Friday, May 16, 2008

Creative Destruction is Essential for long Term Success

The Economist Joseph Schumpeter (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Schumpeter) in his book Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy, published in 1942, popularized the concept of creative destruction (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creative_destruction).
Creative destruction simply is the process or practice of reinventing oneself constantly often at the expense of the past. What this means is that after the process of reinvention, the final product or idea or paradigm may be vastly different from the past.

This concept resonates with ancient ideas in many philosophies where it has been understood that a paradigm that works, or a civilization that works very well needs to "destroy" it self and reinvent itself, otherwise it will be destroyed and replaced by another paradigm, civilization etc. over which you will have no control or ownership. This thought can be extrapolated to nations, governments and businesses as well.

In the late 19th and most of the 20th century, large, inflexible forms of organizations would come to dominate governments and industry in the name of stability. Companies would respond to these organizations of stability and implement hierarchies and strategies that would in effect render them complacent, leaving no room for what Schumpeter and others called creative destruction.

So the question is are you an agent of creative destruction or are you scared of change? From a business perspective this means that are you willing to have your organization change in fundamental ways that render it vastly different from what it is now, or would you rather have a competitor destroy your organization.

Over the years many organizations like Nokia and others have changed themselves as the markets and society has changed, but many more have bitten the dust or become secondary players because they failed to reinvent themselves.

The need for creative destruction within organizations is normally understood as a concept, but rarely practised because it threatens the status quo. Often leaders in organizations themselves protect status quo because the alternative would mean apparent loss of control or position at a personal level. Sometimes organizations in order to show their willingness to change practise ideas like that of TQM (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Total_Quality_Management)or other such methods that bring short term gains but do not address the fundamental issues.

In the business and technology world the days of a stable visions of the future can debilitate you. To run a successful business you need to embrace and thrive on chaos and drive process. Some of the interesting events that will unfold in the next decade will be Microsoft's attempts at creative destruction. Microsoft is clearly aware of the issues, the next decade will tell us if they can act on this awareness and continue to remain the primary player or be relegated to a secondary role. On the political front most major powers of the past like Great Britain have failed at their efforts of creative destruction and have been relegated to secondary roles. The most obvious question now is whether the United States has the ability to embrace creative destruction and remain a primary player, say in 50 or 100 years.

4 comments:

PCV said...

Excellent article, Chandran.
People may argue "why fix something thats not broken"....But I agree that in the longterm creative destruction should be the buzzword for success and survival. As Bhagavat Gita says "Whatever is yours today was somebody else’s yesterday and will be somebody else’s tomorrow.Change is the law of the universe".
Pradeep
Dr Pradeep C Vasudevan
Leicester, UK

Anonymous said...

I think creative destruction is a process of the natural selection based on Darwinism on survival of the "fittest", where the "fittest" in one point of time would survive, but in another would die. In terms of technological innovation, if a company can see the trend & derive what is the "fittest" to adapt will survive & thrive. James Lai

Anonymous said...

very nice article chandran, we used it to stimulate some discussions within our organisation. the "walkman" was a classical example of how sony failed to creatively destruct and allowed apple to own "music on the move". apple as company creatively destructs on a continous basis and stimulates them to get better, its a positive cycle

Anonymous said...

Interesting view. Definitely makes you take a personal view of your organization/company. Change or reinvention is the reality we live in.