Home | About TeamAsia | Clients | Job Opportunities | Speaker Opportunities | Contact Us | Sign Up  
Home > Media Articles >   2004  > A New Vision?
< Back   

 

 

A New Vision?
By Michael Alan Hamlin
December 01, 2004

Jose L. Cuisia, president & CEO of AIG-affiliate Philippine American Life Insurance Company in the Philippines, told me in a 1999 interview that "in the next five to ten years, the Philippines will regain its position as one of the leaders is Asia." But to do that, the country "must get its act together." Cuisia believed that Asia's now nearly forgotten financial crisis would provide the impetus for broad reforms necessary to strengthen government institutions as well as private-sector accountability and transparency. How have we done?

Fortunately, not as bad as many like to assume, and argue, but not as well as we could have, obviously. Despite significant hurdles, the economy is growing at around five percent, according to the International Monetary Fund. Telecom reforms during the administration of Fidel V. Ramos have helped spark significant interest in the Philippines as an outsourcing destination, a form of investment that is an efficient job creator both in terms of investment per job and development cycle. In fact, jobs are being created faster in business process outsourcing sectors - which include contact center, software, design and engineering, animation, and financial services - than educational institutions can churn out qualified applicants. That's a downside, the result of neglected educational infrastructure. So is the fact that the Philippines, despite impressive growth, is growing slower than every one of its neighbors. Yet while things could be better, they could be far worse, too.

Politically, Filipinos appear to have matured. Instead of electing another popular but clearly unqualified actor as president earlier this year, voters rehired President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo for a full six-year term, despite their clear ambivalence toward her. While the president herself has contributed to strengthening that sense ambivalence since her election with a series of clearly unpopular political appointments, her administration seems serious about tax reform, streamlining the bureaucracy, and addressing corruption. It should probably be noted, however, that addressing corruption has less to do with prosecuting wayward officials than it does with acquiring technology necessary to increase transparency and decrease opportunities for collusion between bureaucrats and suppliers.

Both these developments are having an impact on the way the private sector manages itself. Most notably, the sudden inflow of business process outsourcing investment is rapidly introducing world-class management practices. This has at least two principal results. First, many first-time employees are being indoctrinated in Western management practices, and enjoying the benefits - both tangible and intangible - of working for firms used to competing aggressively for smart people, and demanding the most of them. Second, businesses that supply these companies - telecom firms, computer and network manufacturers, recruitment firms, advertising and creative agencies, construction and office equipment suppliers, for instance - are adopting world-class supply and procurement practices as well as global standards of product and service quality.

As a result, we're seeing a gradual change in the way businesses are conceptualized, grown, and managed. At the core of these changes is the business model.

BUSINESS MODEL CHANGES

Strategy and Focus. While opportunities are increasingly plentiful in the Philippines and Asia as the regional economy recovers, opportunity-driven growth - a product of developing, protected markets - no longer provides reasonable prospects for rapid growth and sustainable success. There is instead great pressure to administer corporate resources efficiently and in an effective, focused manner to capitalize on distinct competencies. Top managers as a result spend more time thinking about vision and strategy, value-driven products and services, and continual improvement in the hopes of sustaining competitive advantage. Indeed, consecutive annual surveys by PriceWaterhouseCoopers show that most big-name CEOs and other top managers spend most of their time "setting corporate strategy and vision."

Shifting Profit Zones. There are still plenty of managers out there that spend a lot of time trying to think of the easiest way to separate potential one-time customers from their money. But such short-term thinking is on its way out as traditional sources of profitability are drying up, and managers realize that repeat customers are more profitable than former victims. Attracting and keeping profitable customers is the new mantra. Even for well managed firms, things are changing. Quality and high productivity, for instance, are mere requisites of doing business rather than providers of competitive advantage. Competitive advantage instead is a product of innovation in addressing the needs and desires of a demanding client base most notable for its constantly changing preferences. This is apparent in the Philippine banking industry, where high net worth individuals are courted with special perks from gold cards to credit lines. Loyalty cards providing 20 percent discounts lure frequent customers back to expensive restaurants. Even Mercury Drug - once the epitome of customer disdain - rewards loyal customers with discounts, gifts, and raffles.

Constant Revitalization. Innovation isn't limited to sexy technology industries and exporters. Rather, consistent innovation is a requisite in every industry as the competition to capitalize on shifting profit zones heats up and the traditional cachet accruing to market share evaporates. From food processing to business services, management excellence is characterized by the capacity to think differently. For MTV Philippines, that means attracting new sponsors and viewers with a fashion awards and a youth festival. Real estate developers no longer offer housing, they offer an environment.

Tuning into the Consumer. The consumer really is king, at last. After decades of lording it over a captive marketplace, lumbering private-sector bureaucracies are learning to be customer intimate or perishing. This is a dramatic development that will gain additional momentum as prosperity increases in the Philippines and Asia and consumers become comfortable "throwing around their weight." The second top priority of Asian decision-makers is staying in contact with customers according to PriceWaterhouseCoopers surveys. BMW offers customers and prospects a day with a new model. Ford calls customers to schedule maintenance, and again afterwards to make sure things went well. Who can think of a fast food restaurant that doesn't deliver?

Expansion to New Markets. Liberalization is not one way. While Philippine and other Asian companies must gear up, consolidate, and merge to compete in Asia, Western markets are free game. And technology - especially Internet and e-commerce technologies - will make it easier for Asian companies to move into Western markets. But a good idea still holds a premium. WEBWORKS OS founder and fellow Enterprise columnist Joey Gurango is a good example. In a little over a year, he's built a company that provides focused software development expertise not to large enterprises, but to commercial software solution developers the world over.

NEW CORPORATE CHARACTER

Observers, analysts, and pundits rightly criticized Asian governments, ponderously uncompetitive conglomerates, and inefficient, poorly regulated banks for delaying structural reforms as the severity - and prolonged duration - of Asia's financial crisis became increasingly apparent in the late 1990s. The framers - and principal beneficiaries - of the now mythical Asian miracle fought an untenable battle to preserve a comfortable way of commercial life tied to privilege and payback. But Asia's new generation of leaders refuse to be held back by their Jurassic predecessors. For this new generation, leadership has more to do with communication skills than connections. And no competitive advantage is sustainable, not even the capacity to think faster than the competition, as one international consultant proposed. There are other differences.

Consider technology. For the new generation of business leaders technology is far more than a productivity-enhancing convenience, it is a means to address strategic concerns: 1) understand the company's real sources of revenue; 2) identify profitable customers; 3) build new strategic models to capitalize on shifting profit zones; and, 4) identify new business opportunities. Then there are the people themselves. The new generation of leaders seems to realize that people, not a closed market, are the critical resource. Getting the right people, in the most important positions, with the right tools and the mandate to do their jobs is requisite to industry leadership for these new managers and entrepreneurs.

The Philippines catharsis that began with the Asian financial crisis provided an opportunity for fundamental change. Despite significant hurdles to change - political uncertainty, bureaucracy and corruption, and entrenched elites, for example - change has, and is, taking place. New entrepreneurs are being created, a world-class brand of managers is taking charge of Philippine enterprise, and consumers are demanding global standards of quality, service, and value. While the Philippines may not be an Asian leader yet, it can get there. As long as it continues to get its act together, that is.

(Michael Alan Hamlin is the managing director of consultancy TeamAsia and the author of three books on Asian economies and companies. His latest book is Marketing Asian Places, of which he is a co-author (Wiley, 2001), and he is currently at work on High Visibility: The Making and Marketing of Asian Professionals into Celebrities. Write him at mahamlin@teamasia.com.).

Copyright © 2004 Michael Alan Hamlin. All Rights Reserved.

(###)

Back to prevous page


Media Archives

Copyright © 2004 TeamAsia and Hamlin-Iturralde Corporation. All rights reserved.