Agility and adaptability defining perennial success for today's organizations
It is not the strongest species that survive, nor the most intelligent,
but the ones most responsive to change.
Charles Darwin's theory of evolution can well be coined in the business scenario as the "theory of staying great forever".
Reports indicate that only less than 20% of the Fortune 500 companies of 1955 exist today. The rest faded away, merged with larger companies, went bankrupt, or currently have just a humble existence.
Compaq became the world’s largest supplier of PCs during the 1990, with its competitively priced, trusted PCs, and was known to be one of the youngest firms to be part of the Fortune 500. However, the story came to a sorry end when the company was acquired by Hewlett-Packard and the brand name Compaq disappeared from the US.
The reason for their failure: unplanned acquisitions rather than focusing on tapping on industry trends or innovating in their area of expertise
Borders were the leaders of the books industry, but with the advent of online reading options, the brick-and-mortar bookshops slowly lost their flavor. Unfortunately, Borders could not match its steps with the changing demands of book lovers and announced closure of hundreds of stores, laying off thousands of workers.
The reason for their failure: their unwillingness to adapt to change
The lesson learnt from these experiences: change now or die slowly. All these organizations were the dinosaurs of their era but have just a fossilized existence today. In the race to be the best, what would your choice be - the fierce puma or an extinct dinosaur?
The puma of course!
The business world has plenty of pumas to look up to as examples - from Amazon, who perennially revolutionize e-commerce by disrupting the landscape, to Apple, where constant innovation and reinvention has challenged most its competitors into silence.
What are the characteristics of a puma organization?
Every current marvel is the result of a focused effort of looking out for "the next big wave", embracing the change smoothly, and figuring out how we can get ahead of the change to provide futuristic solutions. So, what makes an organization a racing puma?
Today's organizations need chameleons who can easily adapt to changing needs, who can take on new challenges with ease, and who can identify with the organization's futuristic direction. Organizations too need to make a conscious choice to be perennially great - the only way to stay great is to constantly challenge your boundaries and to move swiftly from one success to the other like a puma, else your organization would land up being a fossilized dinosaur in the museum of ancient organizations. The choice is yours.