
Repairing reputational damage: don’t go the way of BoeingÂ
All organizations should have a plan to secure trust during, after (and even before) a crisis hits. Here are a host of examples, good and bad, to learn from....
Audio available
by Thomas W. Malnight Published April 8, 2021 in Strategy • 3 min read
Competition for new growth and opportunity is fierce and relentless. In this fight, business leaders are often left puzzled as to why their strategies, the result of arduous planning and painstaking research, struggle to beat expectations and differentiate their company in the marketplace.
Most corporate strategy today suffers from three faults:Â
How can companies become more focused on the outside world and its opportunities? How can we take big leaps rather than small steps? How do we become proactive and ready to lead our industries?Â
Our research shows that putting purpose at the core of corporate strategy is a critical driver of growth, profitability and organizational relevance. To achieve this, purpose must play two distinct roles to: Â
Redefining the playing field enables companies to avoid market share battles and pursue growth with the logic, “we grow by growing the ecosystem.”Â
Consider the case of US-based Mars Petcare. Its purpose of creating “A Better World for Pets” provided impetus for it to extend its ecosystem from pet food to pet health and pet care. It invested in systematic acquisitions of several veterinary hospital chains in the US to become the largest American veterinary operator. Significant synergies soon emerged between the food and pet health businesses. The company now seeks to grow by enabling wider pet ownership, making it a seamless, convenient and fun experience. All these moves have contributed to Mars Petcare becoming Mars Inc.’s largest as well as fastest-growing business segment.Â
Watch: How successful companies redefine their business – Mars Petcare case
Reshaping the value proposition – the second role of purpose – requires building compelling relationships, which complements the strategy of growing the ecosystem. Purpose–driven organizations re–evaluate their value proposition and keep evolving it to remain relevant as customers’ expectations change in line with industry trends or as different explicit and implicit needs emerge.Â
India’s Mahindra Finance, which provides vehicle finance for tractors and utility vehicles to rural customers, leveraged its purpose of “RISE” to repeatedly broaden its value proposition. It mapped customers’ pain points across their lifetime and launched new value propositions such as insurance broking services (for vehicles, life and health), housing finance, SME finance and asset management. Notwithstanding the many challenges of serving the rural market, the company not only strengthened its customer relationships but also secured new revenue streams and profits, to become India’s largest rural non-banking financial company catering to over 50% of the market and 6 million customers.Â
Our take on the role of purpose counters the typical perspective of most organizations and managers, i.e. purpose is peripheral to strategy used only to drive corporate social responsibility, philanthropy and sustainability initiatives or purpose is just one component of the total strategy where it is used to create shared value and inclusive growth.Â
The role of purpose must shift from the periphery to the core of strategy. Articulating a compelling purpose and following it through with leadership commitment and financial investment, can be used to shape a sustainable profitable growth strategy. Beyond that, purpose becomes an exceptionally powerful tool that brings three specific benefits – it unifies the organization, motivates stakeholders and creates wide ranging impact.Â
You must ask: Why does your company exist? What is its impact on society? Why should people want to work for you? In today’s world, the answers to these questions cannot just be money. Companies must recognize they have a bigger role to play, and that they can transform the world around them.Â
Watch:Â Put Purpose at the Core of Strategy – interview with Thomas W. Malnight
Professor Emeritus of Strategy and General Management
Thomas W Malnight is Professor Emeritus of Strategy and General Management. His fields of interest are strategy, leading and accelerating transformational organizational change, and the role of purpose in redefining businesses and their impact on society.Â
April 17, 2025 • by Michael Skapinker in Strategy
All organizations should have a plan to secure trust during, after (and even before) a crisis hits. Here are a host of examples, good and bad, to learn from....
April 14, 2025 • by Salvatore Cantale, Frederikke Due Olsen in Strategy
By managing ESG-heavy assets separately, companies can drive progress in their sustainable business units while addressing the sustainability challenges of traditional assets. Here are four effective strategies to achieve your goals....
April 10, 2025 • by Sander van der Linden in Strategy
It’s possible to immunize people against false or manipulated information through simple exercises that policymakers and platforms could easily roll out....
March 27, 2025 • by Robert Earle, Karl Schmedders in Strategy
Subsidies for renewables have led to electricity prices frequently falling to less than zero, creating opportunities for consumers....
Explore first person business intelligence from top minds curated for a global executive audience