| Featured Legal Services |
|---|
| Australia's first 11 in performance and valuation | | Print | |
| Written by Noric Dilanchian | ||||||
| Tuesday, 12 February 2008 | ||||||
|
Their search leads to mountains of books, articles and electronic data feeds. Only a few sources are insightful, reliable and free of bias. Even fewer focus on Australia.
One useful book on increasing company performance and valuations is The First XI. It is written by four Australian authors who have either an academic or consulting background or a combination of both. The lead author is Professor Graham Hubbard, currently Head of Adelaide Graduate School of Business. Hubbard.
Prof Hubbard and his co-authors apply rigour to answer this question: What is it that winning organisations do which gets them above-average performance over the long term?
Their answers are not startling or new for readers familiar with books and articles on management. This is a good thing and we'll discuss why this is so.
A major reason why this is a good thing is that it avoids an all too common game in management literature. In that game, an author talks up an allegedly brand new concept. It is presented as a theory for everything. We've seen that since the 1990s with words such as "re-engineering", "leadership" and "blue ocean strategy". It's resulted in a stream of books debunking management gurus and junk management literature.
The First XI was first published in 2001 by John Wilely & Sons. As a testament to its success, a second edition appeared in February 2007. The second edition has marketing support from Fairfax Books. The preface is written by Fred Hilmer, CEO of Fairfax publishing from 1998 to 2005 and now Vice Chancellor of the University of New South Wales. All this helps make the book a significant business book by Australian book marketing standards.
In 2001 the book's methodology gave it a head start in its first edition. The authors examined 199 firms in Australia before identifying 11 that met their criteria of achieving above-average returns for 10 to 15 or more years. The logos of the first 11 appear in the GRAPHIC accompanying this post.
Professionals can work top down or bottom up. The top down approach begins with theory and moves to practice, it focuses on developing high-level frameworks to explain what goes on in business. The bottom up approach learns from experience, it focuses on concrete problems, drawing lessons from specific case studies to work out what to do. Both approaches are needed. A strength of the First XI is that it combines both a top down and a bottom up approach. The 2007 edition adds information on the performance of the first 11 organisations between 2001 and 2006 (going bottom up from company performance experience). It then moves to develop a theory to explain why the 11 have been successful (going top down, looking for common patterns).
The message is that broadly speaking the performance of the 11 organisations in The First XI can be explained in ways already covered by the US-centric management literature which inspired The First XI.
These US books are In Search of Excellence (published 1982), Built to Last (published 1994) and Good to Great (published 2001).
Very early in the book there appears a useful statement on the foundations of the book's research. The authors cite the Australian references at the end of this post and they say they lead to this question: "Which are Australia's high-performing organisations and why? (page 3)
Unfortunately, the answers The First XI provides are under whelming in many ways. For example, like the vast majority of US or Australian business books it fails to address the needs of small and medium-sized enterprises, let alone micro businesses or start-ups. Experience in practice shows that the needs of the meek are very different from very large or transnational corporations, about which books and papers continue to proliferate. The number of books about big business vastly exceed the number of good books on small business. This distorts perceptions about the reality faced by small business.
But there's at leat three reasons to recommend The First XI.
This third point is also illustrated in a GRAPHIC in this post. It sets out the sharemarket performance for the first 11 from 1980 to 2001 which brings us back to where we started on the path to discovering what winning organisations do which gets them above-average performance over the long term.
-------------------------------- Note on graphics:
All the graphics in this post are taken from electronic documents in websites featuring work by some or all of the authors of The First XI. In our firm we extensively use management graphics. Some are featured or discussed in our following posts: Are managers from Earth and lawyers lost in space? and Australian wine industry clusters, economics and branding.
Australia Management References:
Graham Hubbard, Delyth Samuel, Graeme Cocks & Simon Heap, The First XI: Winning Organisations in Australia (John Wiley & Sons Australia, Sydney, 2007)
Australian Quality Council, Australian Business Excellence Framework.
Pappas, Carter, Evans and Koop/Telesis, The Global Challenge: Australian Manufacturing in the 1990s (Australian Manufacturing Council, Melbourne, 1990).
Australian Manufacturing Council and Manufacturing Advisory Group (NZ), Leading the way - a study of manufacturing practices in Australia and New Zealand, ( Australian Manufacturing Council, Melbourne, 1992)
| ||||||
|
||||||
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|
| Main Menu | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Free Tools |
|---|
| Registered Users | |
|---|---|
|

Every day people examine news, sharemarket performance and other factors looking for signs and explanations for shifts in valuations for companies, businesses and assets.
Their research followed the methodology or track of prior US-centric works which we'll mention shortly. Fortunately not included among the 11 are - Ansett, OneTel, Compass or HIH Insurance - all Australian companies which have died this decade.
In working top down, one of the noteworthy elements of The First XI is its chapter titled "Comparing our findings with other studies." It provides additional reasons why it is a good thing that the discoveries of the book are not startling.
