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Confronting Reality: Doing What Matters to Get Things Right
 
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Confronting Reality: Doing What Matters to Get Things Right [Hardcover]

Larry Bossidy , Ram Charan
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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In their 2002 bestseller, Execution: The Discipline of Getting Things Done Larry Bossidy and Ram Charan identify why people don’t get results: They don’t execute. Bossidy and Charan are back with another stellar study on organizational behavior that shows how companies can succeed if they return to reality and examine every part of their business. Confronting Reality is based on a simple concept, but many companies approach strategy and execution in a surprisingly unreal manner and even the simplest of measurement methods, like the business model, are not applied correctly.

Cisco, 3M, KLM, Home Depot, and the Thomson Corporation are just a few of the companies that Bossidy and Charan examine. To demonstrate how to examine a business using the business model, Bossidy and Charan map out external variables, financial targets, internal activities, and an iteration stage (defined as a time to "make tradeoffs, apply and develop business savvy") to prove how a dynamically evolving business model will help improve performance.

"The version of the business model we have developed is a robust, reality-based process for thinking about the specifics of your business in a holistic way. It shows you how to tie together the financial targets you must meet, the external realities of your business and internal activities such as strategy development, operating tactics, and selection and development of people."

Larry Bossidy, retired chairman and CEO of Honeywell International, and Ram Charan, author of What the CEO Wants You to Know and Profitable Growth Is Everyone's Business, have once again shed industrial-strength light on how to run a successful business. --E. Brooke Gilbert

Amazon Exclusive Content

Amazon.com Interview: Larry Bossidy and Ram Charan


Larry Bossidy and Ram Charan are back with Confronting Reality to show how companies can succeed if they get back to reality and examine every part of their business. Amazon.com senior editor E. Brooke Gilbert interviewed Bossidy and Charan to discuss the current business climate, their new book, and future projections.
Read the interview.



Larry Bossidy and Ram Charan Discuss the Airline Industry

Larry Bossidy and Ram Charan discuss the airline industry's failure to confront reality based on a recent Wall Sreet Journal article and their new book as a backdrop.
Read their comments.



From Publishers Weekly

On the heels of their business bestseller Execution, retired Honeywell chairman and CEO Bossidy and corporate guru Charan take a step back and focus on the more fundamental issue of figuring out what to execute in the first place. The message is simple ("relentless realism"), and their solution is a return to the "ancient analytical tool" of a three-part business model that includes external realities (such as customer demand and industry conditions), financial targets (such as cash flow and revenue growth) and internal realities (such as operational and workforce capabilities). Bossidy and Charan use that model to analyze how companies such as EMC, Cisco and Sun reacted to the meltdown of the high-tech sector, and how Home Depot built efficiency, 3M reignited growth through innovation and Thomson Corp. restructured its focus. The book loses steam in the final quarter, getting repetitious but still managing to make a few familiar points feel fresh, some as simple as developing one's own "business savvy" and "need to know." The authors use the same winning formula as in their first book. The concepts are basic, the tone is conversational and the content is not unique, but sales of the previous book (600,000 in the U.S.; 1.5 million worldwide) and the authors' personal platforms virtually guarantee widespread attention in the business media and corporate sales.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Top-Down View of When and How to Create a New Business Model, July 15 2006
By 
Donald Mitchell "Jesus Loves You!" (Thanks for Providing My Reviews over 112,000 Helpful Votes Globally) - See all my reviews
(TOP 10 REVIEWER)    (#1 HALL OF FAME)   
This review is from: Confronting Reality: Doing What Matters to Get Things Right (Hardcover)
Confronting Reality is a book about selecting strategies to execute. The examples are from very big businesses, but the principles apply to all businesses.

We live in an age of business discontinuity due to rapid globalization of competition, greatly fluctuating currencies and commodity prices, swift proliferation of new technologies and enormous surpluses of manufacturing capacity. The authors correctly state that shooting for incremental gains in effectiveness frequently won't work. Instead, a new business model that makes breakthrough advances in costs, effectiveness and reach may be the only way to survive and possibly to prosper. Confronting Reality provides several large company examples to make this point (especially EMC, 3M and Thomson).

The authors point out that are several problems that this situation creates:

1. Most leaders have never developed a new business model and don't even realize that they should be considering that.

2. Most organizations are out of touch with the current and future threats from discontinuity and from competitors' business model.

3. Most leaders don't understand what their organizations can and cannot execute, so they often select strategies that have no chance of succeeding.

4. Changing anything major about a company is a big job and most leaders don't know how to manage a major change initiative.

IBM before Lou Gerstner's arrival is cited as an example of these problems.

You also get an earful about Home Depot, Intel and Dell.

The best parts of the book came in the fourth part, How to Prepare for Change. I particularly liked the material on how leadership development has to change. That's critical reading for boards of directors.

The authors also have a process for business model analysis and redesign that is well illustrated by the examples they provide. For people who don't understand what is involved in creating a business model, this information will be very helpful in providing a context for the subject.

With so many good things in this book, why did I rate it as a three-star effort?

1. The message is wrong. Companies should always be trying to replace their business models with better ones . . . not just when being hit with or being threatened by a discontinuity. My own research (published in Chief Executive Magazine from 1992-2001) points out that this has been the key differentiating factor in successful growth for almost 20 years. The message of this book would have been a good one for 1980. But it's 2005.

2. The process focus for creating a new business model needs work. Most successful business model innovations develop from "bottom-up" experimentation. The authors place scant reliance on that possibility. They see only "top-down" opportunities. Those exist, too, but they are less important.

3. The process for business model innovation itself is incomplete. It doesn't place enough emphasis on fundamental analysis of "who, what, when, where, how, why, and how much" -- the key aspects of how you change a business model. The process described in the book is a good one for checking out a possible business model and for analyzing competitors' business models . . . but it needs more emphasis on the creative spark of locating what else needs to be done and to stop being done in order to succeed.

4. Stakeholders play an enormous role in creating new business models. This book shows mostly people creating new business models who rely on stakeholders as little as possible. That's the wrong message.

I suspect the authors got this wrong because they wanted to describe the cases they know best (and there aren't very many of those) and then to extrapolate from them.

As an example, they provide an excellent case about Joe Tucci at EMC. In the case, they contrast the new business model with the old one. The authors also explain that EMC was the fastest growing stock on the NYSE in the decade before Joe Tucci took over.

What the authors miss is that EMC prospered under former CEO Mike Reuttgers by creating FOUR improved business models sequentially replacing one another before Joe Tucci became CEO. Here was a chance to tell the story of the importance of continuing business model innovation, and the authors totally missed it.

Of the other companies who have been frequent business model improvers, only Dell is mentioned.

Unless you are an entrepreneur who has never created a new business model who is planning your next start-up, I suggest that you skip this book and read one that will help you understand how to routinely improve and replace your business models.
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Amazon.com: 3.4 out of 5 stars (30 customer reviews)

106 of 115 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Buy their bestseller EXECUTION instead, Nov 10 2004
By Peter Leerskov "The Strategist, www.lace.dk" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Confronting Reality: Doing What Matters to Get Things Right (Hardcover)
There are many good and new things in this book. Unfortunately, the good things aren't new, and the new things aren't good.

I have reviewed Charan and Bossidy's book on EXECUTION as well as Charan's book on PROFITABLE GROWTH. Both were great readings that asked us to confront reality in order to do what matters to get things right.

I've just read CONFRONTING REALITY. And I cannot help asking myself, why it was published at all? It doesn't add any new material compared to their marvellous bestseller; Execution. Instead this book spends most of its time telling case stories on the subject. I find too many of them too long and too boring.

The authors' new focus on the vague concept of the business model is still a mystery to me. Why not build on strong concepts such as McKinsey's business system or Porter's value chain with proven track records. Please, confront reality!

My advice is that you buy Execution instead. It's much better. It has a clear concept, a stronger structure - and exactly the same highly important messages.

If you're a hardcore fan - like I am - of Charan and Bossidy's execution concept, you may just want to have this as an audio book for a long highway trip... that's how I managed to get through it.

Peter Leerskov,
MSc in International Business (Marketing & Management) and Graduate Diploma in E-business

45 of 53 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Wrong, wrong, wrong ..., April 21 2005
By Occasional Critic "skypilot" - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Confronting Reality: Doing What Matters to Get Things Right (Hardcover)
Larry & Ram lost me, and I hope most of you, with their very first example. The new CFO, with no knowledge of the company or plant other than reading a few spreadsheets, with about 3 comments convinces the General manager to close the plant, fire everyone, desimate the town and move to China. The coatings company described was high end, high service, specialty-focused and anything but commodity. The workers were unusually dedicated. They had some time. For the GM to do anything other than allow THE WORKERS to confront reality and give them a shot at reengineering the place is a complete travesty. I've seen it work many times and I am no bleading-heart union man. Bossidy & Charam set this up as a great example, but it is a pure, short-term, initial price analysis with NO consideration for total cost and total value. The GM might have been able to save a business, save a town and actually win customers -- or yeah, move to China afterall. But no one will ever know. Larry and Ram sure don't. Get real, guys.

20 of 22 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Confront and optimize reality., April 14 2005
By Senior Executive, Fortune 100 Company - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Confronting Reality: Doing What Matters to Get Things Right (Hardcover)
This book is excellent for entrepreneurs and junior managers who have bought into the myth that optimism is a foundation for success. Bossidy has a wealth of corporate management experience and offers some compelling case studies (although sometimes I wish he would have gone into more detail). Bossidy does not explain the flaws of positive thinking, [...] but he does write a practical perspective on the power of confronting reality. I recommend this book [...] to rise above mediocrity and create optimum results.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 30 reviews  3.4 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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