customer. Stories abound within Jones of millionaires who live in trailers – people all the other brokerages would never think of approaching.

    ”investors“

    Our basic service is investment. We do not seek to offer services such as checking accounts for their own sake, but only as part of the management of a client’s assets.

    ”who delegate their fi nancial decisions“

    We do not target self-directed do-it-yourselfers, who are comfort-able making their own investment decisions. We are also unlikely to serve validators, who are merely looking for reassurance that their decisions are correct.

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