Define YourOperating Model
Designing a Foundation for Execution
Excerpted from
Enterprise Architecture as Strategy:
Creating a Foundation for Business Execution
By
Jeanne W. Ross, Peter Weill, David C. Robertson
Harvard Business PressBoston, Massachusetts
ISBN-13: 978-1-4221-8078-5
8070BC
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Copyright 2008 Harvard Business School Publishing CorporationAll rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
This chapter was originally published as chapter 2 of Enterprise Architecture as Strategy:Creating a Foundation for Business Execution,
copyright 2006 Harvard Business School Publishing Corporation.
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1
2
Define Your
Operating Model
GENERAL H. NORMAN SCHWARZKOPF once observed, “Lead-
ership is a potent combination of strategy and character. But if
you must be without one, be without the strategy.”1 Few business
executives would be comfortable leading without a strategy. Busi-
ness strategy provides direction, an impetus for action. Most com-
panies also rely on strategy to guide IT investments. Accordingly,
IT executives work to align IT and IT-enabled business processes
with stated business strategy. But business-IT strategic alignment
can be an elusive goal.
Business strategies are multifaceted, encompassing decisions
as to which markets to compete in, how to position the company
in each market, and which capabilities to develop and leverage. In
addition, strategic priorities can shift as companies attempt to re-
spond to competitor initiatives or to seize new opportunities. As a
result, strategy rarely offers clear direction for development of sta-
ble IT infrastructure and business process capabilities.
To best support a company’s strategy, we recommend that the
company define an operating model. An operating model is the
necessary level of business process integration and standardiza-
tion for delivering goods and services to customers. An operating
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model describes how a company wants to thrive and grow. By pro-
viding a more stable and actionable view of the company than
strategy, the operating model drives the design of the foundation
for execution.
The choice of an operating model is a critical decision for a
company. It’s the first step in building a foundation for execution.
An operating model enables rapid implementation of a range of
strategic initiatives. But that same operating model will fail to sup-
port initiatives that are inconsistent with the assumptions it’s
built on. Thus, the operating model is a choice about what strate-
gies are going to be supported. Take, for example, the ease with
which Charles Schwab introduced online brokerage relative to
Morgan Stanley. Schwab had already implemented low-touch sys-
tems and processes. In contrast, Morgan Stanley had built its ca-
pabilities for more customer-intimate (and higher-cost) operations.
Similarly, Amazon could add consumer products to its product list
because its operating model highlighted its capabilities in distri-
bution and online customer interactions. Barnes & Noble’s oper-
ating model was ill-suited to online sales but adapted easily to a
partnership with Starbucks, which enhanced its customers’ in-
store shopping experience.
The operating model decision (or lack thereof) has a profound
impact on how a company implements business processes and IT
infrastructure. A company without a clear operating model brings
no automated, preexisting, low-cost capabilities to a new strategic
pursuit. Instead, with each new strategic initiative the company
must effectively begin anew to identify its key capabilities. But se-
lecting an operating model is a commitment to a way of doing
business. That can be a daunting choice.
Our research suggests the payoff for making that choice can be
huge. Companies with a foundation for execution supporting an
operating model reported 17 percent greater strategic effectiveness
than other companies—a metric positively correlated with prof-
itability.2 These companies also reported higher operational effi-
ciency (31%), customer intimacy (33%), product leadership (34%),
2 ENTERPRISE ARCHITECTURE AS STRATEGY
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and strategic agility (29%) than companies that had not devel-
oped a foundation for execution.3
In this chapter we will first define the dimensions of the oper-
ating model—standardization and integration—and then describe
the four types of operating models: Diversification, Coordination,
Unification, and Replication. We will describe the critical compo-
nents of each model and show how an operating model shapes
future strategic choices. We will then discuss important consider-
ations in choosing an operating model.
Integration and Standardization: Key Dimensions of an Operating Model
An operating model has two dimensions: business process stan-
dardization and integration. Although we often think of standard-
ization and integration as two sides of the same coin, they impose
different demands. Executives need to recognize standardization
and integration as two separate decisions.
Standardization of business processes and related systems means
defining exactly how a process will be executed regardless of who
is performing the process or where it is completed. Process stan-
dardization delivers efficiency and predictability across the com-
pany. For example, using a standard process for selling products or
buying supplies allows the activities of different business units to
be measured, compared, and improved. The result of standard-
ization—a reduction in variability—can be dramatic increases in
throughput and efficiency.
Yet greater standardization has a cost. In exchange for increased
predictability, standardized processes necessarily limit local inno-
vation. And the transition to standardization usually requires that
perfectly good (and occasionally superior) systems and processes
be ripped out and replaced by the new standard. This can be po-
litically difficult and expensive.
Integration links the efforts of organizational units through
shared data. This sharing of data can be between processes to
Define Your Operating Model 3
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enable end-to-end transaction processing, or across processes
to allow the company to present a single face to customers. For
example, an automobile manufacturer may decide to integrate
processes so that when a sale is recorded, the car is reserved from
among the cars currently in production. By seamlessly sharing
data between the order management and manufacturing schedul-
ing processes, the company improves its internal integration and,
consequently, its customer service. In financial services, sharing
data across processes enables a loan officer to review a customer’s
checking, savings, and brokerage accounts with the bank, provid-
ing better information about the customer’s financial situation
and enabling better risk assessments for loans.
The benefits of integration include increased efficiency, coor-
dination, transparency, and agility. An integrated set of business
processes can improve customer service, provide management
with better information to make decisions, and allow changes in
one part of the business to alert other parts of actions they need to
take. Integration can also speed up the overall flow of information
and transactions through a company.
The biggest challenge of integration is usually around data.
End-to-end integration requires companies to develop standard
definitions and formats for data that will be shared across business
units or functions. For business units to share customer informa-
tion, they must agree on its format. Similarly, they must share a
common definition for terms like sale, which can be said to occur
when a contract is signed, when money is paid, or when product
is delivered. These can be difficult, time-consuming decisions.
Four Types of Operating Models
We have developed a straightforward two-dimensional model with
four quadrants, representing different combinations of the levels
of business process integration and standardization (figure 2-1).
Every company should position itself in one of these quadrants to
clarify how it intends to deliver goods and services to customers.
ENTERPRISE ARCHITECTURE AS STRATEGY4
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The four general types of operating models are:
1. Diversification (low standardization, low integration)
2. Coordination (low standardization, high integration)
3. Replication (high standardization, low integration)
4. Unification (high standardization, high integration)
Define Your Operating Model
F I G U R E 2 – 1
Characteristics of four operating models
© 2005 MIT Sloan Center for Information Systems Research. Used with permission.
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Unification• Customers and suppliers may be
local or global• Globally integrated business processes
often with support of enterprise systems
• Business units with similar or over-lapping operations
• Centralized management oftenapplying functional/process/business unit matrices
• High-level process owners designstandardized processes
• Centrally mandated databases• IT decisions made centrally
Replication• Few, if any, shared customers• Independent transactions aggregated
at a high level• Operationally similar business units• Autonomous business unit leaders
with limited discretion over processes• Centralized (or federal) control over
business process design• Standardized data definitions but data
locally owned with some aggregation at corporate
• Centrally mandated IT services
Diversification• Few, if any, shared customers or
suppliers• Independent transactions• Operationally unique business units • Autonomous business management• Business unit control over business
process design• Few data standards across business
units• Most IT decisions made within
business units
Coordination• Shared customers, products, or
suppliers• Impact on other business unit
transactions• Operationally unique business units
or functions• Autonomous business management• Business unit control over business
process design• Shared customer/supplier/product
data• Consensus processes for designing
IT infrastructure services; IT applica-tion decisions made in business units
Low High
Business process standardization
5
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Companies adopt an operating model at the enterprise level and
may adopt different operating models at the division, business
unit, region, or other level. To decide which quadrant your com-
pany (or business unit) belongs in, ask yourself two questions:
1. To what extent is the successful completion of one busi-
ness unit’s transactions dependent on the availability,
accuracy, and timeliness of other business units’ data?
2. To what extent does the company benefit by having busi-
ness units run their operations in the same way?
The first question determines your integration requirements;
the second, your standardization requirements. What operating
model you choose will drive important design decisions around
the autonomy of business unit managers and the role of IT. Com-
pare your answers to the characteristics of each operating model
in figure 2-1 to see where your company fits.
Diversification: Independence with Shared Services
Diversification applies to companies whose business units have
few common customers, suppliers, or ways of doing business.
Business units in diversified companies offer different products
and services to different customers, so central management exer-
cises limited control over those business units (see the Diversifica-
tion quadrant in figure 2-1).
JM Family Enterprises (JMFE) has a Diversification operating
model. Headquartered in Deerfield Beach, Florida, JMFE had rev-
enues of $8.2 billion in 2004, making it the United States’ fifteenth-
largest privately held company.4 JMFE comprises four closely related
businesses:
1. Southeast Toyota Distributors (SET) serves more than 160
dealers in Florida, Georgia, Alabama, and North and South
Carolina with vehicles, parts, and accessories. SET dealers
sell approximately 20 percent of all Toyotas sold in the
United States.
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2. World Omni Financial Corp. (WOFC) is a diversified finan-
cial services company that provides a broad range of fi-
nancial products and services to consumers, dealers, and
lenders. Its offerings include automotive financial prod-
ucts and services, third-party servicing solutions, whole-
sale floor-plan accounting and risk management systems,
full-service inspection, automated risk decision software,
and automotive remarketing services.
3. JM&A Group offers a variety of automotive finance and in-
surance (F&I) products and services, such as new- and used-
vehicle protection plans, used-vehicle certification programs,
prepaid maintenance plans, credit life and disability insur-
ance, and F&I training and consulting services.
4. JM Lexus is the largest-volume retail dealership of Lexus
cars and sport-utility vehicles in the world.
The lower left quadrant of figure 2-2 describes JMFE’s Diversi-
fication operating model. Because the business units are synergis-
tic, they can generate business for one another. For example, JM
Lexus is a customer of JM&A; SET sells automobiles to dealers whose
customers often finance those vehicles through WOFC; and WOFC
offers loans to dealers to finance the vehicles in stock, helping in-
crease orders to SET.
JMFE provides some centralized services to its business units
through the JM Service Center. The largest of the shared ser-
vices is IT; the others are procurement services, financial services,
salon, fitness center, benefits administration, food services, corpo-
rate staffing, distributive and document services, facilities, reloca-
tion, and dealer services. Motivation for forming shared services in
2001 included cutting costs on these services and realizing quick
economies following expected acquisitions.
Historically, JMFE has grown primarily through the growth of
individual business units. SET has become the world’s largest fran-
chised Toyota distributor, and WOFC is one of the world’s largest
automotive finance companies. As JMFE’s current markets become
Define Your Operating Model 7
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ENTERPRISE ARCHITECTURE AS STRATEGY
F I G U R E 2 – 2
Four operating model examples
© 2005 MIT Sloan Center for Information Systems Research. Used with permission.
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• Local and global customers; global suppliers
• Global manufacturing, financial, HR, order management, purchasing, cus- tomer service, and other processes
• Business units all support globalchemical research, development, and sales
• Centralized management with matrixed business unit/process/geographical management
• Centralized process design imple-mented through ERP and corporate process owners
• Centrally mandated, single instance of key databases
• IT decisions made through central shared IT services organization
ReplicationTD Banknorth
• Few, if any, shared customers• Banks record independent customer
transactions aggregated centrally• Banks decide locally how to serve
their customers while implementing company practices
• Growing companywide standard processes to increase efficiencies and limit risk
• New business processes designed centrally
• Data locally owned; standard data definitions accompanying process standard implementations
• Assimilating existing IT systems of individual banks into central systems
DiversificationJM Family Enterprises
• Few shared customers or suppliers• Mostly independent transactions with
intercompany transactions at arm’s length
• Unique operations across business units
• Autonomous business unit heads reporting directly to CEO; arm’s-length transactions between business units
• Business unit control over business process design except for shared pro- curement, HR, financial, dealer, and corporate services
• Few data standards across units• Shared IT services to realize
economies of scale
CoordinationMerrill Lynch Global Private Client
• Single face to customer through multiple channels
• Customer transactions are indepen-dent, but product data is shared
• Individual financial advisers own their customer relationships
• Financial advisers customize their interactions with customers
• Financial advisers in 630 offices exercise local autonomy within bounds of their responsibilities
• Total Merrill platform provides shared access to technology and data
• IT organization provides centralized technology standards
Low High
Business process standardization
8
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saturated, the company is preparing to grow through acquisi-
tions—a common characteristic of Diversification companies. Be-
cause JMFE’s business units are run autonomously, each of them
has an operating model capturing its individual integration and
standardization requirements. By building a foundation for exe-
cution to support their individual operating models, these busi-
ness units contribute profitable growth to JMFE.
The organizing logic for Diversification companies is based on
synergies from related, but not integrated, business units. Business
units might create demand for one another or increase the com-
pany’s brand recognition, which generates enterprisewide value
despite autonomous management. Companies with a Diversifica-
tion model may pursue economies of scale through shared ser-
vices, but they typically grow through the success of the individual
business units and acquisitions of other related businesses.
Coordination: Seamless Access to Shared Data
Coordination calls for high levels of integration but little stan-
dardization of processes. Business units in a Coordination com-
pany share one or more of the following: customers, products,
suppliers, and partners. The benefits of integration can include
integrated customer service, cross-selling, and transparency across
supply chain processes. While key business processes are inte-
grated, however, business units have unique operations, often de-
manding unique capabilities.
For companies with a Coordination model, low cost is usually
not the primary driver in companywide decisions. Autonomous
business heads execute their processes in the most efficient man-
ner possible, but corporate directives and negotiations focus on
providing the best service to the customer. Strong central man-
agement defines the need for cooperation. Successful companies
rely on incentive systems and management training to encourage
companywide thinking at the business unit level. (See the Coor-
dination quadrant of figure 2-1.)
Define Your Operating Model 9
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Merrill Lynch, one of the world’s largest financial services
companies, is composed of three major business units: the Global
Markets & Investment Banking Group, Merrill Lynch Investment
Managers, and Global Private Client. Its Global Private Client (GPC)
business provides an example of a Coordination operating model
(figure 2-2). GPC delivers wealth management products and ser-
vices to individuals and small businesses through more than 14,000
financial advisers in approximately 630 offices around the world.
While financial advisers each serve their individual customers, their
services are integrated through what’s called the Total Merrill plat-
form, which gives all advisers access to the full range of Merrill
products: commission- and fee-based investment accounts, credit
products, banking services, cash management and credit cards, trust
and generational planning, consumer and small-business lending,
retirement services, and insurance products.5
GPC focuses on delivering comprehensive, innovative solu-
tions to meet the financial needs of its target customers. These
customers want to do business with Merrill Lynch through a vari-
ety of channels, such as the telephone call center, the Internet,
and advice-based interactions with financial advisers. In addition,
customers want access to non-Merrill products. GPC’s operating
model, therefore, coordinates services to its customers by provid-
ing integrated access to products across customers and integrated
access to customer data across products and channels. Such ser-
vice requires highly standardized product and customer data, but
it allows financial advisers to customize their individual interac-
tions to the needs of their customers. Merrill Lynch calls its model
providing “all things to some people,” and customized service is
important to retaining high-value customers.6
Merrill Lynch’s GPC grows by increasing the number of finan-
cial advisers who, with their access to product data, can identify
and then serve more customers. GPC also regularly innovates to
expand its product line, recently adding products such as new
credit cards and loan management services. These new services
help GPC provide a strong portfolio of products as it seeks to re-
tain its ability to provide a full range of services to clients.
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GPC’s standard technology platform and access to shared busi-
ness data enable the company to productively employ the largest
number of financial advisers in the industry. These financial advis-
ers have the industry’s best revenue per adviser, earnings per adviser,
and assets per adviser.7
Like GPC, most companies in the Coordination quadrant can
grow by extending their reach to defined customer segments in
new markets. They can also increase services to meet new, but re-
lated, customer demands. By integrating, but not standardizing,
product lines or functions, the Coordination model fosters process
expertise while enhancing customer service. This expertise attracts
new customers and sells more products to existing customers, thus
enabling profitable growth.
Replication: Standardized Independence
Replication models grant autonomy to business units but run op-
erations in a highly standardized fashion. In a Replication model
the company’s success is dependent on efficient, repeatable busi-
ness processes rather than on shared customer relationships. The
business units are not dependent on one another’s transactions
or data; the success of the company as a whole is dependent on
global innovation and the efficiency of all business units imple-
menting a set of standardized business processes. Accordingly, busi-
ness unit managers have limited discretion over business process
design, even though they operate independently of other business
units. McDonald’s, like other franchise operations, provides a clear
reference point for a Replication model. (See the Replication quad-
rant of figure 2-1.)
TD Banknorth, one of the thirty-five largest commercial bank-
ing companies in the United States, also provides an example of a
Replication model (figure 2-2). Over the past decade, the company
has grown by a factor of ten from a small community bank to the
largest bank headquartered in New England. TD Banknorth’s core
strategy is to grow through acquisitions of community banks with
customer-focused corporate cultures. The company adds value by
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introducing economies of scale and providing its banks’ cus-
tomers with new and improved products.8
Founded in Vermont in 1824, TD Banknorth grew with the
objective of understanding its customers better than anyone else.
As a result, each local bank developed its own processes and infra-
structures to meet the perceived needs of its specific customers.
But when John Petrey became the company’s CIO in September
2001, he set out to integrate and standardize its information tech-
nology. Petrey created standardized processes for bringing new
banks onto TD Banknorth’s foundation.
These new standardized processes are converting TD Banknorth
from a Diversification model, with independent operations in each
of the company’s banks, to a Replication model, in which banks
are run independently but with the same IT infrastructure and
a set of standardized core processes. To facilitate this transition, a
new Enterprise Projects Committee, headed by COO Peter Verrill,
reviews projects for their strategic impact in light of the company’s
focus on developing synergies across its banks. While Banknorth
looks for the efficiencies and predictability of standardized processes,
however, it also aims to preserve the image of a community bank
by retaining local decision making wherever feasible.
Many Replication companies grow through acquisition like
TD Banknorth, but most Replication companies can also build new
businesses from scratch. Whether companies are growing organi-
cally or through acquisition, the Replication model helps them
increase profits when management quickly installs its standard-
ized practices and technology foundation into a new unit and
then allows a local manager to build the business.
Unification: Standardized, Integrated Processes
When organizational units are tightly integrated around a stan-
dardized set of processes, companies benefit from a Unification
model. Companies applying this model find little benefit in busi-
ness unit autonomy. They maximize efficiencies and customer
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services by presenting integrated data and driving variability out
of business processes.
Unification companies typically have integrated supply chains,
creating interdependence between distributed business units. These
business units share transaction data, often including global cus-
tomer and supplier data. Standardized processes support global in-
tegration and increase efficiency. The Unification operating model
often benefits from implementation of large packaged systems to
support company standardization and integration requirements.
(See the Unification quadrant in figure 2-1.)
The Dow Chemical Company has adopted a Unification model
for its core chemicals-manufacturing business.9 Founded in 1897,
Dow Chemical develops and sells innovative chemical, plastic,
and agricultural products and services to customers in more than
175 countries around the world. From 1994 to 2004, despite a
downturn in the market, Dow nearly doubled its revenues while
growing its employee base less than 10 percent—a productivity
improvement of 8 percent per year. Management attributes much
of the company’s success to its well-tuned globally integrated
processes (figure 2-2).
Managers at Dow estimate that approximately 60 percent of
the company’s work processes are standardized. For example, fi-
nancial work processes are common around the globe. Manufac-
turing has common processes for building plants, driven in part
by the need for those facilities to be highly cost effective and en-
vironmentally secure. Standardized human resource processes allow
Dow to do performance management and to plan salaries and in-
centives around the globe in three weeks, equitably and transpar-
ently, even taking into account multiple currencies and differing
rates of inflation. Finally, some supply chain work processes (e.g.,
order to cash) are globally standardized; others (e.g., planning and
scheduling) are specific to particular products or regions.
Dow constantly reengineers processes to introduce greater
standardization and automation, as appropriate. These efforts are
intended, first and foremost, to cut costs, but they also increase
Define Your Operating Model 31
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quality, safety, and security—other important organizational ob-
jectives. Dow invests substantial resources in understanding the
costs of its processes and the impacts of its improvement efforts.
Dow sustains its integration and standardization through global
systems, such as SAP’s enterprise resource planning system, and
through a management structure that assigns owners to the vari-
ous global processes. Five of Dow’s eight global processes are housed
in a shared services organization that includes IT, purchasing, sup-
ply chain services, and customer service (including e-business),
along with expertise on six-sigma and work processes. Dow’s ma-
trixed management structure, in which managers often report to
product and process heads or to product and geographic heads,
further encourages global integration.
Unification companies invariably have highly centralized man-
agement environments. Management drives out inefficiencies and
then grows the company by leveraging economies of scale. Since
minimizing variation is key to driving efficiencies, Unification is
best suited to companies whose products and services are largely
commodities. Companies more focused on innovation may find
that the costs of standardization outweigh its benefits.
Applying the Operating Model
An operating model represents a general vision of how a company
will enable and execute strategies. Each operating model presents
different opportunities and challenges for growth. For example, the
need to integrate business processes, as in Coordination and Uni-
fication operating models, makes acquisition more challenging
because the new company must reconcile disparate data definitions.
On the other hand, the process integration of the Coordination
and Unification models facilitates organic growth through expan-
sion into new markets or extensions of current product lines.
Process standardization, as in Unification and Replication mod-
els, enables growth through a rip-and-replace approach to acquisi-
tions. When the acquisition is intended to create a mirror image, a
company can replace the systems and processes of the acquired
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business with its own. But both the Unification and Replication
models depend on leveraging processes already in place. Neither
model offers much leverage when a company chooses to expand
into synergistic, but operationally distinct, lines of business.
The Diversification model imposes fewer constraints on the
organic growth of individual business units and fewer challenges
in an acquisition. But it also leverages fewer capabilities than the
other models, thus offering fewer opportunities to create share-
holder value. Figure 2-3 summarizes the growth opportunities pre-
sented by each of the operating models.
Deploying Operating Models at Different Organizational Levels
Although most companies can identify processes fitting every op-
erating model, they need to select a single operating model to guide
Define Your Operating Model
F I G U R E 2 – 3
Different operating models position companies for different types of growth
© 2005 MIT Sloan Center for Information Systems Research. Used with permission.
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Unification• Organic: leverage economies of
scale by introducing existing products/services in new markets; grow product line incrementally
• Acquisition: can acquire competitors to leverage existing foundation; must rip and replace infrastructure
Replication• Organic: replicate best practices in
new markets; innovations extended globally
• Acquisition: can acquire competitors to expand market reach; must rip and replace
Diversification• Organic: small business units may
feed core business; company grows through business unit growth
• Acquisition: unlimited opportunities; must ensure shareholder value
Coordination• Organic: stream of product
innovations easily made available to existing customers using existing integrated channels
• Acquisition: can acquire new customers for existing products but must integrate data
Low High
Business process standardization
15
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management thinking and system implementations. Management
can then organize responsibilities for business units and IT based
on principles about how the company will operate most of the time.
One way companies respond to conflicting demands is to adopt
different operating models at different organizational levels. For
example, a company with a Diversification model, like JM Family
Enterprises, often adopts different models in its business units.
Johnson & Johnson (J&J) has long operated in the Diversifica-
tion quadrant. General managers in the company’s more than 200
operating companies have always had significant autonomy, and
for most of J&J’s 100-plus years of existence, analysts believed that
this decentralized management style was key to the company’s suc-
cess. But as major global customers increasingly demand integra-
tion across multiple business units, J&J responds by introducing
new organizational levels that can provide shared customer data
across subsets of related business units.10
J&J’s U.S. pharmaceutical group applies a Coordination model,
presenting a single face to health-care professionals. In Europe, its
Janssen Pharmaceutical Products applies a Replication model, pro-
viding low-cost, standardized processes for drug marketing, deliv-
ery, and monitoring. Having different operating models at different
organizational levels allows J&J to meet the multiple objectives of
large, complex companies while keeping organizational design rea-
sonably simple at the individual operating company level.
Many companies in the Diversification quadrant, including
DuPont, Citicorp, and General Electric, have multiple organiza-
tional levels, each adopting a different operating model so that
it can simultaneously meet the company’s and its own business
objectives.
Transforming to a New Operating Model
An operating model helps define the range of strategic initiatives
a company can readily pursue. As long as the operating model
presents attractive options, it provides a stable approach for deliv-
ering goods and services. If a company determines that its existing
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operating model is not well suited to its market realities, the com-
pany must shift to a new operating model. Shifting from one
operating model to another is transformational. A transformation
disrupts a company, imposing new ways of thinking and behav-
ing.11 But while companies would not want to regularly introduce
new operating models, such changes are sometimes necessary.
From Diversification to Unification:
a European packaging company
A European packaging company recognized a need to change
operating models in the late 1990s.12 At the time, the company was
organized into separate country-based business units, each of which
was responsible for its own operations. Different countries had dif-
ferent enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems, order manage-
ment processes, invoice formats, and even pricing. Each country
made its own decisions about IT systems and data standards, which
was a slow, inefficient, and expensive way to do business. Alarm-
ingly, management discovered some corporate customers were tak-
ing the same order to multiple organizations to drive down the
price by bidding one country-based unit against others!
The management team decided its key operations were sales,
order processing, new product introductions, and after-sales ser-
vice. Management decided it could accomplish those operations
better with a Unification model than with a Diversification model.
The company didn’t need to adopt a new strategy—it was still de-
livering the same products to the same customers. The change in
operating model was designed to help it deliver products and ser-
vices faster, better, and more efficiently.
To transform its operating model, management replaced the
different order management systems in each country with a central
ERP system and process. The countries now enter orders through
a browser interface with one product list, price list, and order man-
agement system for the entire business.
The company’s new operating model dramatically reduced order
management cycle time, lowered operational costs, and increased
business flexibility and agility. In the old operating model, adding
Define Your Operating Model 17
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a product with a new pricing structure required updating 15 dif-
ferent systems, which could take weeks. In the new system, one
central change is made, usually in a matter of hours. But the new
operating model had dramatic effects on the power structure of
the company, making the transition difficult. In the old model, a
country manager could, within limits, make independent deci-
sions about products, pricing, and promotions. That authority was
greatly reduced, and local managers naturally resisted the change.
Shifting from Diversification to Unification introduces trau-
matic organizational change. As companies attempt to increase
standardization and integration, they obsolete existing systems,
processes, and organizational structures and roles. Successful trans-
formations of this kind are costly, time consuming, risky—and
sometimes necessary. As we saw with the packaging company, the
rewards of the change can be substantial.
From Unification to Diversification:
Schneider National
Schneider National, a large, privately held trucking company,
built a strong Unification model in the early 1990s.13 Schneider
had highly standardized and integrated operations processes and
systems built around a centralized management model in which
most employees were based in Green Bay, Wisconsin. The company
had long been recognized as an industry leader in the effective
use of IT. Schneider was the first trucking company to implement
satellite tracking systems and then the first to integrate its track-
ing systems with both operations and customer service applica-
tions. But management decided in the early nineties that many of
the United States’ 50,000 trucking companies were dropping prices
and pushing down margins throughout the industry. Any person
with a truck could go into the trucking business, making it in-
creasingly difficult for Schneider to grow profitably.
Responding to the requests of some of the company’s key cus-
tomers, Schneider decided to offer logistics services. Management
recognized that a new logistics business could not leverage the
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company’s existing foundation for execution. Trucking demands
centralization, standardization, and integration to serve customers
who need reliable service delivery and accompanying informa-
tion. Schneider intended to provide localized, customized logis-
tics services, managed by logistics representatives who would sit
at customer sites and access local databases. Thus, the operating
platform that had regularly enabled innovation in the trucking
business was not a good fit for logistics. So when Schneider
launched the logistics business, it did so with a new and separate
management structure and segregated IT processes and operations.
Over time, Schneider has found synergies between its two
businesses. In particular, the trucking business has benefited from
some of the newer technologies introduced to support logistics.
But Schneider has two foundations for execution: one for the
Unification operating model of the trucking business and one for
the Replication operating model of the logistics business. As a
whole, Schneider has a Diversification model with some shared
infrastructure and services to benefit both businesses. Companies
with a core business adopting a Unification model, like Schneider,
may run out of opportunities to leverage that core. A Diversifica-
tion model provides opportunities to feed the core business.
The Operating Model as Company Vision
Focusing on the operating model rather than on individual busi-
ness strategies gives a company better guidance for developing IT
and business process capabilities. This stable foundation enables
IT to become a proactive—rather than reactive—force in identify-
ing future strategic initiatives. In selecting an operating model,
management defines the role of business process standardization
and integration in the company’s daily decisions and tasks.
The operating model concept requires that management put
a stake in the ground and declare which business processes will
distinguish a company from its competitors. A poor choice of
operating model—one that is not viable in a given market—will
Define Your Operating Model 19
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have dire consequences. But not choosing an operating model is
just as risky. Without a clear operating model, management ca-
reens from one market opportunity to the next, unable to leverage
reusable capabilities. With a declared operating model, manage-
ment builds capabilities that can drive profitable growth.
Because the choice of an operating model guides development
of business and IT capabilities, it determines which strategic op-
portunities the company should—and should not—seize. In other
words, the operating model, once in place, becomes a driver of
business strategy. In addition, the required architecture—as well
as the management thinking, practices, policies, and processes
characteristic of each operating model—is different from one op-
erating model to another. As a result, the operating model could
be a key driver of the design of separate organizational units.
We encourage senior managers to debate their company’s op-
erating model. This debate can force managers to articulate a vi-
sion for how the company will operate and how those operations
will distinguish the company in the marketplace. In clarifying
this vision, management provides critical direction for building a
foundation for execution.
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Chapter 2
1. ThinkExist.com Quotations Online, “Norman SchwarzkopfQuotes,” http://en.thinkexist.com/quotes/norman_schwarzkopf/.
2. The measure for strategic effectiveness was a weighted average ofthe company’s priorities for operational efficiency, customer intimacy,product leadership, and strategic agility relative to its success in meet-ing those objectives.
3. These statistics are based on a survey of 103 companies. Thesewere perceptual measures of how well the company’s existing IT-enabled business processes were addressing each of these strategicneeds. The first three strategic impacts refer to the disciplines describedin Michael Treacy and Fred Wiersema, The Discipline of Market Leaders:Choose Your Customers, Narrow Your Focus, Dominate Your Market (Read-ing, MA: Addison-Wesley, 1995). We have added strategic agility becauseof its growing importance to companies.
2
Notes
1
This document is authorized for use only by Sree Priyanka Kondeti in Sp23 – INFO TECHNOL MANAGEMENT-I-DAL (01930) at University of Texas at Austin, 2023.
4. The description of JM Family Enterprises is from (1) Cynthia M.Beath and Jeanne W. Ross, “JM Family Enterprises, Inc.: Selectively Out-sourcing IT for Increased Business Value,” MIT Sloan Center for Infor-mation Systems Research, forthcoming working paper and (2) Forbes.com, “America’s Largest Private Companies,” 2005, http://www.forbes.com/finance/lists/21/2004/LIR.jhtml? passListId=21&passYear=2004&passListType=Company&uniqueId=PTGE&datatype=Company.
5. The description of Merrill Lynch is from (1) Merrill Lynch, An-nual Report, 2004 and (2) V. Kastori Rangan and Marie Bell, “MerrillLynch: Integrated Choice,” Case 9-500-090 (Boston: Harvard BusinessSchool, March 2001).
6. Quoted phrase from V. Kastori Rangan and Marie Bell, “MerrillLynch: Integrated Choice,” Case 9-500-090 (Boston: Harvard BusinessSchool, March 2001).
7. Merrill Lynch, Annual Report, 2004.8. The description of TD Banknorth is extracted from Francisco
Gonzalez-Meza Hoffmann and Peter Weill, “Banknorth: Designing ITGovernance for a Growth-Oriented Business Environment,” workingpaper 350, MIT Sloan Center for Information Systems Research, Cam-bridge, MA, November 2004.
9. The description of Dow Chemical is extracted from Jeanne W.Ross and Cynthia M. Beath, “The Federated Broker Model at The DowChemical Company: Blending World Class Internal and External Capa-bilities,” working paper 355, MIT Sloan Center for Information SystemsResearch, Cambridge, MA, July 2005.
10. See Jeanne W. Ross, “Johnson & Johnson: Building an Infrastruc-ture to Support Global Operations,” working paper 283, MIT Sloan Cen-ter for Information Systems Research, Cambridge, MA, September 1995.
11. Clayton M. Christensen, The Innovator’s Dilemma: When NewTechnologies Cause Great Firms to Fail (Boston: Harvard Business SchoolPress, 1997).
12. The example company’s industry has been disguised, but it hasmany characteristics of the packaging industry.
13. The Schneider National vignette is drawn from Jeanne W. Ross,“Schneider National Inc.: Building Networks to Add Customer Value,”working paper 285, MIT Sloan Center for Information Systems Re-search, Cambridge, MA, September 1995.
22 Notes
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