Founder's Mentality Blog
The Three Levels of Micro-battles
The Three Levels of Micro-battles
All roads lead to technology.
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Founder's Mentality Blog
All roads lead to technology.
All micro-battles lead to technology. But micro-battles journeys don’t start with technology. Let’s discuss.
As we work with companies on micro-battles, we’re learning that taxonomy matters. Derived from the Greek words taxis (arrangement) and nomia (method), the term taxonomy was originally used in biology to classify organisms. But taxonomy is now applied widely. We’ve found huge value in identifying and naming patterns of behaviors, routines and lessons as companies work on micro-battles.
Working closely with Bain’s Innovation practice, we’ve been identifying the common patterns that Agile teams and micro-battle teams encounter as they prototype and scale winning solutions. And we’re seeing common patterns in the most successful innovations and micro-battles themselves. Inevitably, the teams work on three levels: customer experience, business processes and technology. That order matters.
Want to learn more about the journey to scale insurgency? Explore the Bain Micro-battles System℠, step by step.
The best teams start with the customer. They ask, “What parts of the customer experience are we actually trying to improve?” This demands developing a clear taxonomy of the customer experience and the episodes—such as “purchase and pay”—that it comprises. For an online retailer, the customer experience might move from “browsing and selection,” to “purchase and pay,” to “shipping and receiving,” and finally to “after-sales service.” For a mobile phone company, the experience might encompass multiple players. It could move from “selecting a phone” (which might involve an online comparison of brands), to “choosing a plan” (which might involve a network-branded store or third party), to “purchase and pay” for initial service. The customer experience could continue with “ongoing billing” and “ongoing services” (dealing with phone or network issues) to “extension/upgrade.” Micro-battle teams need a clear, shared understanding of the full customer experience and more specifically, what they’re trying to improve. By mapping the taxonomy and honing in on a specific episode of the customer experience within that map, the micro-battle team can innovate in a way that mirrors the customer’s experience, and the innovation can serve the customer that much more effectively. This is level one.
The team works on level one until it has a winning prototype. But, as we’ve discussed elsewhere, teams are also focused on prototypes that scale. They’ll be testing to ensure that these prototypes can transfer across other customers and markets. They’ll be testing that the prototype translates into the routines and behaviors of the people who deliver the customer experience. As teams execute changes to the customer experience, they move to level two. They ask themselves, “To fully implement the improvement of customer experience X, what business processes do we need to improve?”
Again, taxonomy matters. The team must outline the full range of business processes—the procedures, activities and tasks that the company executes to deliver the customer experience. Then it must be specific about what processes need to change. Our online retailer should think through business processes required for planning, buying, distributing and selling. It also wants to think through “management and control” processes to support the teams, such as financial controls, legal, human resource systems, and so on. For example, if you’re trying to improve how your customers can purchase and pay for products online, you might conclude that you’ll need to change your store inventory-management processes immediately.
As the team starts to work on level two, or business process improvements, another pattern emerges—all work to improve business processes leads to technology solutions. This is level three. Again, we need a taxonomy for discussing technology improvements across infrastructure, applications, data and services. The team needs to work through the technology requirements to change the business process that will improve the customer experience.
The “three levels” idea is occurring everywhere. Here are a few examples.
Understanding the natural pattern of customer experience, to business process, to technology has significant benefits. Teams familiar with the three levels often take five critical actions.
All roads lead to technology. In fact, when you move to a full portfolio of micro-battles, you’ll find that you’re well on the road to “transformation through technology” or T3. But the journey doesn’t start with technology—it starts with the customer.
Discussed.
The leadership team acts as a role model for scale insurgency.
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