Think about how long it took to bring suppliers 4 tiers deep into the Toyota way, and to debug and implement new processes, and the tech to do those processes.
That'll probably take 10-20 years, eh?
THAT is Process Power.
Conversation
Here's another example: Zara. When Zara was starting out, it owned these old factories in Europe. At some point they had the idea to increase inventory velocity to make up for their higher cost base. Then they leaned into that — and created what we now call 'fast fashion'.
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Zara is vertically integrated. It owns its own factories, and it runs design inside those factories, connected to a global network of store managers who are trained to notice trends. It, too, had to modify the relationship it had to upstream suppliers.
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Like Toyota, it had to integrate downstream to its consumer facing stores (Toyota was with dealers).
I'm not entirely sure because I'm not from manufacturing, but @SamTaylors_ear assures me it would take around 10 years to modify an existing org to adopt Zara's model.
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Like Toyota, Zara stumbled onto its Process Power by accident. So this begs the question: is it possible for a company to deliberately adopt Process Power?
Interestingly enough, I think the answer to that is yes.
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In 1992, Steve Jobs gave a talk at MIT's Sloan School of Business. I think most people paid attention to the shade he threw at management consulting. But I found his comments on manufacturing to be more interesting. Jobs TOTALLY UNDERSTOOD Process Power:
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6 years later, he found Tim Cook and poached him away from Compaq. Cook spent the next 10 years transforming Apple's supply chain. He famously assigned Competing Against Time to his subordinates. (It remains the best book on building Process Power that I know.)
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Link to the book: goodreads.com/book/show/2232
Process Power meant Cook could lock up all supply of hard drives for the iPod, as well as components needed for the first iPad. And it puts Apple's moves into supplier financing in a new light.
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Why do you provide supplier financing? So you can dictate the terms of your engagement, and get them to change their processes to fit your JIT manufacturing system.
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Anyway, time to wrap this up. The next time you see someone going 'oh, X company has Process Power', ask yourself if it would take an operationally excellent competitor 10 years to copy the process. If yes, then you have Process Power. If no, then heh. No Process Power exists.
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In a sentence: if you want sustainable competitive advantages from your company's unique processes, your processes better be so damn hard to copy it would take decades of expensive investment to copy it.
Follow if you'd like more threads on business or career moats. /end
