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What can you do when penny-pinchers get in the way of your
disruptive ideas to make necessary, often disruptive, changes in your
company?
When Dell announced in February its decision to take
the company private in a deal estimated at US$24.4 billion, founder and
CEO Michael Dell said in a statement the move was part of the strategy
to “continue the execution of our long-term strategy and focus on
delivering best-in-class solutions to our customers as a private
enterprise”.
One could have added that the deal was necessary to
give Dell the breathing space it needed – away from the demands of
shareholders and the market – to re-boot its strategy and recover its
profits from its bread-and-butter PC business, which have been badly hit
by sexier, more innovative products such Apple’s iPad and Amazon’s
Kindle.
For big corporations – regardless of industry – making
disruptive changes isn’t a question of money: many have substantial
budgets and can ride out the disruption. It’s a question of mindset and
how you position the innovative disruption on the balance sheet– and
that can be the downfall.
INSEAD Associate Professor of
Accounting and Control Gilles Hilary, in the research paper Does
Accounting Conservatism Impede Corporate Innovation?, makes the case
that firms with a greater degree of accounting conservatism are less
innovative because of, among other things, the requisite accounting
practice of immediately provisioning for future losses.
“The
principle of accounting conservatism is to recognize losses as soon as
they become probable but delay the recognition of profits until there is
a legal claim to the revenues generating them and that revenues are
verifiable,” Hilary writes.
“The negative effects of accounting
conservatism on innovation activities are more pronounced…when the
pressure from short-term institutional investors is greater.”
Long-term viewThe
pressure to meet quarterly and annual financial targets is indeed
great, says Hal Gregersen, Senior Affiliate Professor of Innovation and
Leadership at INSEAD, but it did not deter innovators such as Amazon
founder and CEO, Jeff Bezos.
“It’s important to remember that
every major risk that Bezos has had Amazon take, the markets have
actually been very negative when he takes the risks,” Gregersen told
INSEAD Knowledge in an interview during his appearance at the Unleashing
Innovation conference in Singapore in February.
“When Amazon
went from just selling books to building massive full-sized warehouses
to hold more than books because they were spreading beyond that product,
the markets thought he was an idiot for investing the money in that
sort of capital expansion; we know the story there – it worked.”
The
markets crushed Amazon stock on two other company announcements: the
move into e-readers (Kindle) and cloud computing; the bets paid off both
times. Sales have more than tripled from US$14.85 billion in 2007 to
over $48 billion in 2011, illustrating the benefits of taking the
long-term view that Bezos often talks about.
It is well-known
that Bezos includes in every Amazon annual report the company’s 1997
letter to the shareholders, reminding them that “It’s All About the Long
Term”. Among many points made in that letter, Bezos states quite
clearly: “We will continue to make investment decisions in light of
long-term market leadership considerations rather than short-term
profitability considerations or short-term Wall Street reactions.”
Innovation exemplified?Hilary
writes that “cash-flows generated by innovations in firms with more
conservative accounting have shorter horizons,” and that “the negative
effects of accounting conservatism on innovative activities are more
pronounced when firms operate in innovative industries.”
He adds:
“To encourage innovation, accounting should be facilitating the
tolerance of failures at the initial stages of risky projects. This is
particularly true when managers are already under strong pressure to
deliver results quickly.”
In that respect, CEOs and CFOs alike
have much to learn from Amazon. The constant innovation that happens at
the Seattle HQ churns out products that contribute to the aforementioned
revenue streams. Perhaps more importantly, Bezos’ courage to think
long-term in such an innovative and high-tech industry, such as the one
that Amazon is in, has minimized conservative accounting’s negative
effects on innovation.
All well and good, but you still have to convince the CFO whose job, after all, is to be cautious.
“You
get a CFO often coming in to a bright new idea using language like,
‘The marginal cost of our equipment can deliver something far cheaper
than the total cost of this new investment,’” Gregersen elaborates.
“So I’m gonna use my marginal cost logic on you to say, ‘Don’t invest the money, CEO. It’s not a good idea.’”
As a result, a company misses out on what could have developed into a long-term cash cow, much like the Kindle has for Amazon.
Can you teach innovation?That is not to say that CFOs and accountants are a guaranteed death sentence for innovation.
For
his book, The Innovator’s DNA, Gregersen gave the example of Mike
Collins, founder of venture capital and crowd funding firm Big Idea
Group.
“Mike told us about hiring a CFO to make sure that they
were making wise financial choices in the company. He said that the
CFO’s creativity skills were close to zero when he came into the
system,” he wrote.
“But over the course of over nine to 12
months, just by being around others who think differently and act
differently, he said the CFO’s creativity went up to about 30-35
percent, which is about as far as it needed to be because when he was
sitting at that senior executive table, he could not only provide input
about the numbers, he could also interpret the numbers strategically and
help the company to go in a different direction. So, in that kind of
situation, where the culture itself was pretty innovative, it helped the
CFOs elevate their creative capacity.”
But what about CFOs who
work in companies that do not have an inherently innovative culture? How
should such CFOs go about becoming more innovative to help the
organization?
“I think I would write down four or five minutes
every day all the questions I had about a problem, and it would lead to
new questions which will create new solutions,” says Gregersen. “I’ll
think about places I can go to watch and observe situations which might
give me some insight about the issue. I would identify three or four
people outside my industry, in a different geography perhaps, and talk
to them about their perspective on the problem.”
It’s not easy, he said, but it works.
“If
I do those sorts of things, and then I meet with the senior executive
team four or five weeks later, I’d be stunned if that CFO wouldn’t walk
into that room and deliver a different and better perspective on the
problem than he/she would have otherwise. It’s that kind of
legwork/homework…it takes work! But it leads to creative ideas that help
a strategic-thinking group of people to go in a new direction.”
The writer is web editor at INSEAD Knowledge. Article provided courtesy of INSEAD Knowledge (knowledge.insead,edu/home.cfm)
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