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- Date: 2 Nov 93 15:13 -0600
- From: Rob Slade <roberts@decus.arc.ab.ca>
- Subject: Book Review: "Globalization, Technology and Competition"
-
-
- BKGLBTCH.RVW 980930
-
- Havard Business School Press
- Soldiers Field Road
- Boston, MA 02163
- 617-495-6700 617-495-6117 800-545-7685
- 617-495-6444 617-495-6334 fax: 617-496-8066
- or
- McGraw-Hill Ryerson/Osborne
- 300 Water Street
- Whitby, Ontario L1N 9B6
- 416-430-5000 416-430-5047 Rita Bisram, Marketing
- fax: 416-430-5020
- or
- 2600 Tenth St.
- Berkeley, CA 94710 USA
- 415-548-2805 800-227-0900
- "Globalization, Technology and Competition", Bradley/Hausman/Nolan, U$34.95
-
-
- The inclusion of "globalization" and "competition" in the title, as
- well as the imprimatur of the Harvard Business School indicate that
- this will be other than a technical manual. At the same time, the
- subtitle does give one hope that there will be some technical material
- of interest. One should know better by now. When business and
- technical interests clash, business always wins.
-
- "Business" research, along with much of economics, reminds one of the
- statement about much of educational research: if it isn't blatant
- nonsense, it's stuff your grandmother knew. As they say in Russia,
- there is no pravda in Izvetsia, and no izvetsia in Pravda (a pun on
- the names of the two major papers, the "Truth" and the "News"). This
- compilation of papers appears to have been taken from a single
- symposium and made to fit into a book. The heavy preponderance of
- professors from Harvard and MIT make the work seem quite
- self-indulgent. The range of companies studied goes from big to big:
- by the time you are finished you will know more than you ever wanted
- about the International Stock Exchange, General Electric Information
- Services, Saturn, Benetton, Wal-Mart and Rosenbluth Travel.
-
- In the absence of a preface or foreword, chapter (or paper) one, with
- the slightly reordered title of "Global Competition and Technology",
- would seem to fill that role, particularly as it is the only content
- of part one. However, after an initial laying of some foundations and
- a seeming introduction to part two, this first paper drifts into a
- mini-"Megatrend" essay which tries to touch all of the communications,
- technology and globalization bases without much apparent structure.
- The technical background is suspect in places, as where the authors
- applaud the death of standards, suggesting that this will drive the
- movement to open systems. This indicates a very profound lack of
- understanding of the necessity of standards for the open systems
- concept to even exist, and a limiting of the definition of "standard"
- to "proprietary standards", itself almost an oxymoron.
-
- Part two discusses organizational structures. If the aim is to
- propose any suggested style for "global" organizations, it is only
- scantily achieved. Malone and Rockart give us some rewording of
- Naismith's "networking", structure with an organization (as opposed to
- the hierarchical pyramid of traditional companies) with "adhocracies"
- and "answer networks". However, they appear to be proposing that such
- structures already exist within large corporations: their only
- evidence is a "gee whiz" listing of some information technologies
- already in use. Some idea of the framework under which a global
- organizational structure could develop would be helpful. Eccles and
- Nolan appear to want to give us that. Instead, we get a retreading of
- the usual "policy vs procedure" model of delegation from management to
- line workers (under the new phrase "superordinate design"). Tacking
- an additional title onto an existing acronym (GIS, commonly known as
- geographic information systems but here used as global information
- systems), Konsynski and Karimi purport to help us to design worldwide
- networks. Instead, we have vague business terms being applied to
- complex networking problems; one admission that networks might be
- limited by available technologies; and one "case study" which lists
- applications which are, again, impressive but do not address current
- major problems.
-
- Part three purports to talk about the creation and restructuring of
- industries. Whether this is supposed to be prescriptive (how to
- restructure) or descriptive (what new industries *will* look like) is
- left open. In any case, definitive statements about restructuring are
- hard to come by. Bradley's article lists some new industries and some
- restructured companies. But the role of information technology is not
- directly linked to any changes. The promised examination of the value
- and cost justification is limited to two paragraphs stating that
- measurements of return on investment for networks are difficult,
- seldom done, but should be done. Not very helpful. (In addition it
- is very difficult, in the paper, to distinguish technical networking
- from business, political or social "networking".) Hayter's chapter
- discussing the changes wrought by the introduction of electronic
- trading to the International Stock Exchange is fascinating but
- somewhat limited by the lack of specific examples of change to
- affected companies. The restructuring of a manufacturing industry is
- examined in the case of a particular company, but the Jaikumar/Upton
- paper goes to the opposite extreme and fails to give any account of
- technology in this firm limited not only to one nation, but to a
- restricted area within Italy. The Hammond article does study one
- technology area ("point of sale" information) and one industry (retail
- sales, particularly fashion) and produces the best of the bunch. More
- detail would have been helpful. One example in the fashion industry
- cites a six-week response time. That is half a "season" in fashion:
- it would be interesting to see how to shorten it.
-
- Part four is ostensibly aimed at the general manager who needs to
- respond strategically to the changes of globalization and technology.
- One would assume, therefore, that this section would be primarily
- practical. Not so. A paper by Clemons again trying to cover the
- whole field (and, again, demonstrating a basic misunderstanding of the
- business aspects of computing by the statement that information
- technology investments are feasible and not restricted to a single use
- with a single partner), a presentation of an IBM study on
- globalization that stresses "balance", and an interesting study of
- GM's Saturn division which makes almost no mention of technology. The
- one useful article details the international "expansion" of a travel
- agency through alliances with "local" firms in other countries and the
- use of technological assistance which supports and cements the
- alliance.
-
- The final section of the book is entitled, "Competing with
- Technology". However you wish to interpret that, the three papers
- have little to do with it. Hausman lists activities of various
- telecommunications carriers overseas, while the other two articles are
- two versions of peering into the future. The Marx article is quite
- "blue sky" in its assessment. The Hald and Konsynski article is more
- detailed but perhaps no more useful. The technologies it examines are
- certainly interesting. However, the recent development of a
- dependable replacement for the century-old gas meter design will
- likely turn a seven hundred million dollar gas meter supply industry
- into a twenty-five million dollar industry within three years (and
- have an even greater impact on gas service.) This may not be as
- "sexy" as virtual reality, but it will affect business much more over
- the next five years.
-
- The conference that prompted this book may simply have been a bad one.
- In all likelihood, though, this is a fair representation of current
- business thinking with regard to technology. Fuzzy. I would
- recommend that managers with a technical background study this book.
- My reason is the same reason I would give for studying BASIC. In self
- defence, it behooves you to know what the brass is being fed, and,
- what nonsense you might have to deal with.
-
-
- copyright Robert M. Slade, 1993 BKGLBTCH.RVW 980930
- Permission granted to distribute with unedited copies of the TELECOM
- Digest and associated mailing lists/newsgroups.
-
- DECUS Canada Communications, Desktop, Education and Security group newsletters
- Editor and/or reviewer ROBERTS@decus.ca, RSlade@sfu.ca, Rob Slade at 1:153/733
- DECUS Symposium '94, Vancouver, BC, Mar 1-3, 1994, contact: rulag@decus.ca
-