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The Global Business Agenda
No doubt, the effects of the economic downturn during 2001-2002, combined with the
headwinds of globalization (and an uncertain geopolitical environment) has made many
C-Team executives reluctant to put their large balance sheet positions to work. However,
that reluctance to spend appears to be waning, with the productivity miracle of
the past 10 or more years beginning to running out of gas - on top of the need to drive
top-line revenue in an increasingly competitive global economy. In this sense, the data
suggests that we may be seeing a shift to spending money rather than saving money, as
CEOs and their C-Team colleagues - cautiously - begin to commit cash that had previously
either sat idly on the sidelines, or had been redistributed to shareholders (in the
form of corporate stock buy-back programs).
We anticipate that this spending will likely come in the form of both continuing
M&A activity (to help buy market share) as well as a potential up-tick in capital
investment spending, although top line capital spending forecasts for 2007 thus far
do not yet fully support this scenario. With information technology representing
nearly 50 percent of non-farm capital spending in the US, any acceleration in this
area would have a profound impact on the technology sector - especially as it concerns
key infrastructure and integration investments.
from C-Team Research: Growth and Innovation Driving the Global Business Agenda (ST-1507)
Mergers and Acquisitions
Survey respondents report that their M&A integrations are more successful
for targets over $1 billion in sales than for targets under $100 million in sales
(Chart 4). Large integrations might be more likely to succeed than smaller
operations because they are, more often than not, led by a senior business
manager who can mobilize the resources needed and pilot the entire range of
activities affected. A small acquisition, on the other hand, might be given to an
inexperienced, high-potential manager as her or his first real business challenge,
which could translate into a lack of access to and support from M&A experts.
Of course, large acquisitions do not occur as often as small ones, so the chances
of keeping a large "integration engine" employed are low. Since a large
acquisition only occurs at SC Johnson every two to three years, the company
does not have a permanent M&A integration team. Instead, an ad hoc M&A
integration team is assembled for each large acquisition. If corporate needs to
mobilize many resources for a large acquisition, it can also pull together a
sizable integration team.
from Strategic Mergers and Acquisitions: Creating Tools and Capabilities for Successful Integration (CB-1401)
Institutional Investing
Overall, pension funds held a total of 38.9 percent of all institutional assets
in 2005, up from 32.6 percent in 1980 (see Table 3 and Chart 4). This
increase occurred primarily from 1980 to 1990, peaking at 42.5 percent in
1995 and declining since then. Of the total pension fund assets of $9.4 trillion
in 2005, private trusteed (primarily corporate) funds held $4.8 trillion, or
51 percent, while state and local funds held $2.7 trillion, or 29 percent.
Within the mix of pension fund assets, however, state and local pension
funds have a smaller - albeit more rapidly growing - asset base compared
with private trusteed pension funds. State and local pension funds have
gradually increased their share of total institutional investor assets, from
7.4 percent in 1980 to 11.2 percent in 2005, remaining steady since then.
In the last decade, the share of private trusteed funds has hovered in the
22 to 25 percent range - a small increase from their 19.2 percent share in
1980. Private trusteed funds declined to 19.8 percent of total institutional
investor assets in 2005, down from their peak of 24.4 percent in 1995.
Investment companies enjoyed the most dramatic increase in their share of
total institutional investor assets, which grew from 2.6 percent in 1980 to
23.3 percent in 2000, and to 24.9 percent in 2005. During this period,
open-end mutual funds accounted for the largest segment of investment
company assets.
from The 2007 Institutional Investment Report (CB-1400)
Enterprise Risk Management
While companies are adopting a variety of approaches to
manage risk and new practices are publicized regularly, it
has become clear that ERM should not be reduced to yet
another loss-prevention compliance exercise.
For members of The Conference Board working group,
this means being aware of the potential hidden in a business
risk so that ERM may be used effectively as a tool
to identify long-term strategic opportunities and elevate
them to the attention of senior executives and the board.
In this report, the potential benefit that the company may
derive from undertaking a calculated risk is referred to as
upside risk. On the other hand, those events assessed
by the firm as negative or requiring a mitigation or
avoidance response are termed downside risks.
The working group discussed two facets of any risk
management activity: a preventive, control-based
aspect and a forward-looking and entrepreneurial aspect.
Traditional risk management solutions tend to focus on
negative events and often rely on diligent corporate compliance
programs to control their occurrence. The downside
of this approach is that the company may, over time,
develop a risk-averse culture. Given its emphasis on strategy
and the coherent use of risk appetite and tolerance
metrics, ERM can help the corporation find a better balance
between loss-prevention, risk-mitigation efforts and
risk-taking entrepreneurial endeavors.
from Emerging Governance Practices in Enterprise Risk Management (CB-1398)
Executive Development
The transition from leading other mangers to leading a function is often the first time in one’s career that a person has management responsibility for unfamiliar activities. Thus, it’s a critical, and often difficult, juncture for people in building their leadership skills. The leader can’t answer all the questions anymore and may feel that his or her technical expertise is diminished. Note that the person who is most expert in a function is by no means necessarily best suited to leader it. The leader must come to understand and value unfamiliar forms of work. The leader must also take a broader, longer-term, and more strategic perspective in order to manage the interfaces with other functions within the context of overall business strategy. Many potential leaders struggle or reach their limits at this point. Therefore it’s an important place both for career support for the promising and career redirection for those unlikely to thrive.
The next transition, to leading a business, is one of the most gratifying for most leaders. They get to "run their own show," with all of the responsibility and potential for personal success that goes with it. The individual must be direction setter, integrator, and communicator - capable of leading other leaders and inspiring high performance, while also making the tough strategic decisions and taking decisive action. The individual must also have developed the personal presence, respect and confidence to function as a member of the corporate executive team.
The last transition in the leadership pipeline is to a CEO or Chairman of a multi-business enterprise. The perspective becomes global, and the leader must oversee the development of vision as well as strategy. New responsibility includes making decisions on resource allocation across the enterprise’s - and other people’s - businesses.
from Building Executive Bench Strength: Ensuring Leadership Agility in Complex Times (CG-4906)
Corporate Performance Measurement
Compliance is a classic application for CPM
where continuous monitoring and management
against defined performance metrics is required.
This is a very similar to the monitoring of SLAs
(Service Level Agreements) - guarantees of IT
service uptime, for example, are very popular in
the public sector. Many vendors have introduced
CPM-oriented products to assist with
compliance. For example, Oracle’s Internal
Controls Manager includes application controls
monitoring, segregation of duties, financial
statement certification and auditor-ready
reporting. In regards to Basel II, Oracle
integrates risk indicators with key performance
indicators. Business Objects has developed a risk
management solution based on its Dresdner
Bank Basel II project. Cognos works with
Teradata in this area. SAS has over 100 Basel II
management customers based on its SAS9
foundation platform.
The next important compliance requirement for
the financial services industry will be MiFID
(Markets in Financial Instruments Directive)
which replaces the existing Investment Services
Directive (ISD) for investment intermediaries and
financial markets. MiFID introduces more
extensive compliance requirements, in particular
in relation to their conduct of business and
internal organisation. MiFID is part of the
European Union’s Financial Services Action Plan
(FSAP), which is designed to create a single
market in financial services.
Expect innovative vendors to develop specific
CPM applications where there is a clear and
substantive link between performance
management and a industry-specific reporting
requirement. Now even generic CPM solutions
include measures relating to corporate
governance and corporate social responsibility.
Industry sector CPM solutions such as emissions
and environmental management in the energy
sector, or hospital waiting lists in healthcare, will
become more commonplace. Execuvue has a
hospitality solution for hotels that tracks "rev
PAR" (revenue per available room) for example.
from Corporate Performance Management (BL-5550)
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