Founder's Mentality Blog
The Win-Scale Model: Winning by Failing
The Win-Scale Model: Winning by Failing
Micro-battles solve problems by challenging the old ways of doing things.
Founder's Mentality Blog
Micro-battles solve problems by challenging the old ways of doing things.
We introduced in a separate blog post the Bain Micro-Battles SystemSM, which involves the Win-Scale model (how you run a micro-battle) and the Amplify model (how you run a portfolio of micro-battles). We then introduced the story of Freddie, to emphasize how important behavioral change is to running individual battles and a portfolio of battles. Now, we turn to the key skills you’ll build as you work on winning, scaling and amplifying. This blog post covers the skills involved in winning.
Five quick contextual points:
The winning skills are those of a company with a strong Founder’s Mentality. The exam question is, “How do we identify the critical first failure points in our strategic initiatives so that we can start working on the hardest things first―those that will require many market tests and adaptions?” This requires two sets of skills:
Want to learn more about the journey to scale insurgency? Explore the Bain Micro-battles System℠, step by step.
All good strategies ultimately align the organization around a few critical elements: a clear ambition (the insurgent mission and a set of full potential targets); a common view of “where to play” (we’ll focus on these specific, properly defined markets); a common view of “how to win” (our spiky capabilities, Repeatable Models® and common instincts); and a clear set of strategic imperatives, which includes very specific actions we’ll take to win in the market and how we’ll measure success.
I’m sure you’re nodding your head here. But most companies spend remarkably little time really focusing on those specific actions needed to win in the market. Many leaders believe they have a strategy when they conclude they must:
These are aspirational chapter headings, but they aren’t strategy. They don’t really say how you intend to pursue those aspirations or clear the biggest obstacles. This is where micro-battles come in. They develop the skills you need to move from chapter headings to the actual novel.
Translate strategic intent into a micro-battle, by defining the most important failure point and a hypothesis on how to deal with it. I was on a panel with two CEOs of leading multinationals not long ago, and we were talking about micro-battles. I raised this issue of translating strategy into micro-battles by identifying failure points, and one of the CEOs turned to the other and said, “Isn’t it odd that the bigger you get as a company, the more a single rule applies: Every strategic initiative takes exactly 18 months … to fail.”
His point was that large incumbents typically lay out big strategy initiatives (chapter headings) and begin work on all the easy things first. Phase One of the strategy takes a good 12 months tackling the easy things. Then halfway through Phase Two, the executive committee turns to the hard things―and begins to fail spectacularly. The cost of failure is high because the company has spent more than a year and lots of money on easy things and is now losing confidence and ultimately eating those big sunken costs.
The CEO went on to say, “One of the most important requirements of a leader is to translate a strategic initiative into the most important failure point and to focus the organization on that big problem early. It will demand lots of testing and lots of low-cost failure from the outset.”
This is a micro-battle. And with micro-battles, the very first step is to identify the most critical failure points in your strategy. This requires specific action at all levels.
Ensure that the failure point can be tested with the right customers using the right prototype. There’s an art to this. It is not enough to say, “The failure point of this strategic initiative is X.” You have to follow up with: “A solution to X can be tested with these key customers through this specific prototype until we get it right.” This is iterative. There is no sense in defining a failure point unless you can see your way to testing a solution with prototypes and customers. NASA scientists didn’t just say, “We know we want to go to the moon, and the biggest potential failure point is how to get three astronauts there and back alive.” They went further and said, “We’re going to figure this out through a series of smaller tests, proving each point to the best of our abilities. That will either build to a solution or keep the costs of failure to a minimum.”
The design of the prototype is critical. You want to fail fast and adapt quickly, but doing so meaningfully demands clarity around which customers really matter and rigor around what type of feedback you gather. In many cases, your test subjects will be traditional customers outside the company, and this can involve nuances. If you want to test a new beer promotion, for instance, you need to get it in front of beer drinkers, but you also need input from your on-trade partners (bars, restaurants). In other cases, the customer is internal―folks in the organization who will be most affected by the proposed solution. If you want to test a major cost-reduction initiative as an airline, your key “customers” might be pilots and flight crews.
Develop the right facts. Micro-battles aren’t “micro-hunches,” and you can’t rely on your gut instinct to determine whether the customer likes your latest prototype. A key skill is to sort out the set of analytics that will give you the most relevant insights into what your customer is really thinking. You also have to create alignment around the best way to collect that data via testing. You need to go deep on things like “preference drivers” and competitive benchmarking. You need to worry about the size of the target customer segment and the average lifetime value of these customers. One of the micro-battle leader’s toughest jobs is to decide which facts to collect via prototype testing to ensure the team is producing a winner.
Once you’ve defined the first failure points and set up the right prototype, you’ve got to run the micro-battle through its paces. This requires mastering a number of skills.
Agile development. The Win-Scale model depends on Agile ways of working, and instead of trying to explain Agile in great detail here, I’ll refer you to the work of my Bain colleague Darrell Rigby, the head of our Innovation practice. But I will focus briefly on a few essential points that are critical to micro-battles.
Active listening (or rooting out failure in the blah, blah, blah of customer feedback). It is easy to get good customer feedback. Ask the right questions in the right way, and nice people will be nice. It is a lot harder to get great customer feedback―namely, the thoughtful feedback of thoughtful customers pointing out how many ways you failed with the latest prototype. The work of the micro-battle team is to find the failure points, not collect cheers. The team’s job is to learn as much as it can from each cycle, so the next product will be better. That’s why it’s so important to define the hard metrics that measure success, then hold the prototype to these exacting standards. The leader’s motto should be, “We’ve built in the time to fail, so let’s fail spectacularly.”
Mastering the pivot. Every failure offers the chance to learn and adjust. So the leader must develop the skills to pivot effectively, based on great customer feedback. Every pivot is a sign the team is learning and moving forward, something the leader needs to champion. The worst kind of incumbent behaviors are about “fighting your corner” and making sure your idea “prevails.” Micro-battle teams need to develop the opposite skills―celebrating together the abandonment of a feature that didn’t test well, cheering the idea that has morphed over time into something that is now working.
Making the Leadership team work for the Win-Scale team. Elsewhere in these blog posts, we’ve been clear that we’re placing a big burden on the micro-battle teams―that is, they are accountable for running their micro-battles like the microcosm of the company you want to become. A big part of that is helping change the leadership behaviors of the company’s most senior executives. In that sense, the monthly Leadership meetings could be seen as a burden. But that is the wrong way to look at it. The micro-battle leader must make these sessions work for her team. She must develop the skills that will let her make the most of these sessions with top executives to:
This isn’t easy. It might conflict with the demands of the Leadership team. Top executives might be stuck in incumbent behaviors that are hurting―not helping―her team. But she should call out these issues and ask for help. The whole point of micro-battles is to solve problems by challenging the old ways of doing things.
This is how a micro-battle comes to resemble the scale insurgent your company wants to be. The battle leader is, quite intentionally, a maverick. Make problems smaller and act. Stay externally focused, and get the right facts and feedback you need to fail and pivot effectively. Don’t let the team get distracted by all the shallow work of the organization. Keep focused on the deep work only you can do. Celebrate the great failures and the wonderful successes. Tell it like it is to your bosses, and get the help you need to move your team forward so the company can win in the marketplace.
Winning is about rediscovering your Founder’s Mentality; scaling is about taking advantage of your size.
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