This strategy can positively affect your business' performance. Know more about it here!

Miles Everson • February 7, 2023

Tuesday: Return Driven Strategy

FROM THE DESK OF MILES EVERSON:

As someone who’s been in the business and consulting industry for 30+ years now, I find Return Driven Strategy (RDS) effective in managing my team.

Discussed in the book,  “Driven,”  RDS is a pyramid-shaped framework that has 11 tenets and 3 foundations. When applied properly to your business strategy, this framework can help you achieve wealth and value creation.

Kudos to my friend and colleague, Professor Joel Litman, and Dr. Mark L. Frigo for coming up with this awesome framework!

Today, we’ll continue our discussion about the fifth tenet of RDS:  Innovate Offerings .

Keep reading to know what TRUE innovation means and how it can help firms consistently generate high returns.

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CEO, MBO Partners
Chairman of the Advisory Board, The I Institute

 

 
 

This strategy can positively affect your business' performance. Know more about it here!

What does “innovation” mean for you?

New offerings?

New strategies?

New opportunities?

It’s easy to associate innovation with the term, “new.” After all, when you innovate, there’s always something new you bring to the table. This is also why businesses, particularly salespeople, often focus less on the features of an offering and more on its benefits to customers.

Return Driven Strategy’s (RDS) Tenet Five: Innovate Offerings

According to  Professor Joel Litman " and  Dr. Mark L. Frigo  in the book,  “Driven,”  there are always new opportunities for new offerings that answer existing unmet needs.

In fact, return-driven firms consider all aspects of a potential or existing offering and what it does for consumers in the areas of product component, service component, and psychological component.

Professor Litman and Dr. Frigo say this strategy is on the right track but can still be taken a step further. For them, the focus of innovation should be squarely on fulfilling otherwise unmet customer needs (Tenet Two of RDS).

This means high-performing businesses should innovate anything that affects customers’ mental perception of their offerings. These firms should also believe how consumers view and receive their offerings is as important as the physical functions of the actual offerings.

Let’s use the business case study below as an example of a firm that successfully innovates its offerings…

Dell  is a multinational technology company that develops, sells, repairs, and supports computers and other related products and services such as:

  • Personal computers (PCs)
  • Servers
  • Data storage devices
  • Network switches
  • Software
  • Computer peripherals
  • HDTVs
  • Cameras
  • Printers

… and more.

In the 1980s and 1990s, Dell’s establishment of mass customization in a direct-to-consumer business model enabled customers to experience a myriad of self-selected choices in building their own PCs.

[ Mass Customization:  The process of providing customized goods and services that best meet customers’ needs.

Direct-to-consumer Business Model:  Also known as business-to-consumer (B2C), this refers to the process of selling products directly to consumers and bypassing any third-party retailers or wholesalers.]

At that time, Dell not only fulfilled an unmet customer need (a new business model that lets consumers purchase computers more conveniently) but also realized that the experience of the direct-to-consumer business model is as important as the actual offerings themselves.

The result?

The technology company was able to TRULY innovate its offering—provide an approach that was unique at that time AND fulfill customers’ needs for choice and flexibility in creating the PC they’ve always wanted.

Simply said, Dell provided and innovated an offering for which there was no true substitute… and because of that, the company produced earning power levels in excess of 20%. Today, Dell is also known for effectively managing its supply chain and e-commerce strategy.

Innovation When Previous Offerings are “Dying”

Professor Litman and Dr. Frigo say one of the problems businesses face is having offerings that target non-existent needs.

For example: Companies that produced buggy whips just before the advent of motor cars naturally experienced falling sales volumes and falling prices.

[ Buggy Whips:  A horse whip with a long, stiff shaft and relatively short lash used for driving a horse harnessed to a buggy or any other small open carriage.]

What else?

Polaroid  and  Kodak ’s failure to quickly move into digital photography despite available assets was a contributor to poor performance.

These business failures show innovation is important especially when previous offerings are “dying” or no longer needed. According to Professor Litman and Dr. Frigo, the solution to these kinds of problems is a release of the attachment to existing product and services lines.

They say firms that continually generate high returns have noticed how their assets could be used in new ways to innovate offerings for new unmet needs.

This concept is shown in how  General Electric (GE)  makes more than just refrigerators, how  Walmart  is more than just a department store, how  Toyota  constantly improves its design and development of the RIGHT offerings, and how  Nokia  is no longer a paper company but a manufacturer of telecommunications equipment.

In commoditized industries, pricing competition rules the day… and with available substitutes, firms are forced to compete on price and not on the quality of offerings. The result of this?

Companies are able to sell offerings that do fulfill needs, just not  otherwise unmet needs.

That’s why Professor Litman and Dr. Frigo say innovation is the only viable solution to the commoditization of goods. It can even save an entire industry.

This is because firms that have displayed high performances in the long run have shown an ability to “reinvent themselves” as if their businesses were dying. They do that either by moving into entirely new industries or branching out into related industries.

Always execute RDS’ Tenet 5 (Innovate Offerings) with RDS’ Tenet 2 (Fulfill Otherwise Unmet Customer Needs) in mind. This will help you create products and services that not only address unmet needs but also let you stand out in your industry.

Hope you found this week’s insights interesting and helpful.

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Stay tuned for next Tuesday’s Return Driven Strategy!

Since 1971,  Starbucks  has established itself as an iconic, premium brand known for its quality coffee products, exceptional customer service, and unique marketing strategies.

Learn more about  Starbucks’ phenomenal marketing strategies as seen in the lens of Return Driven Strategy  in next week’s article!

Miles Everson

CEO of MBO Partners and former Global Advisory and Consulting CEO at PwC, Everson has worked with many of the world's largest and most prominent organizations, specializing in executive management. He helps companies balance growth, reduce risk, maximize return, and excel in strategic business priorities.


He is a sought-after public speaker and contributor and has been a case study for success from Harvard Business School.


Everson is a Certified Public Accountant, a member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and Minnesota Society of Certified Public Accountants. He graduated from St. Cloud State University with a B.S. in Accounting.

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