by Patrick Hylton, Managing Director of the NCB Group.
The following are excerpts from remarks made by Patrick Hylton at the PSOJ President's Forum on July 22, 2014.
JAMAICA is undergoing a transformation, as part of our economic
programme, which is an important foundation for sustainable growth. All
stakeholders — public and private sector and ordinary citizens — must
play a role.
Today, the pervasive question is: Where is the growth? The burning
platform for growth is further fuelled by the fast-changing global
environment in which we operate. Technology and digitisation have
lowered barriers to entry, changed the competitive landscape and raised
our customers' expectations and expanded their options. It is in the
interest of every firm to make the adjustments required to survive or
thrive in this new norm. Jack Welch often said: "If the rate of change
on the outside is greater than the change on the inside, the end is
near."
It is my strong belief that the growth we seek can be unlocked with transformation.
Transformation means significant and meaningful change; change that
makes people doubtful, uncomfortable and even resistant. It requires
changes in both mindset and behaviour. It is the failure to transform
one's mindset that often leads to failure.
It may be our natural disposition to doubt the growth possibilities given challenging circumstances:
* In 1943, Thomas Watson, president of IBM, said: "I think there is a world market for maybe five computers."
* In 1946, Darryl Zanuck, executive at 20th Century Fox said:
"Television won't be able to hold on to any market it captures after the
first six months. People will soon get tired of staring at a plywood
box every night."
* In 1977, Ken Olsen founder of Digital Equipment Corporation said:
"There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their home."
Once you transform your mindset, then you also need to transform your
businesses. In every recession, you find companies that grow. In the
2007/2008 US recession, Apple, Starbucks and Wal-Mart grew. Before Apple
became the company we know today, it was a company with declining
performance, focusing primarily on computers before it transformed the
marketplace for mobile computing devices and portable entertainment. In
2003, when Apple introduced the iPod, its market capitalisation was
approximately $1 billion and today Apple's market cap is in excess of
$500 billion dollars.
You can also find growth in low-growth economies. Digicel received its
telecommunications licence in 2000, when Jamaica's real GDP growth was
0.2 per cent. This set the stage for transformation of the
telecommunications landscape in Jamaica and tremendous business growth
for Digicel.
National Commercial Bank (NCB) has been on a transformation journey
since 2011. We recognised that we had a model that had not changed in
decades while financial services were changing dramatically globally.
FIVE-STEP TRANSFORMATION
We have been using a five-step transformation framework developed by McKinsey and Company.
STEP 1: ASPIRE — This answers the question What do we want to achieve?
At NCB, we set an aspiration to become one of the top five financial
services institutions in the English-and Spanish-speaking Caribbean.
Another aspiration was to triple our sales productivity. We heard this
aspiration was not achievable because of economic and technological
constraints. However, we revamped our sales methodology and tripled
sales productivity in less than six months. This played a role in
offsetting losses related to the Jamaica Debt Exchange and led to NCB
becoming the #1 bank based on profitability for the first time in its
history. In terms of our regional aspirations, we are successfully
progressing toward this goal. One of the lessons learned in the
aspiration-setting process is that you need to be bold. Complaints,
cynicism, and resistance are good indicators that your aspiration is
transformative in nature.
STEP 2: ASSESS — This is evaluating where you are today
versus your aspiration. This requires honesty about your strengths and
weaknesses.
In conducting our assessment, we learned:
* Look beyond your local borders when benchmarking your performance.
Insularity can limit perspective and consequently your accomplishments.
* Validate "intuition" with analytics. Intuition often leads to poor
decisions. Amazon's customer experience, the election of President
Barack Obama, and the recent German World Cup win have come about as a
result of analysing data to drive decisions and strategies.
* Leaders must look in the mirror too. Role modelling is a critical part of change language.
STEP 3: ARCHITECT — This is developing the action plan.
My only caution is to avoid the phenomenon of analysis paralysis. I
paraphrase Robert Burn's poem To A Mouse: "The best laid schemes of mice
and men often go awry."
It is important to plan but quickly get to STEP 4: ACT.
Kodak was so synonymous with photos that the phrase "a Kodak moment" was
coined. Yet, the company filed for bankruptcy in 2011. This company
invented the core technology in digital cameras but failed to act and
became obsolete. We often hear the phrase "justice delayed is justice
denied". The same is true if we replace justice with value, because of
the time value of money.
We learned it is better to pilot the action plan and then refine as you
go along. This gets us to action, but mitigates the risks of limited
planning.
Acting is also about courage. If you are embarking on something
transformational, you will face resistance. But recall: "Smooth seas
don't make for skillful sailors." So be brave and courageous in your
actions.
STEP 5: ADVANCE, which answers the question "How do we
improve?" Even when you have reached what you consider to be the highest
heights of achievement or performance, you must continue to advance.
Apple, Samsung and Amazon are three of the best companies in the world
in terms of market capitalisation, profitability, and growth. Yet, they
are constantly transforming and, as a result, they are constantly
growing.
At NCB, our next transformation is called "Bank of the Future". We have
installed intelligent ABMs and kiosks in our branches, which allow our
customers to avoid teller lines, pay reduced or no fees, transact
business 24/7 in some locations, and continue to bank in the safe
environs of our branches.
We look at transformation as critical to our sustainability. The public
may wonder why we are making changes given how profitable we are. It is
important to note that historical financial performance is no predictor
of future performance. Companies that have generated billions in US
dollars in profits — Lehman, Bear Stearns — have failed. Recall that
three of the best performing companies in the world — Apple, Samsung,
and Amazon — are still making continuous improvements.
In closing, let me re-emphasise how important it is for all citizens to
play a role in Jamaica's transformation. Instead of asking "Where is the
growth", recognise that the growth is within each of us. Let us commit
to transitioning the dialogue from where's the growth to identifying the
growth and pursuing it through transformation of our mindset and
businesses.
As Daniel Burnham said: "Make no little plans. They have no magic to
stir men's blood and probably themselves will not be realised. Make big
plans; aim high in hope and work, remembering that a noble, logical
diagram, once recorded, will never die, but long after we are gone will
be a living
thing, asserting itself with ever-growing insistence."
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