Showing posts with label company. Show all posts
Showing posts with label company. Show all posts

22 May 2019

A glass exists to hold water. A company exists to serve its customers

By George ILIEV
CorporateNature Metaphor Series, No 104

A glass full of water is a container that makes a valuable liquid useful and accessible. Sometimes people collect glasses for the sake of the glasses themselves, e.g. to put them in a display cabinet of Waterford Crystal. But most of the time glasses, cups and pots exist to serve a higher and more useful purpose.

Metaphorically, companies are glasses and cups while their business activities are the useful liquid they contain inside. 

Before the 2008 Global Financial Crisis, most economists agreed with Milton Friedman's 1970s theory that companies exist for their shareholders. Back then, the key objective of a company was seen as generating shareholder returns, which was akin to believing that a glass exists for its own sake.

However, ever since the 1970s, Peter Drucker, the father of management, has maintained that companies do not exist for their shareholders but for their customers, so the primary objective of a company is to be useful to its customers. This is akin to maintaining that the glass exists to hold a liquid.

The financial crisis has ultimately shown that Milton Friedman was wrong and Peter Drucker was right: the glass exists for the liquid inside, not for the melted and strangely-shaped quartz that makes up the glass itself.



Glass of water (Source: Wikipedia)

6 January 2019

Startup journeys take you across mountains; Corporate careers take you down river valleys

By George ILIEV
CorporateNature Metaphor Series, No 75.

Entrepreneurs discover "points of pain", tackle the uknown and overcome challenges that others often consider insurmountable. This makes the startup journey similar to climbing a mountain.

On the other hand, corporate employees tread a well-trodden path. This makes a corporate career resemble a trek down a river valley. The river has already eroded its bed through the rocks just like the company has established its policies, processes and territory; one only needs to go with the flow and follow the river downstream.

And then, occasionally, there are the canyons: rivers that have cut their bed deep across mountains. These are the unicorns: startups that headed up a mountain and on the way got big and created their own giant river valley.

Grand Canyon (Source: Wikipedia