Recognizing the Need for Change
Rita McGrath, Columbia Business School professor and author of the article, “Transient Advantage,” discusses several traps that can blind a company to the need for imminent changes to their strategy to preserve competitive advantage. These traps, discussed in the second half of the article, include: the first-mover trap, the superiority trap, the quality trap, the hostage-resources trap, the white space trap, the empire-building trap, and the sporadic-innovation trap.
Locate and post a link to an article in The Wall Street Journal, or another reputable source, about a company that fell victim to one or more of these traps.
Identify the trap(s) and discuss why you believe the company’s management missed the warning signs.
What were the impacts that resulted from falling for the trap(s)?
Drawing on the guidance offered by Sherman in Chapter 6, what could they have done differently to avoid the trap(s)?
Sample Answer
It’s challenging to definitively say which trap a company fell into without insider knowledge. However, I can offer an analysis of a company that seems to have exhibited behaviors consistent with several of McGrath’s traps, and discuss what they could have done differently.
Company: Nokia (circa 2007-2013)
Article: While a specific WSJ article focusing solely on Nokia’s downfall is hard to pinpoint, numerous articles and analyses have been written about their decline. This article from the Harvard Business Review titled “Nokia’s Smartphone Meltdown” provides a good overview: https://hbr.org/2012/07/how-nokia-missed-the-mobile-revolution
Traps and Analysis:
Nokia appears to have fallen victim to a combination of traps:
- Superiority Trap: Nokia was the dominant player in the mobile phone market for many years. This success led to a sense of complacency and a belief that they were invincible. They underestimated the threat posed by the emerging smartphone market, particularly the iPhone and Android. They were slow to adapt and innovate in this new space, clinging to their existing feature phone model.