Book review, Lou Gerstner’s “Who said Elephants can’t dance?” on IBM turnaround

I´ve justed sent Lou Gerstner´s book “Who said Elephants can´t dance?” back to my bookshelves.

I have to admit that, having been for a while very keen on CEO´s books, Lou Gerstner´s feedback on his IBM experience is one of the category´s masterpieces.

Well, writing on IBM, a fascinating company, also helps. But I really enjoyed the way Gerstner described the assets as well as the shortcomings of Big Blue.

There are definitely a few lessons I should remember from reading this book (nicely written, fluid style – at least that´s my opinion):

- Gerstner had a strategy consulting, consumer goods and financial services marketing background prior to joining IBM as a “Change Agent”. He was the first non-IBMer to take such a responsibility in a company known for its overwhelming culture. He managed, through a real, sound, true alignment of strategic issues with operational behaviours and communications, to make of IBM (an at the time heavy administrative technology-breakthroughs focused geographically-divided multinational) a customer satisfaction, market-driven services transnational company (IBM is still today´s leading services corporation worldwide).

- Throughout the book, Gerstner insists a lot on:

* communication, “Say what you do, do what you say” could be one of his mottos, at all levels: cross-border, cross-departements, bottom-up, top-down, internal-external;

* a constant competitive analysis, or benchmarking, with speeches I find hilarious, but true, referring to competitors stealing IBMers the money they saved for their children´s College studies. As an example, the way IBM could generate enough free cash-flows (the only real performance indicator in the corporate world according to Gerstner) was basically to optimize its cost structure against the competition´s cost structure;

* transferring R&D patents into disruptive market innovations that serve customer´s needs;

* avoiding corporate inertia, fancy titles, and “sit-and-watch” jobs; a good strategy can´t work without a perfect execution.

Gerstner was also rather concerned about his lack of IT skills prior to joining the company. He had an terrific advantage though: he knew IBM from a customer viewpoint. Going back to his lack of technology acumen, Gerstner was humble enough to find the best people to translate the high-tech jargon into common English sentences, and transform IBMers, great tech persons, into great tech persons + great business-minded people.

Today, IBM´s competitive edge is challenged but still unmatched in many areas (Middleware software like Rational and Lotus for instance; storage solutions; servers; IT services consulting; etc.) thanks to its one-stop shop size. I believe great CEOs are brave leaders. In other words, leaders courageous enough to do what it takes to convince their stakeholders (clients, suppliers, employees, shareholders, etc.) to pull the rope in the same direction. Gerstner´s legacy is all made of brave moves, amongst which:

* keeping IBM in one piece, to benefit from the economies of scale implied by its size;

* lowering the size of blockbuster servers to increase short term market share & cash flows to invest better in the future;

* realizing that OS2, though a better operating system than MS Windows 3.1, had lost the operating systems battle against Microsoft´s marketing power. I used to be a fanatic of OS2, Mac OS and Jean-Louis Gassée´s BeOS a long time ago – and indeed, these were better products than Windows. But in the end, what matters is not technology, it´s customer adoption…I learnt the lesson too and switched to Windows when its 1995 millesium was released;

* etc. etc. Reading this book is a no-brainer!

All in all, I learnt a lot reading Gerstner´s “Who said Elephants can´t dance?”, and I strongly recommend this book to all would-be managers, as well as all the geeks who believe what matters most is technology, not customers. The latters will find in Lou Gerstner´s testimony the perfect demonstration that what lies behind every success as well as all failures is nothing else but competitive and market forces – which then drive technological innovation.

On eBay´s international expansion strategy

table

I´ve gathered some data about countries where eBay operates. Here it is presented in a table (Sources: populationdata.net & global-reach.biz; figures are from December 2005).

Could someone explain to me what eBay´s international expansion strategy exactly is? It seems rather inconsistent…

For instance, eBay´s in Singapore, New Zealand & Ireland and not in, say, Estonia, Jordan, or Israel (for the latter: pop. 6,780,000; 3,700,000 Internet users; 55% IT literacy).

When it comes to Japan, where eBay, again, doesn´t operate, I understand that Rakuten´s leadership is probably unmatchable, but isn´t fighting competition the very essence of top companies?

eBay eventually integrates with Skype for good

So there we are. eBay eventually issued a press release stating clearly how it was intending to make Skype fit in its universe (eBay + Paypal, and soon Fon?): buyers will be able to contact sellers through Skype when considering buying an expensive item (like jewels, a piece of Art, a car, a sockets company, etc.). This, according to eBay, should help close deals faster, enhancing trust and confidence in both parties´ abilities to pursue the transaction.

Though I cannot come up right now with a smarter idea to integrate eBay & Skype, I believe the move (to be probably extended to all items soon) is too easy to be value creative – especially for sellers. The whole point of eBay relies on its asynchronous properties: I can sell my books while sleeping! And I definitely don´t want to waste my time chatting with every single eBay user, or I´d rather go to the flea market and liquidate everything.

I´m all the more convinced that eBay purchased Skype – for a mere $bn 2.6, just to prevent someone else (Google? Yahoo? Microsoft?) from buying the Skype technology and voIP market share out. And such a way of playing with one´s shareholders money, to my mind, jeopardizes the executive team´s credibility.

Picture request…

No really connection with IT, but it shows at least one way to take advantage of the new horizons the maturation of the Internet has opened.

I got an e-mail this morning asking for my picture. There you go.

Please not that, though single, I´m currently unavailable. I hope this little story will urge people to start their own blog…

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