Sunday, February 07, 2010

Influencing the trajectory of development

The PC industry had witnessed the mighty coalition of IBM, Microsoft and Intel when the industry was still in a nascent stage.
The trio set the objective of establishing an industry standard for increasing PC penetration and of course establish leadership.
Many would have believed IBM to take the lead with its already established O/S2 architecture but the coalition triggered an
unlikely disruption with MS breaking away with its own standard, leaving IBM gaping. Windows and Wintel became a household name
within a few years. Coalitions are formed usually to increase a company's share of influence in the industry.As an increasing number
of organizations focus on the future, competition isn't about building products for future, it is about influencing the trajectory of
industry development. The rise in coalitions can thus be attributed to the quest towards 'influencing.'
 
How about employees? How can they play a role in influencing the growth of an organization and possibly the development of an industry
in which their organization is present? The answer obviously is coalition.
- Partner like minded: While many organizations advocate the need to have globally integrated talent, today it is important for employees
to proactively reach out to others with similar skills xperience and outlook.
- Collaborate:Many already do this via social networks. However, majority of those logging in don't have an agenda or objective. One can
successfully collaborate only when there is clarity in terms of the intended outcome.
- Eye on future:What one possess as talent today might become obsolete the day after. In a coalition, it is imperative to keep ones eyes
and ears open to understand where the organization is heading towards and the industry. What are the necessary competencies for the future?
- Be open:There is no room for the rigid-in an organization as well as in the industry. If the objective is development, it should be collective.
A coalition can also collectively hamper growth, remember. 

Posted via email from rahulanands's posterous

Blog Archive