Founder's Mentality Blog
Path Two: Reviving Founder's Mentality®
Path Two: Reviving Founder's Mentality®
Large incumbents and struggling bureaucracies that have lost their "founder's mentality" can regain it.
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Founder's Mentality Blog
Large incumbents and struggling bureaucracies that have lost their "founder's mentality" can regain it.
The resources of large global companies are the envy of any start-up. These large incumbents enjoy the benefits of scale: They have the market leadership, assets and scope they need to out-invest competitors, hire top talent and serve their customers better than anyone else.
For start-ups, the goal is clear: Achieve the same scale so they can compete with these behemoths. This is also why incumbents work hard to retain their industry positions. As we outlined in the book Profit from the Core, scale and scope are often critical to achieving sustainable growth and leadership in an industry.
But scale and scope can come with a cost. Entrepreneurial companies often regret the trade-offs they make as they grow: the loss of an ownership culture, a reduced focus on customers and the growth of complexity. In short, they begin to lose the Founder’s Mentality® behind their original success.
CEOs of large incumbents also feel nostalgia for the good old days. Sitting atop the vast global enterprises that are the envy of start-ups, they long for simplicity, for a better connection with the front line and for the voice of the customer to be better represented in corporate debates.
The three elements of the Founder's Mentality help companies sustain performance while avoiding the inevitable crises of growth.
Of course, for many leaders, this loss of Founder’s Mentality might seem like an acceptable trade-off if it gives their companies the scale and scope needed to dominate their industries. But companies cannot hover in place. No matter their size or resources, incumbents eventually sink under the weight of their own complexity—pulled down until they become struggling bureaucracies that have not only lost their Founder’s Mentality, but begin to lose the net benefits of scale and scope.
What pulls them down? Just as predictable forces—the westward winds—cause insurgents to lose their Founder's Mentality as they grow, another set of predictable forces turns the power of incumbency into the pain of bureaucracy. We call these forces the southward winds.
In and of itself, incumbency is not a problem—it offers companies tremendous resources and benefits. But these southward winds are very real, and without a Founder’s Mentality, they constantly threaten to push an incumbent south until it becomes a struggling bureaucracy.
The path for incumbents and struggling bureaucracies is clear: Maintain, or recreate, the benefits of scale and rediscover the Founder’s Mentality. We think this is best done through Repeatable Models®:
Creative partnerships with fast-growing, Agile companies can help large incumbents regain their Founder's Mentality.
Founder's Mentality®, Great Repeatable Models® and Repeatable Models® are registered trademarks of Bain & Company, Inc.