Title: Balancing the Portfolio
1(No Transcript)
2 Balancing the Portfolio SIM - 2002
- 25 years ago first SIM speech
- What has stayed the same?
- What has changed?
- What does the future hold?
3 What has stayed the same?
- Rapid technology change (Vendor fragility)
- Organization resistance to change 54th AMP
yearbook - 1968 - Stages Theory (new technologies)
- Technical skill obsolescence/ individual
renewal
4 What has stayed the same? (continued)
- Applications development portfolio -
Implementation risk - Contingency management -
Alignment corporate strategy - Efficiency capacity issues
- Strategic grid contingency management
- The need for a CIO
5STRATEGIC IMPACTAPPLICATIONS DEVELOPMENT
PORTFOLIO
High
Strategic
Factory
- Strategic
- Dependence
- Existing
- Operating
- Systems
- A - Major Electronic Components Firms
- B - Major Brokerage
- C - Large Agricultural Firm
- E - Major Airline
- F - Major Consulting Organization
- G - Insurance Broker
Support
Turnaround
Low
High
6 What has changed?
- Open standardsGlobal interconnectivity Case of
Li Fung - The Extended Enterprise BPO case of Nortel
Acct, HR, IT The case of HEB/PG Extranet
Fleet Cisco - Application discontinuity Intranet Clicks
and bricks
7What has changed?Global Interconnectivity -LI
FUNG
- Almost 100 years old
- Publicly traded Hong Kong family company
- Year 2002 - 5 billion sales USAOver 5,100
employees - Sourcing company- 69 sales USA- 27 sales
Europe- Major retailers customers
8What has changed?Global Interconnectivity LI
FUNG
- Global supply network (1,000s) (Asia, Africa,
Caribbean) - 63 offices - 37 countries
- Soft goods 77
- 1997 Browser-enabled Intranet
Development outsourcedall offices - Extranet 10 major customers
Development outsourced
9 What has changed?
- Open standardsGlobal interconnectivity Case of
Li Fung - The Extended Enterprise BPO case of Nortel
Acct, HR, IT The case of HEB/PG Extranet
Fleet Cisco - Application discontinuity Intranet Clicks
and bricks
10E-BUSINESS SESSION - COMPANY ROLE REDEFINITION
- 1996 Scanner HEB space Supplier
space -
1989 FAX Orders - Customer HEB stores HEB
depots Suppliers - HEB.com 2000 1990 Scanner
- Decision rights shift 1990 11.4 Inv.
turns/year - Asset responsibility shifts 1994 38.6 Inv.
turns/year - Costs squeezed out of value 1997 Negative
inventory
chain - Delivery process changes 2000 Role of
store - IT permeates every part of chain
11 What has changed?
- Open standardsGlobal interconnectivity Case of
Li Fung - The Extended Enterprise BPO case of Nortel
Acct, HR, IT The case of HEB/PG Extranet
Fleet Cisco - Application discontinuity Intranet Clicks
and bricks
12What has changed? The Extended Enterprise -
CISCO
- Company
- - 1993 Sales - 500 million
- - 2001 Sales - 20 billion
- E-Commerce
- B to B sales July 1, 1996 0
- B to B sales FY2001 18 billion
(92) - Supplier Direct to customer 65
- Customer service 82
-
-
13What has changed? The Extended Enterprise -
CISCO
- IT Applications - (continued)
- Product upgrades 92
- 18 million internal web pages i.e., product,
travel, H.R., manuals, etc. - Intranet - Management issues
- Built on ERP architecture
- Complete standard (PCs, databases, HTML)
- - 60 days acquisition
- SVP customer advocacy
- CIO - 25 customers (in field) - outward facing
- 1.3 billion payback
-
14 What has changed? (continued)
- Literate users/(not designers)
- ImplementationPortfolio alignment in a dynamic
competitive world - Chunking - Cultural
overload - Common threads - Alignment,
long-term - short-term needs - Balance
vis-à-vis, industry benchmark,
inside,outside, supply-chain, flexibility -
What if planning - Connecting the Dots, Cathleen Benko
F. Warren
McFarlan, HBS Press, 2003
15 What has changed? (continued)
- First mover/fast follower - Schwab - Merrill
Lynch - Non-adapters get to dieStrategic necessity
- Infrastructure really matters Rise and fall
ofThe Innovators Dilemma - Outsourcing Its here complex - a web
of relationshipsIndependence
has a price - Massively higher uptime requirements
(redundancy, security)
16What has changed?First mover, fast follower -
Schwab-Merrill Lynch
- December 28, 1998SchwabMarket Cap 25.5
billionMerrill market cap 25.4
billion - September 4, 2002- Schwab market cap 12.9
billion- Merrill Lynch market cap 30.4 billion
17What has changed?First mover, fast follower -
Schwab-Merrill Lynch
- Two remarkable organizations and leaders
- Schwab beautifully positioned for challengea
natural first mover - Merrill - An attack on their culture -Hugely
successful company - Turn around - great leadership
18What has changed?First mover, fast follower
-KEY THEMES
- We are in a marathon not a sprintTechnical
excellence must be there, BUT - TIMING market entry depends
- Brand and financial strength really matter
- History and market position dictate first
mover, fast follower positioning
19 What has changed? (continued)
- First mover/fast follower - Schwab - Merrill
Lynch - Non-adapters get to dieStrategic necessity
- Infrastructure really matters Rise and fall
ofThe Innovators Dilemma - Outsourcing Its here complex - a web
of relationships - Independence
has a price - Massively higher uptime requirements
(redundancy, security)
20 SUMMARY
- After 47 years, the best days are still ahead
- History of other transforming technologies is key
- Al Chandlers, A Nation Transformed by
Information How Information Has
Shaped the United States
from Colonial Times to Present,
(Oxford Univesity Press, 2000)
21 SUMMARY (continued)
- The enablers arent necessarily profitable
companies (or even survivors) - Not sure about digital divide
- Future much more frictionless interconnected
world people still matter - The CIO still pivotal