Situation: A company is changing its business model from fee for service, driven by individual contributors, to a contracted project model with teams delivering service. The driver for the new model is to deliver full solutions to meet client needs. The CEO is struggling to obtain buy-in to the new model from all stakeholders – employees, managers and shareholders. How do you generate buy-in as you change the business model?
Advice from the CEOs:
- The objective is to obtain agreement on vision and direction as the company adapts over a 3-5 year horizon.
- Benefits include: product vs. service sales, a growing annuity revenue base, increased stability for the company and improved career paths for all members of the team.
- Risks include: massive change, fear accompanying any change, too rapid growth, and the changes to company culture that will accompany this
- Acknowledge and celebrate what the company and team have done well and the success that this has generated. In addition, share the lessons learned from experience to date, as well as the new opportunities that these lessons have created and the reasons to change to take advantage of these opportunities.
- Create an exciting vision that expresses the new opportunities. Consider an off-site “WOW” event to announce your vision.
- Focus on what’s in it for them as stakeholders. Address how they can participate in the change.
- Where are the opportunities? Do they include investment and ownership?
- Focus on the next major steps and the doable objectives associated with each step.
- The new direction will require a different type of manager – with skills and experience managing teams. This is a growth opportunity for all involved. Provide training to assist the transition.
- Employee and manager skill sets (including the CEO’s) will need to adapt – identify what skills will be needed and how they can be found or developed.
- The past culture has been highly entrepreneurial with little middle management. The new model may be different from the current model, but it can still be entrepreneurial in a different way.
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Consider leaving the business model as it is and start a new venture (company).
Start the new company with a different business model and run both companies.
Having two companies would make it easier to keep one from dragging down the other. If one falls on hard times you might avoid trouble for the other.
Let the new company develop its own business environment and culture without disrupting the original company.
At some point you could fold one company into the other or sell one.
Cheers,
Paul