Home » Ethics » Innovation » Sustainability & environmental issues » Currently Reading:

Cutting Costs reaches its event horizon

January 28, 2007 Graeme Codrington Ethics, Innovation, Sustainability & environmental issues 3 Comments

A nice article in the Economist, 18 Jan 07, entitled: “Browne out“, looks at the departure of BP’s boss, Lord (John) Browne. He has been in charge since 1995, and his tenure coincides with some huge changes in the industry. These include massive mergers, the “greening” of Big Oil, and at the same time some big mess ups – “In March 2005 a fire at an American refinery killed 15 people and injured 170 more. Since then, BP has suffered corrosion and spills on its pipelines in Alaska, delays in developing new oilfields and two investigations of its trading arm for price-rigging.”

But the article makes a very interesting point: most of these issues relate to massive cost cutting that has characterised the oil industry in the past decade. Ruthlessly cutting costs eventually strips out the ability of a company to do what it has to do. It stretches staff, and demoralises them as well, often beyond their ability to cope with situations that arise. In oil companies, as in other industries, this can have catastrophic results, in the glare of public scrutiny. But for other companies, especially in the service industries and professional firms, the results can be equally catastrophic – yet unseen until the company teeters and topples.

There are only so many costs you cut, until you and all your competitors are all running on empty. In most industries, we’ve reached that point. Now, I predict, we’ll see competitive advantage coming in the form of “we’re not the cheapest, but we are the best” type approaches, as companies rebuild strategic capacity, and focus on VALUE, not just COSTS.

Related posts:

  1. How to cut costs and keep your employees The million dollar question I hear you sigh as you...

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

Currently there are "3 comments" on this Article:

  1. Dragon says:

    That reminds me of something:

    “When patent serial number 700,000 was assigned, the Commissioner of the U.S. Patent Office famously recommended that his office be abolished because ‘Everything that can be invented has been invented.’”

    It seems to me, ‘The more things change, the more things change.”

    Who knows what ideas people will have when it comes to making a company more efficient? Maybe some will run out of gas, but the smarter ones will outlast those who aren’t as smart. Others may not make it because of unforeseen events. But, we adapt, new companies pop up, and things in general, keep going.

  2. henryh says:

    Would love it to be true, but after working for a big US company for many years,
    my level of optimism is not that high.

    Very few CEO’s have the “balls” to tell shareholders to piss off – we are busy with a plan. Unless shareholders (especially US ones) see returns fast they will do all in their power to get rid of the CEO. Only long term plans that are appreciate is to suck cost out of the business… As you say lets kill the business slowly !!

  3. Dragon says:

    Could it be these big ones are the ones that won’t last, whereas the smaller and medium-sized companies, will? BTW, I’ve heard of several stories about CEO’s who have golden parachutes which cost the company quite a bit of money when they discover they need to get rid of the CEO. Looks like they would learn…

Comment on this Article:







Subscribe to this blog

Subscribe

Category Drop-Down

Posts about Future Trends

Forget creating customer loyalty and focus on building friendships with customers

March 18, 2010 Dean van Leeuwen

Forget creating customer loyalty and focus on building friendships with customers

I’m not talking about the glib friendships companies try to encourage by inviting their customers to be friends or fans on Facebook, but rather intimate and deep relationships that come from having a vested interest in the people that make their business possible. I recently came across a study by Michael Argyle and Monika Henderson [...]

You’re going to have to change your management style

March 17, 2010 Barrie Bramley

You’re going to have to change your management style

I spend a large part of my year in conversation with managers working hard to try and understand today’s younger workforce. The pain they’re feeling is palpable. The evidence of change is overwhelming. Making the necessary changes, at times, seems impossible. The hope is that the challenges are being interrogated and slowly but surely acted [...]

A Radical Proposal for Executive Pay

March 15, 2010 Graeme Codrington

A Radical Proposal for Executive Pay

Everyone agrees that something must be done about executive pay. One of the major contentious issues emerging out of the financial crisis is the way that senior executives and manager, especially in the financial industries, are remunerated. These days, executive pay often seems to be unrelated to the company’s performance, and in many [...]

The future of money

March 12, 2010 Dean van Leeuwen

The future of money

For years banks and credit card companies have held a strangle hold over the movement of money and charged exorbitant rates for doing so. Now this is changing and fast.
Michale Ivey the founder of Twitpay has devised a system, using code that PayPal made available to him, that allows people to make payments [...]

Recent Comments

  • Graeme Codrington: From: http://philippschaefer.posterous.com/the-participa...
  • Graeme Codrington: Here is an example of how social media changes the power rel...
  • stace: lazy and sensationalist - I couldn't agree more...
  • Graeme Codrington: Here's another example - a company that developed software t...
  • Graeme Codrington: I agree with you on this point, Barrie. BUT... I just had a...

Archives

Tweet Blender

barriebramley: Google eyes departure from China on April 10 - http://bit.ly/bUJVhf (via @hotapple)
1 hour ago
workforcetrends: RT @philipp_philipp: The participation economy | By Tim Brown and David Fetherstonhaug | The Economist http://post.ly/TMh2
4 hours ago
barriebramley: What Business Card? Just Scan My QR Code - http://ow.ly/1opB0
7 hours ago
workforcetrends: Amazing! @MichaelHyatt is giving away 50 copies of the NY Times bestseller SWITCH by Chip and Dan Heath: http://bit.ly/8Xs9wF
8 hours ago
workforcetrends: RT @GreenMaven: The 16 People You Must Follow on Twitter for #Green Business | Earth and Industry http://bit.ly/cWAt7s #ff
8 hours ago
workforcetrends: RT @futureaware: Robot Journalist Takes Pictures, Ask Questions, Publishes Online #future http://bit.ly/aNVEVL
8 hours ago
workforcetrends: RT @fastcompany: GM to Use Augmented Reality Tech for Safer Driving http://su.pr/5MzhaS
8 hours ago
workforcetrends: I was just asked if I'll be tweeting "personally" somewhere. No, is the answer. This account is my only twitter feed. Content stays the same
8 hours ago