Book Review: The Upside of Turbulence

The Upside of TurbulenceReviewer

Dr. Michael Boehlje, Professor Emeritus, Department of Agricultural Economics

Risk dominates the agricultural sector, and most agribusiness managers focus on reducing the risks they take. Risk is perceived by most to be bad—something to be avoided. But entrepreneurs and businessmen also know that without some risk, there likely is not much reward. To obtain a reasonable return, you typically have to take some calculated risks. In fact, risk or uncertainty has both an upside and a downside. The key management challenges are to make sure you are adequately rewarded for the risks you take and to minimize the downside and capture the upside of the risks and uncertainties that you face or choose to take.

In his recent book, The Upside of Turbulence, Donald Sull focuses on “seizing opportunity in an uncertain world” (the subtitle of the book). His key themes are that successful positioning requires two attributes of a firm: 1) resiliency and absorptive capacity to handle the potential downside or negative consequences of an uncertainty, and 2) agility to detect and capture the potential upside or positive consequences of an uncertainty.

The absorptive capacity of a business or its resiliency to downside risk or uncertainty is impacted by a number of features or characteristics:

1) Low fixed costs – These can help a firm weather a wide range of changes, such as price wars, higher raw material costs, and declining demand.
2) War chest of cash – Cash is perfectly fungible, so it can be deployed against future contingencies that managers cannot foresee.
3) Diversified cash flow – Companies can withstand downturns in specific units, and diversified units serve as a store of potential wealth that can be sold later.
4) Too big to fail – Large firms can survive by off-loading operations and reducing head count in crises. Size also increases the odds the government, customers, or suppliers will prop up an ailing firm.
5) Tangible resources – Valuable resources such as raw material deposits, real estate, and so on serve as a store of potential value.
6) Intangible resources – Brand expertise, and technology can insulate the firm against changes in the market in the short and medium term.
7) Customer lock-in – Switching costs prevent customers from easily jumping ship, buying a firm time when circumstances shift.
8) Protected core market – Barriers to entry in a core market provide a safe stream of cash to weather storms.
9) Powerful patron – A powerful government, regulator, customer, or investor vested in the firm’s success can buffer it from changes.
10) Excess staff – The corporate equivalent of body fat, these employees serve as a store of value that can be shed in hard times.

Note that most of these sources of absorption/resiliency are not just happenstance or predetermined, they are a function of conscious decisions to accomplish a specific goal or objective—to position the business so that it can accommodate and absorb the unfortunate events it might encounter.

Critical characteristics or sources of agility that enable a business to capture the upside of risk and uncertainty include:

1 Strategic
• A strong balance sheet and a large war chest to finance big bets.
• A governance structure that permits executives to seize opportunities more quickly than rivals.
• Owners and executives with a long-term perspective.
• Early recognition of market changes.
• Willingness to exit.
• Start-up/new venture mentality.

2. Portfolio
• A diversified portfolio of independent units.
• A cadre of general managers who can be transferred across units.
• Central corporate control over important resources, such as talent and cash, so they can be reallocated.
• Regular, unbiased evaluation processes.
• Structured processes for decreasing investments or selling off units.

3. Operational
• Shared real-time market data that are granular and credible.
• A small number of corporate priorities to focus effort.
• Clear performance goals for teams and individuals.
• Mechanisms to hold people accountable and to reward them.
• Conscious management decisions can enhance this capability to capture future opportunities.

As agribusinesses face the current downturn in the business climate, they should not just focus on the risks they face, but make sure they don’t miss the opportunities that always accompany any downturn.

 

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