Damien McLoughlin, Dean of the Michael Smurfit Graduate School of Business at University College Dublin in Ireland, started his presentation at Alltech Symposium this week with the fact ‘Companies are dying’. Most growth plans fail, but certainly the remaining 10% succeed.
McLoughlin maintained that the most failures are due to growth plans not being related to the core business. Creating and maintaining the competitive advantage is key for success. Look at Smithfield with its swine operation, look at Tyson with its poultry business, and look at OSI with its food service excellence – they all focus on their core businesses. In other words, each step from core keeps us away from success.
Two hard questions
Do leaders know what their core business is? Does the management team know what the core is? They both look as a matter of course and the most basic questions, but more than a few leaders fail to answer appropriately. Professor McLoughlin recommended four steps for managers to take:
The presentation by Professor McLoughlin was indeed very much ‘focused’ on his message: The focus is the key in every business for successful growth. Understand the core, discuss the core, fully exploit the core, and repeat the model around the core. This should result in profit generation in the core.