Posts Tagged ‘assets’
Ralph was convinced that one of the main reasons EG had gotten into trouble was a lack of focus on value creation in developing corporate-level and business-unit plans. Likewise, evaluations of the performance of the businesses had only a vague focus on value. Ralph firmly believed that it was the responsibility of all senior managers to focus on value creation. Ralph would ensure that company plans included a thorough analysis of the value of each of the businesses under alternative scenarios. He would also make sure that EG used the restructuring hexagon approach on an annual basis to identify any restructuring opportunities within EG’s portfolio.
This new focus on value would also require some changes in the way EG thought about its corporate strategy. For the next year or so, EG had to focus on restructuring. In the longer term, Ralph would need to develop a plan for sustaining EG’s advantage in the market for corporate control. To do this, he would need to better understand the company’s skills and assets and in which businesses they would be most valuable. Most important, he would have to ensure that the value of these skills could be identified in terms of higher margins, growth rates, and the like before building action plans around them. Too often, Ralph was convinced, EG had done a perfunctory analysis of its capabilities and entered businesses without a clear idea of how and why EG would be a better owner and able to create value for its shareholders. As a first step, later in the year Ralph would establish a task force to compile an inventory and do an analysis of EG’s skills and assets compared with its competition, as well as ideas for new businesses EG might enter.
At the business level, EG’s new focus on value would require some changes too. The restructuring review had pointed out a number of specific strategic and operating actions that the various business managers would need to take. Beyond this, management in the business units would need to think differently about their operations. They would need to focus on what was driving the value of their businesses—whether it was volume growth, margins, or capital utilization. Everyone was accustomed to focusing on growth in earnings, but what would matter in the future would be growth in value and economic returns on investment. Sometimes this would mean foregoing growth in the business that would have been accepted in years gone by. At other times, managers would have to get more comfortable with the idea of reporting lower earnings when investment in research and development or advertising with a longer term payoff made economic sense. Ralph knew that these changes would be difficult for his management group, because it had not been encouraged to think this way in the past. To help bring about change, he decided to share with the management group the results of the corporate restructuring analysis and to develop a series of training seminars for senior division management about shareholder value.