Singapore, Toronto, San Francisco, Bangkok, KwaZulu-Natal, Auckland - all these are part of my improbable journey these past eight years. It all began with a delayed flight out of a Moroccan airport. It was the summer of 2017. I was sitting in the backyard with my wife, Pamela.
Laurent Simon, who would become my friend & business partner, was the one in Morrocco. He decided to send a LinkedIn note.
‘I like your books,’ he said. ‘We should write one together…”
‘About what?’ I asked.
“Harnessing digital disruption…”
Laurent Simon in San Francisco |
As we chatted, I checked out Laurent’s LinkedIn profile: INSEAD business school, and impressive achievements in the cosmetics industry, management consulting & financial services. Head of Innovation leader at a major international bank. A smart guy.
‘I’m having a drink with my wife,’ I told him. ‘Maybe we can chat some more next week.’
And thus began our weekly WhatsApp calls. Laurent described his innovation work in the Asia Pacific region. I described my adventures in manufacturing, consumer goods, and health care. And the fun & business results my team & I had enjoyed working with a marvelous financial service company. Each week I would summarize what I’d learned in a mind map, which became part of our body of knowledge.
Laurent and I were natural disruptors, simpatico both professionally and temperamentally. I loved being a Strategy sherpa and mentor to senior leaders. But I was also a composer & leader of the Crazy Angels band. Laurent was a Renaissance man who swam effortlessly in multiple languages and cultures.
Pascal Dennis in San Francisco |
Laurent lived in Singapore; I lived in Toronto. His environment was heat, humidity and rain. Mine was snow, ice and the cold wind sweeping down from Hudson’s Bay. We finally met in person in the fall of 2017 at a conference in Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa, where I was giving a talk. And that’s where we added another routine – long walks during which we would ‘shoot the breeze’. Soon after we began to have regular meetings in Singapore, Toronto and places in between.
We had both spent the previous decade helping companies transform their work, people and management systems. We’d both seen the power of the so-called Lean management system – the methods and mindset underlying the Toyota Production System. We understood that Lean represented a series of revolutions that had ‘changed the world’:
- Quality in the process – the realization that all work comprises a system of activities and information, and that the value chain will only work if each step was done right the first time
- Flow – understanding demand, capacity and the process in great detail; applying the laws of so-called production physics to maximize flow and minimize lead time and cost
- Continuous improvement – the realization that virtually nothing in the work is ‘fixed’, and that things like working content, sequence, layout, timing are all malleable and can be endlessly improved
- Leadership – the art of defining, deploying and executing a great aspiration in accord with a concise winning logic; how to build a learning infrastructure to supports, develops and deeply engages people
- ‘Customer in’ mentality – putting oneself in the customer’s shoes, and deeply understanding their needs and wants
- Strategy and decision-making – how strategy is developed and implemented; how we align and motivate disparate groups of people in complex organizations toward a shared Aspiration; how we make problems visible and deploy remedies; how we overcome the thorny problems of governance.
But Laurent and I differed on a critical point. He believed that Lean is essentially about protecting your core business, and not about igniting new growth. I disagreed: ‘Lean is also a growth strategy,’ I argued. It took a while, but I came around to Laurent’s point of view. Lean is necessary, but not sufficient. If it was, why were the business valuations of GAFA - Google, Amazon, Facebook (Meta) and Apple – higher than those the great industrial companies I revered? Had Toyota, Honeywell, Proctor & Gamble and the like lost their mojo? Certainly not – the great industrials were as strong as ever. Something was happening, and I was determined to find out what it was.
Best wishes,
Pascal Dennis
In case you missed our last few blogs... please feel free to have another look…
Year-End: Why Is Reflection So Difficult?
What is a Good Life?
All Systems Must Support Humanity – Including Lean
To Learn Corporate Strategy, Study the Military Masters