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  • Added for You - (Re)designing Organizations

    What Do We Want To Be When We Grow Up?
    Where do you see yourself and your organization 1,5,10 years from now? What do you want to accomplish? What do you and your organization want to be known for? What do you do for a living? These are all very important questions that need to be answered both on a professional and personal level.People think differently about vision statements. Some people develop them and put them away. Never to be seen again. Some people display them prominently and base every decision on the vision statement. As Stephen Covey says” Always start with the end in mind.” People and organizations need to know where they want to be before they can figure out how to get there. Without a vision statement, people and the organizations they are a part of drift aimlessly through life.The ability to see the future starts at its earliest time in childhood. Kids are great dreamers. They can visualize themselves in a variety of scenarios. Children also have great imaginations. The one thing that children never do is edit their dreams. Only when we become adults, do we start editing our imagination and dreams. Why does that happen? Various life experiences, good and bad, cause adults to edit their vision for the future. Pressure from peers to have the same vision and perception of success as everyone else may cause us to change our own.Why are some people and organizations more successful than others? The answer lies in their vision of the future. Successful people and organizations start out feeling that they are in complete control of their future. They feel that opportunities are endless and even though they are realistic about the amount of work the vision will ta
    tween companies and, once acknowledged, it’s usually left to ‘business development’ to come up with the rest of the goods.

    Because in-licensing has been seen traditionally as a commercial activity, R&D staff are called to the party only at due diligence time, often as an extra burden on top of everything else and not infrequently as a favor. This leads to a progressive detachment of key scientific brains from scanning the market and making preliminary assessments. This is premise one. Once the pipeline starts to be fed from outside, what you need is a sort of ‘rapid reaction force’ that is able to do fast due diligence (scientific and technical), fast minimal exploratory work on the compound or molecule, and to make fast decisions to answer the fundamental question: do we go with this? The bulk of the work is usually to do with ‘proof of concept’. But in many cases this is undertaken by the same discovery or development machinery that is used when a compound is already in full development. In other words, complex, lengthy and unnecessarily ‘safe’ ways to assess the viability of a molecule. This is crazy. What you need at th

    Exploitation of Carwash Labor and Illegal Aliens
    Why would the largest carwash chain in the United States hire illegal aliens? Obviously you would think that a publicly traded company would be smarter than that. Yet this company was not, in fact they were not only hiring illegal aliens they were over 90% of their crews and they had been doing this for over five years and right out in the open. Yet, why did it take so long for the authorities to bust them?Well because the patrons wanted a good deal on car washes and because the authorities operate on complaints. They do not investigate unless someone complains. So who finally complained? Well, it was probably a competitor, but why did someone speak up earlier?At four car washes the company had 56 illegal aliens and they were raided by authorities on a Monday, their slowest day, not a weekend or Friday when the total could have been even higher. During the raid illegal aliens scattered and they authorities said they caught most of them, but not all. Why is it that Americans care so much about illegal aliens and still will not call authorities when they see a company hire them?Why is it that Americans will go to the car wash a couple of times a month and never even make mention of it? A simple phone call would help this problem. So, I ask you will you call authorities next time you see at your local car wash the exploitation of illegal immigration labor? Will you pick up the phone and do the right thing? Or are you a hypocrite just like all the rest? Consider this in 2006.
    When it comes to (re)designing an organization – whether a biotech in growth mode, a mature division in need of regeneration, an amalgamation of groups after a merger or acquisition, a new structure for a research group or any other internal reorganization – you are confronted with a plethora of options, each with its own liabilities. The business literature offers many ‘models’, often attractive ones. But how do you know what is best for you?

    One tends to go for safe territory. If in your previous company you saw or were part of a merger or a particular reorganization that worked, you may be tempted to reproduce it. This is a dangerous path because what worked was contingent to that particular company, time and circumstances and may not be good for extrapolating here and now. Your management intuition may, by and large, be the best guide, but you may want to use more than that in your thinking and implementation.

    There was a time when business schools taught that ‘strategy’ came first and ‘structure’ followed. In other words, make sure you know what you want to do and what the purpose is and then figure out how to be organized, not the other way around. It’s difficult to challenge this logic. However, the world today is more complex than traditional business school linear thinking. The above is true but if you consider ‘structure’ a simple by-product, you are bound to commoditize it because strategies and purposes, at least at a high level, are not necessarily very different. That’s why pharmaceutical companies tend to be organized in a rather similar way and stuck in organizational architectures (structures and operating models) that have not changed for the past 40 years or so.

    Architecture is a strategy
    For some of us, architecture is strategy. The way of being organized and doing things is itself a competitive advantage and a source of strategy generation. For us, strategy and organizational architecture meet in a circle, not in a straight line.

    Pharma R&D organizations in particular face major challenges in terms of maximizing the potential of their structures and systems to deliver high productivity. Pharma R&D leaders should be less pre-occupied with copying what others have done, or trying off-the-shelf ideas, and more focused on reinventing their own R&D in a way that is specifically tailored to their needs. That may entail borrowing ideas from others, even borrowing heavily, but never a total replication. The problem is that few people believe organizational aspects are a real priority. A while ago, a senior leader of a top ten pharma company showed an audience of pharma professionals a dozen or so organizational models and said, “We have been looking at those models for a while but decided not to waste our time.” Judging by the performance of that company, it was obvious he was right: top management had been admiring the models for a while and had done nothing about it.

    The reality is that pharma has not even scratched the surface of possibilities for novel structures and architectures. One of the problems may lie in a strong inward-looking tendency. Under the umbrella-label of regulated business, we find an excuse for uniqueness which is misleading. This tunnel vision has prevented us from looking, or indeed accepting that it may be worth looking, outside the industry for organizational inspiration. The competition mantra with its sister, the benchmarking mantra, has taught us that if you are GlaxoSmithKline you look at Pfizer or Novartis. If you are Novartis, you look at GlaxoSmithKline, etc. In other words, you look around, as opposed to outside. The result is incestuous, more-of-the-same thinking. One of the problems my company encounters with its ‘small’ clients is that, consciously or unconsciously, they want to replicate the ‘big’ ones. Size is in the mind. A medium-sized company is not a smaller version of a big one, just as biotech is not a smaller version of a medium-sized pharma. Size is just one factor of importance depending on your ultimate goals.

    New Product Incubators
    Novel, out-of-the-box organizational architectures may be more able to deliver in the tough times we live in. The idea of New Product Incubators is a way of rethinking the whole area of pipeline filling, particularly exploratory development.

    This is how it works. Many research-driven companies have no problem declaring that they expect their own pipeline to be responsible for a proportion of the compounds going through development. The percentage varies between companies and, once acknowledged, it’s usually left to ‘business development’ to come up with the rest of the goods.

    Because in-licensing has been seen traditionally as a commercial activity, R&D staff are called to the party only at due diligence time, often as an extra burden on top of everything else and not infrequently as a favor. This leads to a progressive detachment of key scientific brains from scanning the market and making preliminary assessments. This is premise one. Once the pipeline starts to be fed from outside, what you need is a sort of ‘rapid reaction force’ that is able to do fast due diligence (scientific and technical), fast minimal exploratory work on the compound or molecule, and to make fast decisions to answer the fundamental question: do we go with this? The bulk of the work is usually to do with ‘proof of concept’. But in many cases this is undertaken by the same discovery or development machinery that is used when a compound is already in full development. In other words, complex, lengthy and unnecessarily ‘safe’ ways to assess the viability of a molecule. This is crazy. What you need at tha

    Understanding the Letter of Intent (LOI) in the Sale of a Business
    The letter of intent is an essential step in facilitating the sale of a business. The purpose is to establish the economic framework for buyer and business seller to move to the due diligence phase. It basically says that with all the available information I have thus far seen and if that all stands the scrutiny of due diligence, I am willing to buy your business for X dollars under Y payment terms. It is however, non- binding pending the execution of mutually acceptable purchase agreements.If I am a seller, I am going to insist that I have this letter establishing the economics of the deal before I agree to allow my company to be turned inside out with buyer staff and advisors. If, as the seller, I want $5 million and the LOI specifies $4.5 million, I am going to attempt to negotiate up before I counter sign this letter. If I am still short on price and terms, I continue to sell the company to other interested buyers.If I am the buyer, I want the seller to commit to my economic parameters before I spend thousands going through due diligence. The other important element of the LOI from the buyer’s perspective is exclusivity. The buyer will lock up this company for a period of from 30 days to 90 days to complete their due diligence and execute mutually agreeable definitive purchase agreements. That means that in return for the time, effort and expense of due diligence, the seller and his business broker or merger and acquisition advisor are not allowed to actively market the business to other interested parties.If you are the seller and you get your LOI, don’t celebrate yet. Make sure the financials that the buyer is analyzing to come
    organized, not the other way around. It’s difficult to challenge this logic. However, the world today is more complex than traditional business school linear thinking. The above is true but if you consider ‘structure’ a simple by-product, you are bound to commoditize it because strategies and purposes, at least at a high level, are not necessarily very different. That’s why pharmaceutical companies tend to be organized in a rather similar way and stuck in organizational architectures (structures and operating models) that have not changed for the past 40 years or so.

    Architecture is a strategy
    For some of us, architecture is strategy. The way of being organized and doing things is itself a competitive advantage and a source of strategy generation. For us, strategy and organizational architecture meet in a circle, not in a straight line.

    Pharma R&D organizations in particular face major challenges in terms of maximizing the potential of their structures and systems to deliver high productivity. Pharma R&D leaders should be less pre-occupied with copying what others have done, or trying off-the-shelf ideas, and more focused on reinventing their own R&D in a way that is specifically tailored to their needs. That may entail borrowing ideas from others, even borrowing heavily, but never a total replication. The problem is that few people believe organizational aspects are a real priority. A while ago, a senior leader of a top ten pharma company showed an audience of pharma professionals a dozen or so organizational models and said, “We have been looking at those models for a while but decided not to waste our time.” Judging by the performance of that company, it was obvious he was right: top management had been admiring the models for a while and had done nothing about it.

    The reality is that pharma has not even scratched the surface of possibilities for novel structures and architectures. One of the problems may lie in a strong inward-looking tendency. Under the umbrella-label of regulated business, we find an excuse for uniqueness which is misleading. This tunnel vision has prevented us from looking, or indeed accepting that it may be worth looking, outside the industry for organizational inspiration. The competition mantra with its sister, the benchmarking mantra, has taught us that if you are GlaxoSmithKline you look at Pfizer or Novartis. If you are Novartis, you look at GlaxoSmithKline, etc. In other words, you look around, as opposed to outside. The result is incestuous, more-of-the-same thinking. One of the problems my company encounters with its ‘small’ clients is that, consciously or unconsciously, they want to replicate the ‘big’ ones. Size is in the mind. A medium-sized company is not a smaller version of a big one, just as biotech is not a smaller version of a medium-sized pharma. Size is just one factor of importance depending on your ultimate goals.

    New Product Incubators
    Novel, out-of-the-box organizational architectures may be more able to deliver in the tough times we live in. The idea of New Product Incubators is a way of rethinking the whole area of pipeline filling, particularly exploratory development.

    This is how it works. Many research-driven companies have no problem declaring that they expect their own pipeline to be responsible for a proportion of the compounds going through development. The percentage varies between companies and, once acknowledged, it’s usually left to ‘business development’ to come up with the rest of the goods.

    Because in-licensing has been seen traditionally as a commercial activity, R&D staff are called to the party only at due diligence time, often as an extra burden on top of everything else and not infrequently as a favor. This leads to a progressive detachment of key scientific brains from scanning the market and making preliminary assessments. This is premise one. Once the pipeline starts to be fed from outside, what you need is a sort of ‘rapid reaction force’ that is able to do fast due diligence (scientific and technical), fast minimal exploratory work on the compound or molecule, and to make fast decisions to answer the fundamental question: do we go with this? The bulk of the work is usually to do with ‘proof of concept’. But in many cases this is undertaken by the same discovery or development machinery that is used when a compound is already in full development. In other words, complex, lengthy and unnecessarily ‘safe’ ways to assess the viability of a molecule. This is crazy. What you need at th

    Telephone Phobia: Make the Phone Your Job Search Friend
    You’re pretty comfortable using the phone. It’s something you do every day in your working routine; so why is it that as soon as you need to use it for career change or job-search it becomes too difficult?Your reluctance to use the phone in your career change or job-search probably stems from anxieties about what might happen. A certain amount of nervousness is quite natural when you call an employer or a network contact and even more so if it’s done on a speculative basis. But don’t let that stop you.Let’s examine your reluctance to use the telephone –“I want to telephone this employer as I’m pretty sure they’ll have an opening for me”“They probably won’t want to speak to me, or they’ll be too busy”“I’m worried about what to say… I might make a mess of it ... they could say no ... I’ll end up feeling stupid ... and rejected”“That makes me feel even worse and I don’t want to make the call now, think I’ll leave it for the moment”“I’ll write a letter instead”Of course letters are much ‘safer” because they make rejection feel much less personal. They didn’t reject me, they rejected my letter is how you can justify that one. But, for exactly the same reasons, it is much harder for an employer to say “no” to you on the telephone than it is to throw your letter into the bin. Most people are too polite to be rude to you on the phone and with a deep breath and some practice you can make it work really well for you.So let’s take another look at that:1. You want to phone an employer about possible jobs.2. You need to find the right person to speak to.3. The secretary might ask to
    more focused on reinventing their own R&D in a way that is specifically tailored to their needs. That may entail borrowing ideas from others, even borrowing heavily, but never a total replication. The problem is that few people believe organizational aspects are a real priority. A while ago, a senior leader of a top ten pharma company showed an audience of pharma professionals a dozen or so organizational models and said, “We have been looking at those models for a while but decided not to waste our time.” Judging by the performance of that company, it was obvious he was right: top management had been admiring the models for a while and had done nothing about it.

    The reality is that pharma has not even scratched the surface of possibilities for novel structures and architectures. One of the problems may lie in a strong inward-looking tendency. Under the umbrella-label of regulated business, we find an excuse for uniqueness which is misleading. This tunnel vision has prevented us from looking, or indeed accepting that it may be worth looking, outside the industry for organizational inspiration. The competition mantra with its sister, the benchmarking mantra, has taught us that if you are GlaxoSmithKline you look at Pfizer or Novartis. If you are Novartis, you look at GlaxoSmithKline, etc. In other words, you look around, as opposed to outside. The result is incestuous, more-of-the-same thinking. One of the problems my company encounters with its ‘small’ clients is that, consciously or unconsciously, they want to replicate the ‘big’ ones. Size is in the mind. A medium-sized company is not a smaller version of a big one, just as biotech is not a smaller version of a medium-sized pharma. Size is just one factor of importance depending on your ultimate goals.

    New Product Incubators
    Novel, out-of-the-box organizational architectures may be more able to deliver in the tough times we live in. The idea of New Product Incubators is a way of rethinking the whole area of pipeline filling, particularly exploratory development.

    This is how it works. Many research-driven companies have no problem declaring that they expect their own pipeline to be responsible for a proportion of the compounds going through development. The percentage varies between companies and, once acknowledged, it’s usually left to ‘business development’ to come up with the rest of the goods.

    Because in-licensing has been seen traditionally as a commercial activity, R&D staff are called to the party only at due diligence time, often as an extra burden on top of everything else and not infrequently as a favor. This leads to a progressive detachment of key scientific brains from scanning the market and making preliminary assessments. This is premise one. Once the pipeline starts to be fed from outside, what you need is a sort of ‘rapid reaction force’ that is able to do fast due diligence (scientific and technical), fast minimal exploratory work on the compound or molecule, and to make fast decisions to answer the fundamental question: do we go with this? The bulk of the work is usually to do with ‘proof of concept’. But in many cases this is undertaken by the same discovery or development machinery that is used when a compound is already in full development. In other words, complex, lengthy and unnecessarily ‘safe’ ways to assess the viability of a molecule. This is crazy. What you need at th

    African American Inventors
    He could have added fortune to fame, but caring for neither, he found happiness and honor in being helpful to the world- This epitaph on the grave of George Washington Carver is proof enough of the contribution this great African-American made by inventing new agricultural technologies that revolutionized farming in several parts of the US. He refused several lucrative offers and kept working to produce several patents on farms and industrial products in the late 18th century and then in the first few decades of 19th century.Many experts consider Benjamin Banneker the first African-American inventor, who blazed a trail of invention to be followed later by many other African-Americans. Banneker was a multi-faceted personality, as he was not only an inventor but also a leading light of the anti-slavery movement. He is remembered for bringing out a Farmer's Almanac. He is credited with building the first wooden pocket watch and predicting several celestial events on the basis of his own calculations. Interestingly he did all this through self-education. He died in 1806.Madame CJ Walker is another famous African-American woman who changed the US cosmetic industry. From a laundry worker to the head of a business empire, she covered this journey in a period of 15 years. She invented a number of cosmetics and hair care products in the early years of the 20th century and never looked back.In the last few decades, several African-American inventors have had a long-lasting influence in almost all fields by coming out with amazing inventions. Take for example Dr. Mark Dean. He holds more than 20 patents, including three of the original nine PCs o
    sister, the benchmarking mantra, has taught us that if you are GlaxoSmithKline you look at Pfizer or Novartis. If you are Novartis, you look at GlaxoSmithKline, etc. In other words, you look around, as opposed to outside. The result is incestuous, more-of-the-same thinking. One of the problems my company encounters with its ‘small’ clients is that, consciously or unconsciously, they want to replicate the ‘big’ ones. Size is in the mind. A medium-sized company is not a smaller version of a big one, just as biotech is not a smaller version of a medium-sized pharma. Size is just one factor of importance depending on your ultimate goals.

    New Product Incubators
    Novel, out-of-the-box organizational architectures may be more able to deliver in the tough times we live in. The idea of New Product Incubators is a way of rethinking the whole area of pipeline filling, particularly exploratory development.

    This is how it works. Many research-driven companies have no problem declaring that they expect their own pipeline to be responsible for a proportion of the compounds going through development. The percentage varies between companies and, once acknowledged, it’s usually left to ‘business development’ to come up with the rest of the goods.

    Because in-licensing has been seen traditionally as a commercial activity, R&D staff are called to the party only at due diligence time, often as an extra burden on top of everything else and not infrequently as a favor. This leads to a progressive detachment of key scientific brains from scanning the market and making preliminary assessments. This is premise one. Once the pipeline starts to be fed from outside, what you need is a sort of ‘rapid reaction force’ that is able to do fast due diligence (scientific and technical), fast minimal exploratory work on the compound or molecule, and to make fast decisions to answer the fundamental question: do we go with this? The bulk of the work is usually to do with ‘proof of concept’. But in many cases this is undertaken by the same discovery or development machinery that is used when a compound is already in full development. In other words, complex, lengthy and unnecessarily ‘safe’ ways to assess the viability of a molecule. This is crazy. What you need at th

    Imprinted Advertising Specialties
    An Advertising Specialty imprinted with a promotional message is known as Imprinted Advertising Specialty. The usage of Advertising Specialties is extremely popular in the corporate world as gifts for their clients and employees as well as other high-profile people. These Imprinted Specialties are also regarded as promotional products, giveaways and ad-incentives. These specialties are a popular product even amongst non-profit organizations like schools, clubs etc.The Imprinted Advertising Specialties also act as a great way to improve your marketing and public relations among consumers, businesses, volunteers, benefactors, employees, communities, etc. The Imprinted Advertising Specialty is used for developing business contacts or thanking existing customers for their patronage. The idea behind giving people an Imprinted Advertising Specialty could be to build brand loyalty or motivate the employees to help the company achieve the goals.Everyone has at some time been given an Imprinted Advertising Special, something with a logo, slogan or saying. In fact you probably personally use at least one every day - maybe pens you write with or the mug you drink your morning coffee from. It could be the calendar you use to schedule meetings or the sweatshirt you wore this weekend. These gifts imprinted with a logo, slogan or saying act as a constant reminder of the company.There are also especially stylish Imprinted Advertising Specialties like clocks, crystal, china and watches. The imprint on the Advertising Specialties will invariably come with the company name or the logo. However, you can take personalization to the next level by getting t
    tween companies and, once acknowledged, it’s usually left to ‘business development’ to come up with the rest of the goods.

    Because in-licensing has been seen traditionally as a commercial activity, R&D staff are called to the party only at due diligence time, often as an extra burden on top of everything else and not infrequently as a favor. This leads to a progressive detachment of key scientific brains from scanning the market and making preliminary assessments. This is premise one. Once the pipeline starts to be fed from outside, what you need is a sort of ‘rapid reaction force’ that is able to do fast due diligence (scientific and technical), fast minimal exploratory work on the compound or molecule, and to make fast decisions to answer the fundamental question: do we go with this? The bulk of the work is usually to do with ‘proof of concept’. But in many cases this is undertaken by the same discovery or development machinery that is used when a compound is already in full development. In other words, complex, lengthy and unnecessarily ‘safe’ ways to assess the viability of a molecule. This is crazy. What you need at that stage is the ability to make fast decisions with less than perfect data, a concept pretty alien to the standard researcher.

    A New Product Incubator (NPI) is a small entrepreneurial structure that sits neither in research nor in full development, that borrows what it needs from traditional ‘exploratory development’ and incorporates or hosts business development, in-licensing and any due diligence activity. It’s an all-in-one engine of fast assessment that is neither R&D nor commercial, but both. It should attract your best scientific brains and your best commercial ones. It does not have to be a host for someone’s entire professional life – people may apply to belong to this structure for a predefined period. The New Product Incubator is also the best place to learn about the cross-fertilization of science/technology and business, as well as a School of Partnership Management. But the NPI must be governed by rules that are different from the rest of R&D or commercial; it borrows as much as possible from the concept of business or technology incubators and therefore needs the ‘protection’ and the resources to be able to function as an entrepreneurial cell within the larger company. This is just a small illustration of a new architecture; I am not suggesting for a second that such a model will be appropriate for all companies.

    Organizational issues are often dismissed as secondary. The few regional or global pharmaceutical for a (conferences, congresses, etc.) hardly focus on organizational architecture. Air time is taken by sexy science and technology, M&A pros and cons, semi-generic rhetoric about innovation plus an endless repetition of the challenges the industry is facing. But professionals (scientists, marketers, sales people, factory managers, etc.) work and spend most of their life in specific ‘houses’. How that house (company, organization, division) acts as a host for innovation, knowledge-flow or fast decision-making, for example, matters a lot.

    What is the best size?
    Small is beautiful… and lonely. Big is powerful, and impersonal. What’s the best size? For many companies this is an academic question because they are stuck with a small, start-up structure. Assuming you can do something about your size, the temptation is to produce a beautiful solution that does not address the right question. It has become fashionable to break up anything that is big (for example an R&D structure) in the hope that agility will follow. But without doing anything about the internal barriers for communication or innovation, old behaviors controlling day-to-day life or an intrinsically lousy decision-making process, any break-up into business units, for example, will not solve anything. Worse, it could raise false expectations because of publicizing to the world that now the company will be ‘freer and more independent, therefore more productive.’ It’s rain-making blessed by stock analysts.

    Before presenting one of several ways to (re)design architectures, let me comment briefly on the two all-purpose, universal ‘answers’ we have come to believe will solve most of our problems: the ‘matrix’ and ‘the teams’. Both have different meanings depending on companies. Matrix is associated with the idea that you need a crossroads between different constituencies and that if you belong to A, for example, you need to work with other people who belong to B, C and D. The matrix was created as a way to meet in neutral territory and to work outside the boundaries of your own division or group. But matrix needs rules of the game and a clear definition of accountabilities and these are not always explicit. The matrix does not solve problems unless the individuals decide to do so. Matrix is often a word for all seasons. The problems with teams are a mirror of the above. Teamocracy has been established as the preferred way of working but we don’t know much about the liabilities until we hit them. Be wary therefore of people suggesting teams and/or matrix as universal solutions and spend time defining what they mean by these terms.

    (Re)designing processes.
    Is there a way to (re)design an organization following a rational process? There are many. My company follows a process based upon the principles of behavioural decision-making and multi-attribute decision analysis. If this sounds grandiose, it’s only that, the sound. In practical terms, we ask the client to split into two separate groups for twin-track thinking. We ask one group to think and provide a list of the ‘criteria’ they would u

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