How - Dov Seidman [1]
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:
Seidman, Dov.
How : why how we do anything means everything . . . in business (and in life) /
Dov Seidman.
p. cm.
“Published simultaneously in Canada.”
Includes bibliographical references.
eISBN : 978-0-470-57103-3
1. Success in business. 2. Business ethics. 3. Values. 4. Organizational effectiveness. 5. Technological innovations. I. Title.
HF5386.S4159 2007
650.1—dc22
2006103097
To my mother, Sydelle, for my first and lasting sense that HOW matters
To my wife, Maria, for the HOW that matters most to me
Preface
This is a HOW book, not a how-to book. What’s the difference between how-to and HOW? Everything.
In the twenty-first century, it isn’t what you do that matters most. In fact, if you line up all the winners in business today, you will notice that few win anymore by what they make or do. If you make something new (or just better, faster, and cheaper), the competition quickly comes up with a way to make it still better and deliver it at the same or even lower price. Customers instantly compare price, features, quality, and service, effectively rendering almost every what a commodity.
This is not just true of businesses; to a large degree, the same holds true for the way individuals get ahead and accomplish their goals. Specialized knowledge or expertise differentiates you for a moment in time, but it likely won’t carry any of us through an entire career. Changing jobs, companies, and even industries now often involves adapting knowledge skills to a new set of conditions.
Yet, the drive for differentiation—personal, professional, and organizational—lies at the heart of all our business endeavors (and many of our personal ones as well). We all still want to stand out, to be bold, to be uniquely valuable, to distinguish ourselves from the competition, to do things others can’t copy, and to be number one. We always will. But in a commoditized world, we are running out of areas in which to do so.
There is one area where tremendous variation and variability still exist, however. One place that we have not yet analyzed, quantified, systematized, or commoditized, one which, in fact, cannot be commoditized or copied: the realm of human behavior—how we do what we do.
Think about it. If you make stronger connections and collaborate more intensely with your co-workers, you can win. If you reach out and inspire more people throughout your global network, your productivity skyrockets. If you keep promises 99 percent of the time and your competitor keeps promises only 8 out of 10 times, you can gain critical advantage in the marketplace. If your interactions with others deliver a more meaningful customer experience, you engender a loyalty that brings them back again and again. When it comes to how you do what you do there is tremendous variation, and where a broad spectrum of variation exists, opportunity exists. The tapestry of human behavior is so diverse, so rich, and so global that it presents a rare opportunity, the opportunity to outbehave the competition.
The world today, powered by vast networks of information, connects and reveals us in ways we have only just begun to comprehend. Groundbreaking technological advances have put us in intimate contact with others about whom we often know little and understand even less. As a result, many of the tried-and-true ways of working together and getting ahead no longer apply. These same advances have also given us unprecedented power to see through the walls of organizations and evaluate not just what they do, but how they do it. I’ve come to believe that the innovations