Back
to this JSB-JH3 approach, the one that hinges on the pursuit of edge
opportunities: Should UCP have a closer look?
"Yes," if it:
"Yes," if it:
- is interested in getting better faster
- is turned on by the prospect of capturing "market opportunities that are appearing more rapidly than ever and that present large upside potential." (Note: Disruptive technologies -- social media, cloud computing, mobility, big data analytics, etc. -- figure prominently in the authors' formula but said opportunities aren't for technocentric industries alone; they're open to organizations of all kinds.)
- has challenges to overcome.
To the last point, this new approach is 's-much-as-anything an antidote to poor performance. It's for counteracting the effects
of "The Big Shift," which is tied to globalization and rapid advancements in technology, and which has "dramatically intensified competitive pressures on
firms over decades." More
specifically, it's for organizations whose tried and true solutions ain't cuttin' it. It's for organizations whose core processes are in need of transformation.
Is UCP feeling performance pressures?
I don't have a lot to go by. My impression, however, is that UCP *is* being exposed to
performance pressures. From UCP-National we have the President and CEO telling us the economics of providing services for disabled children are "difficult." At the affiliate level, I know (this is my lone example) that UCP of Central Ohio merged a few years ago with Goodwill
Columbus in order to lower operating costs -- which it had to do
because it was unable "to raise the money it needed to thrive."
These
may be signs that performance improvement is imperative and not just something that'd be nice to achieve. I keep hearing about steady declines in government support. Are these actual, or threatened? At which levels of government? As for the effects of globalization and technology
advances, I wonder: is UCP is seeing second order effects like service life-cycle
compression and /or donors becoming more fickle in their giving patterns?
Obviously, I need to continue to learn about the nature of
UCP's challenges. In the meantime, though, I'll proceed from the glass-half-full
perspective that says new opportunities are springing up faster than ever. In my opinion, UCP should
be open to any evidence that may exist to the effect that it could do
better by making changes. It should be open to new opportunities and to looking,
if need be, in new places for them.
Like edges.
More about those, next.
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