Find a Sense of Purpose or Fail
Making Profit Should be a by-product of Purpose
Eight years ago, a global study
of high growth in companies was launched by the Harvard Business Review (HBR)
to investigate the importance of three strategies known to drive it: creating
new markets, serving broader stakeholder needs, and changing the rules of the
game. However, the finding of the study was a major surprise, going by the admission
of the brains behind the study. Although each of the three strategies did boost
growth at the organizations studied, there was a fourth driver that the team
had not even considered at all: PURPOSE.
For many years, companies have
been urged to make purpose form the core of what drives them. Unfortunately,
the conversation has often been around having a purpose as an add-on—a way to
create shared value, improve employee morale and commitment, give back to the
community, and help the environment. However, as the study by HBR revealed, companies
have moved purpose from the periphery of their strategies to their core. This
means that such companies have committed leadership and the financial investment
to use purpose as a way towards sustained profitable growth; a way to stay
relevant in the rapidly changing and unpredictable business world; and, to
deepen ties as well as forge meaningful relationships with their stakeholders.
Across the globe, corporate
organizations often have very predictable responses whenever they are faced
with challenges of dwindling margins, especially in the face of the rapidly
commodifying world. It’s always downsizing (what they call rightsizing), or for
the slightly smart ones, the go-to response is to enhance their value
propositions by innovating products, services, or business models. This
explains why a business may start as a Telco but ends up having a financial
product as its core business. While this approach of value proposition may bring
some quick wins, professor Thomas Malnight of Switzerland’s International Institute
for Management Development (IMD) posits in his HBR article that the value
proposition approach is only but a “transactional approach
geared toward prevailing in the current arena.” Professor Malnight insists that
companies must adopt the purpose-driven approach or risk failure because “purpose-driven approach facilitates growth in new ecosystems; it allows companies to broaden
their mission, create a holistic value proposition and deliver a lifetime
benefits to customers.”
I recently listened to Alex
Edmans, a professor of finance at the London Business school, in one of his
video interviews on “Inside Global Economy.” Listening to Edmans got me
intrigued by the idea of having a purpose-driven business strategy rather than
just sticking to the good old Bottom-Line approach. At this point, I would
rather quote the professor verbatim rather than paraphrase, and here it goes.
“A key challenge facing global business
is its responsibility towards wider society. As a society, we are facing major
challenges such as climate change, income inequality, discrimination, and
automation. But many businesses focus only on short-term profit, paying scant
attention to those wider societal issues. This is a concern that is the force
behind populism in the world today. People just do not believe that the current
system of capitalism is working for ordinary citizens.
So, the key challenge for
businesses is to recognize their responsibility to society while also making
sure that they keep an eye on their bottom-line. Businesses, after all, are not
charities, and making a profit is an important part of a well-functioning economy.
The question, therefore, is how
can businesses prepare?
Businesses can prepare for this
challenge by having a clear sense of what their purpose is. So, what is a
purpose? A purpose is the business
reason for being. A “raison d'être” if you will. A purpose defines the role a
business plays in the world and how it contributes to human betterment. A purpose is like a North-star that guides a business in its everyday decision-making. A pharmaceutical
company’s purpose might be “to make medicine
to transform human health.” Similarly, a gaming company’s purpose might be “to make toys that both educate and entertain
children.” Lastly, a telecommunication company’s purpose might be “to use telco services and products in transforming
and impacting lives positively.”
Importantly, a business purpose
should not be just to make profits. Making profit should be a by-product out of
serving your purpose: doing well at making medicine, making the best toys that
bring happiness and educate kids, and transforming lives through its amazing
telco services and products, et cetera. However, it is not just sufficient to
come up with a nice purpose statement. It is important to put it into practice.
Any company needs to think about what measures it must have to get to gauge
whether it is actually fulfilling its purpose. More importantly, company
executives must learn to use such purpose and their corresponding metrics in
making decisions and evaluating employees. This is the only way a company can
move beyond just short-term profit-making and move into the dynamic world of business
with a mind for sustainability.”
Smart and digestable😍
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