Title: Strategic Management
1Strategic Management
2Case Examples
- Nolan, Norton Company, Inc. 1985-87
3The reasons for choosing Nolan, Norton
- Nolan, Norton was a small privately owned
company providing professional services. This is
a fast growing category of enterprise. - Nolan, Norton had a clear vision and values and
had been extremely successful for a number of
years. - Changes in the external environment forced Nolan,
Norton to change - The strategy process was openly conducted and
the interests of different stakeholder groups
became apparent - A clear strategic choice was made leading to the
sale of Nolan, Norton to Peat Marwick.
4Nolan, Nortons Origins
- Founded in 1975 by Dick Nolan and Dave Norton
- Subchapter S corporation (i.e. privately owned)
- Management consultants specialising in deriving
business benefit from information technology - Clients mostly large multi-national,
multi-divisional companies. - Rapid growth between 1975 and 1982.
5Nolan, Nortons Business Purpose
- Intellectual leadership in the management of
information technology Write the Book. - Practical methods for applying these ideas in
practice - Bridge the gap between managers and information
technology and IT people.
6Nolan, Nortons Internal Structure
- One firm with coherent and extendible
framework of ideas - Three organisational dimensions
- Geography
- Client
- Practice
- Three levels of staff
- Consultants
- Managers
- Principals
- 2 owners with high proportion of profit
distributed to staff
7Nolan, Nortons Management Processes
- Professional ideas shared and transmitted using
common pictures and diagrams. - Marketing focused on creating and sustaining
relationships with key individuals - Assignments executed by joint client/consultant
teams - Consultants assigned to projects to optimise
client service, consultant development and
profitability.
8 People and Culture in Nolan, Norton
- Complementary skills of founders
- Dick Nolan - Inspirational leader
- Dave Norton - Top-flight management consultant
and organised manager - Staff - IT professionals taking a career risk
- Values
- Hard work
- Client commitment
- Leading edge ideas from research and university
contacts - Heavy investment in staff development
9External Strategic Issues in 1985
- Arrival of mini-computers
- Loss of control of central IT departments
- Fragmentation of IT spend in clients
- Increasing business impact of IT on company
strategy caused leading strategy consultants to
become competitors of Nolan, Norton. - Nolan, Nortons assignments addressing wider
issues and becoming much larger.
10Internal Strategic Issues in 1985
- Limits to growth of founder-managed structure
- Founders aspirations important - equity
realisation. - Mismatch between resources and opportunities
11Question 1 What were the alternative options to
selling out?
- Option A Building strategic alliances with major
partners in each separate major market. - Advantages
- NNC can focus on its strengths in developing
ideas and methods - Rapid deployment in separate markets
- Provides ample resources
- Combines global and local identities
- Disadvantages
- Handling multiple relationships difficult and
time-consuming - Hard to control overall quality and identity
12Question 1 What were the alternative options to
selling out?
- Option B Continue independently and develop a
new range of services related to IT-enabled
business change. - Advantages
- NNC builds on its strengths in developing ideas
and methods - Appeals to staff who are interested in doing new
things - Disadvantages
- NNC lacks some of the necessary skills
- Moving into direct competition with much larger
and capable competitors
13Question 1 What were the alternative options to
selling out?
Option C Extend specialisation in the management
of IT Advantages NNC builds on its strengths
in developing ideas and methods Competing in a
relatively small market in which NNC is a
respected player Exploits NNC staffs technical
skills Disadvantages Does not appeal to many
staff wishing to extend themselves away from
their technical roots.
14Question 2 Views of Stakeholder Groups?
- Founders Unwilling to weather another recession
- Looking to realise equity
- Keen to carry Principals with them
- Principals Sale offer chance of payouts/earnouts
(a quasi-capital gain) - Staff Peat Marwick offers stability and
security but less fun. - Danger of loss of identity in larger firm
15Question 3 Saatchi and Saatchi instead of Peat
Marwick?
- Peat Marwick and SS had dramatically different
cultures - NNC opinions divided on which was
preferable. - SS offered NNC more independence but did not
resolve the resource issue - SS in fact hit difficult times soon afterwards
from which Nolan, Norton would inevitably have
suffered.
16Question 4 How could Peat Marwick have made
their acquisition more successful?
- Peat Marwick could have left Nolan, Norton to
continue as an independent unit retaining its
historical centralised organisation and
independent marketing. - Peat Marwick would have received
- Nolan, Norton profits
- Entry into large non-audit clients
- Staff development by transferring/seconding IT
consultants into Nolan, Norton - The simultaneous much larger merger of Peat
Marwick with Thomson McLintock was unfortunate to
the success of the Nolan, Norton acquisition.