Founder's Mentality Blog
Scaling as a Capability: 10 Lessons from the Masters
Scaling as a Capability: 10 Lessons from the Masters
Scaling is at the heart of the journey to sustainable, profitable growth.
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Founder's Mentality Blog
Scaling is at the heart of the journey to sustainable, profitable growth.
In our blog on the micro-battles training agenda, we referred to our Leadership training workshop, where we work with leaders to better understand how to manage the portfolio of micro-battles. A good deal of this training is about behavioral change, but we also train on skills. One skill that’s common to most companies working on micro-battles is scaling. But to put it bluntly, most companies realize they’re not very good at it. This is our collection of best practices for scaling issues.
Quick context: Scaling is at the heart of the Bain Micro-battles System℠. And we’ve been writing about it for a while. In introducing the Win-Scale model, we described in some detail how to move from a prototype to a repeatable model. Specifically, we warned that too often, companies jump from a working prototype to a playbook to a rollout in the organization. We covered all the steps that need to happen between prototype and playbook, and also discussed alternative scaling models. In our blog “Introducing the Bain Micro-battles System,” we covered the need to build scaling skills and introduced the idea of the “three communities”—one that disrupts, one that executes, and one that scales by bridging the gap between disruption and the playbook. In fact, this idea of the scaling community has become so critical that we recognize it as one of the six design principles of the scale insurgent. So we’ve been focused on scaling from Day 1. And after completing detailed interviews with leading CEOs on the topic, we want to share their tips with you. Here are the top 10, along with implications for your executive teams.
Want to learn more about the journey to scale insurgency? Explore the Bain Micro-battles System℠, step by step.
1. Recognize that scaling will be critical to your success and that a winning repeatable model will require an iterative process. Demand that your leaders remain in balance across the Win-Scale and Amplify stages. The need for balance plays out on two levels.
Implication No. 1: Ensure that the idea of staying in balance is front and center on your mindset wall (see "Micro-battles and the Learning Center"), and interrogate your micro-battle teams from Day 1 on the repeatable model they advocate and the scaling issues they’ll address. These issues aren’t addressed after building a successful prototype—they happen during the prototyping process.
2. Use the standard taxonomy of the three levels (customer experience, business process and technology) to address common scaling issues from Day 1. By anticipating demands to change business processes and support new technology solutions, you can track and unblock resource bottlenecks earlier.
In our blog “The Three Levels of Micro-battles,” we introduced the idea that the most successful micro-battle teams working on the most successful innovations always address three levels. They do so in the following order: customer experience, business process, technology. The best teams start with the customer and ask, “Which episodes of the customer experience are we actually trying to improve?” At the same time, they’re focusing on scaling by testing whether they can transfer prototypes to other customers and markets. Then they move to level two by asking, “To fully implement the improvement of customer experience X, what business processes do we need to improve?” And these business processes ultimately lead to level three, or the question, “What technology solutions are needed to improve business process Y?”
Understanding the three levels can help you address common scaling issues before they become blockers. Are multiple teams planning to draw on the same areas for changes in business processes or technology? Are there resource bottlenecks that you can unblock in advance by reallocating or recruiting additional resources? A common taxonomy, which defines the three levels and breaks out their specifics, can help. Introducing the taxonomy ensures all teams use the same language to make requests and to define the resources they need.
Implication No. 2: Support your micro-battle teams as they go through the cycle of the three levels. Introduce the common taxonomy and challenge the teams to think about each level early to identify resource bottlenecks. Share lessons from the three levels across the micro-battles portfolio. As we noted elsewhere, all roads lead to technology, but they don’t all start there. Best to start with the customer.
3. From Day 1, identify the people at the center of customer, process and technology bottlenecks. Address the “everyone wants Brent” problem.
The “everyone wants Brent” problem recognizes that many of your micro-battles will depend on three to four functional leaders. At first, you’ll think of the Brents as stars—they’re in such extraordinary demand that they must be extraordinary individuals. But then you start to realize something. The Brents of your world haven’t institutionalized (and therefore scaled) their knowledge. They’re a bottleneck. While we don’t want to judge the Brents’ motivations, you could say they’re using their knowledge to wield power in the organization. They ensure that they’re in constant demand and use the subsequent shortages as a form of leverage. This problem is discussed brilliantly in Gene Kim, Kevin Behr and George Spafford’s book The Phoenix Project. They suggest a simple solution: Surround each Brent with two emerging stars in your business, let’s call them Jane and Simon, and impose two rules. Rule No. 1: Brent can no longer do anything by himself; he must tell Jane how to support micro-battle teams. Rule No. 2: Simon must work with Brent and Jane to create an institutional workbook for all of Brent’s main activities, so others can be trained for Brent’s job.
Implication No. 3: Identify the list of Brents who are emerging in the early days of micro-battle staffing and begin imposing “The Phoenix Project Rule Book.”
4. Don’t jump to playbooks. Scaling models differ according to the degree of tailoring required and the breadth of people who come on board. We spoke in detail about this in our blog on scaling a repeatable model, so we’ll refer you there. But let’s highlight a few best practices that have emerged in this context.
Implication No. 4: Challenge your micro-battle teams early on how they’ll create pull for change. This will help them think about the right team of influencers to bring on board.
5. The best scaling models consider the “unit of scaling.” Jargon alert: What the heck do we mean by “unit of scaling?” Here’s an example. When you study the early days of Enterprise Rent-A-Car, you see that the founders were crystal clear on the company’s unit of scaling. Enterprise would grow by adding more and more branches, each with a fleet of 150 cars. If the branch got bigger than 150, the company would divide the branch into two branches and regrow them to 150. So the unit of scaling was the branch, and you could grow only as fast as your ability to grow branch managers. This focuses the mind. All your micro-battle teams should consider the unit of scaling from Day 1, so you can identify unanticipated bottlenecks. The right scaling model might even force you to change the Win-Scale team. Here are a few more examples:
Implication No. 5: Ask your teams specific questions about the unit of scaling, and use this conversation to identify early resource bottlenecks.
6. Everyone still underestimates the behavioral change required. In our discussion of the six design principles of a scale insurgent, we highlighted that few companies figure out how to ensure Agile teams are working productively with global functions, which operate in traditional hierarchies. Agile micro-battle teams work fast and rely heavily on a test-and-learn model that requires multiple iterations. They also rely on their companies’ global functions to work with them—not simply by supplying resources for micro-battle teams, but also by enabling a winning prototype to scale. But here’s the rub: At the point you need to scale a winning proposition, you need to work directly with a large, hierarchical structure that’s working according to its own timelines and priorities. Either micro-battles scale at the pace of the slowest hierarchical group, or you need to start helping the hierarchies reprioritize their agenda. This way, micro-battle teams can get resources when they need them. That’s an easy sentence to write, but a difficult mission to pull off. A key part of this difficulty is behavioral—the functional leaders will agree on new priorities, but won’t change their behaviors. Old initiatives remain in place, and old resources are locked into them. You’ll make a decision to simplify or stop doing things—then find nothing is simplified or stopped. Inertia is a hard thing to disrupt. That’s why our Leadership workshops focus so much on the need for behavioral change, for both the leaders in that room and the teams they lead. That’s also why we talk about the first 100 days as a series of foundational elements, training modules, interventions and communications. Prepare to intervene a lot.
Implication No. 6: Set aside time to work through how group functions support the micro-battle teams to scale their initiatives. Recognize that this will take a long journey to get right.
7. Understand the role of the three communities and the specific skills required. This might be the most important best practice on the list and the one where the most innovative work is happening. Perhaps immodestly, we think our work with companies on the three-communities issue is some of the most exciting work in Agile enterprise today. We described the three communities in an earlier blog: All companies consist of three communities that operate across structural boundaries. The first is the Agile/disruptive/innovator community—this is 5% to 10% of your activities. Members of this community are disrupting your products and services, your core business processes and your business model itself, to ensure that your customers benefit from innovation. The second is the expert/execution community—this is 85% of your activities. This community is simply executing existing playbooks. This community delivers to your customers the benefits of the flawless execution of a repeatable model and the continuous improvement that comes from good feedback loops. But there’s a third, routinely overlooked community—the scaling community. This is the 5% to 10% of activity that bridges the gap between innovation and execution. Members of this community can turn disruption into routine and recognize the behavioral changes required for scaling new ideas. The simple truth is that no one is talking about the scaling community. This explains why companies have such a hard time scaling Agile. Here’s what our best-practice companies are doing to address this gap.
Implication No. 7: Start building your scaling community today, focusing on these five essential skills.
8. Scaling well demands shifting resources quickly behind a winner. This is self-evident, but worth stating clearly. The whole point of micro-battles is to improve the value of your company and to rediscover the skill of getting the right things done fast. Some of your micro-battles will be real winners, demanding 10 times the resources of others. Your ability to back the winners and over-resource them will be critical to creating value. This can’t happen within an annual budgeting process. It has to be far more dynamic. And the 10-times resources have to come from somewhere, including resources and investments that were agreed upon during an annual cycle. Your Leadership sessions will demand that you continually free up resources from elsewhere to back winners. In almost every case, there are two immediate lessons.
Implication No. 8: Introduce dynamic resource-allocation processes into your Leadership sessions, and start on Day 1 to consider how to free up resources to fund winning micro-battles.
9. Eventually, scaling will demand changes to your operating model. Interventions are required to get Agile teams to work with hierarchical organizations. Earlier, we mentioned that you’ll need to change behavior in order to ensure your global functions work within the timelines of micro-battle teams. But of course, it’s more than that. Ultimately, you’ll need to change your operating model to ensure that the functional teams speed up and become more dynamic in their own allocation of resources. We’ve seen common patterns emerge across organizations. Given that a common goal in micro-battles is to improve the customer experience, which will demand process and technology changes, we’ve found that organizations need to build out six capabilities.
A common lesson among best-practice companies is to begin not with structural changes, but rather with surgical strikes in governance and accountabilities, and new incentives for talent. Consider micro-battle resourcing in all resource decisions at a functional level. Bring members of the Leadership team into these decisions, so they can help set the right priorities. During our Leadership training, we emphasize brainstorming on some early quick wins.
Implication No. 9: Consider simple changes to governance, accountabilities and new incentives for talent to ensure that discussions of global priorities and resourcing give precedence to micro-battles.
10. Use Engine 2 to build specific capabilities. If you don’t, the most important capabilities will languish. While building the scaling community (see Lesson 7) might be the most important action, using Engine 2 to help you build capabilities is perhaps the most counterintuitive. As you become obsessed with scaling, you’ll find yourself creating a long list of capabilities that you need to build. And no matter how much you emphasize their importance, you’ll find that those initiatives always end up at the bottom of the Engine 1 to-do list. There are simply too many priorities. One best practice we’ve seen is to move those initiatives over to Engine 2, giving them the freedom to find ecosystem partners to build these capabilities. Several companies are doing this to great effect.
Implication No. 10: Think about building scaling capabilities across Engine 1 and Engine 2.
That’s it. Long blog; rich topic. And we’re certain this won’t be our last word on the topic, but rather the beginning of a rich conversation.
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