Lazonick on Chandler Part I
I introduced Professor Lazonick's paper the other day, it can be downloaded from here. I will be reviewing this paper in multiple posts. Professor Lazonick is from the University of Massachusetts at Lowell and based on a review of the bibliography for this paper, has been writing on the topic of innovation for over two decades. This is the first that I am aware of Professor Lazonick's writings, and we will definitely have to take a look at some of his other papers.
Lazonick starts off with an appropriate reference to Joseph Schumpeter about the importance of innovation.
More specifically, since, as Joseph Schumpeter (1934, 1950) recognized, innovation drives economic development. p. 1Economic development from the point of view of greater productive capacity to produce oil and gas. How does the oil and gas industry produce more with the same volume of inputs? This is highly dependent on innovation and the capability to innovate that the industry develops. Lazonick notes Chandler;
Chandler (1990: 594) then goes on to articulate in two paragraphs, which I quote in full, what I consider to be the essence of his theory of innovative enterprise, including its contribution to the growth of the economy as a whole, that he had distilled from his trilogy. p. 2
Such organizational capabilities, of course, had to be created, and once established maintained. Their maintenance was as great a challenge as their creation, for facilities depreciate and skills atrophy. Moreover, changing technologies and markets constantly make both existing facilities and skills obsolete. One of the most critical tasks of top management has always been to maintain these capabilities and to integrate these facilities and skills into a unified organization—so that the whole becomes more than the sum of its parts. p. 3
Such organizational capabilities, in turn, have provided the source—the dynamic—for the continuing growth of the enterprise. They have made possible the earnings that supplied much of the funding for such growth. Even more important, they provided the specialized facilities and skills that gave the enterprise an advantage in foreign markets and in related industries. Because of these capabilities the basic goal of the modern industrial enterprise became long-term profits based on long-term growth—growth that increased the productivity, and so the competitive power, that drive the expansion of industrial capitalism. p. 32. The theory of innovative enterprise
The Preliminary Research Report, the Draft Specification and all of the work done at People, Ideas & Objects points directly at the Joint Operating Committee (JOC). The reason for this is that People, Ideas & Objects have determined that the JOC is the ideal organizational construct of the innovative energy producer. Lazonick summarizes why an organization like the JOC is that innovative construct for oil and gas, better then I have seen elsewhere.
A business enterprise seeks to transform productive resources into goods and services that can be sold to generate revenues. A theory of the firm, therefore, must, at a minimum, provide explanations for how this productive transformation occurs and how revenues are obtained. These explanations must focus on three generic activities in which the business enterprise engages: strategy, organization, and finance. Strategy allocates resources to investments in developing human and physical capabilities that, it is hoped, will enable the firm to compete for chosen product markets. Organization transforms technologies and accesses markets, and thereby develops and utilizes the value-creating capabilities of these resources to generate products that buyers want at prices that they are willing to pay. Finance sustains the process of developing technologies and accessing markets from the time at which investments in productive resources are made to the time at which financial returns are generated through the sale of products. p. 4Chandler noted that "strategy follows structure". One of the key attributes of using the JOC is that it enables the strategy to be unique and specific to the property represented. In order for the value to be earned, each facility, each zone of oil and gas requires that a different strategy be implemented. One that is unique and develops the value based on the facts and the situation at the property.
With the structured hierarchy, and its close cousin the bureaucracy, the focus is on the corporate entity. This is reasonable until we discover the conflict associated with many corporate entities represented in each JOC. To eliminate the conflict at the JOC it is important to remember that consensus at the JOC is driven by financial interests. If the strategy and structure are both focused on the same organization, this conflict between corporate entities disappears.
The last attribute is equally important. To establish finance at the JOC does not seem to be an issue until it is realized the oil and gas finance mechanisms are focused on the corporate entity. The Financial Marketplace module of the Draft Specification moves the finance function from the corporate entity to the JOC. This enables proper matching of investments and returns based on the strategy and organizational alignment noted.
As this discussion of strategy, organization and finance show, the culture of the oil and gas industry is based on the Joint Operating Committee. The closer we move to that conceptual model, the greater the alignment, efficiencies and other attributes become. In addition to the focus on the culture of the JOC, there needs to be a revision in another attribute of culture of the energy industry. The culture that we want to change is what Lazonick and Chandler call the optimization culture, and is applied to the oil and gas industry in this post.
I see the two cultures as being mutually exclusive. One, the JOC, being developed to deal with the unique requirements of the partnerships represented in oil and gas. And the optimization culture exists as a result of the "easy" energy era that existed in the 1980's and 1990's. There was a demand to survive commercially during this "easy" energy era. Innovation was the last thing that people thought of. Optimization for the survival of the firm was the skill that was rewarded. Lazonick notes;
The problem is, however, that the optimizing firm is not an innovating firm; indeed it can be characterized as an un-innovating firm. p. 5How do we change from an optimizing to an innovative culture? What we do know is that software defines and supports the organization. Therefore to change the organization requires that we build the software first, and that is what we are doing at People, Ideas & Objects. Review of the remainder of Lazonicks paper will provide more answers, and I think that Lazonick and I are not talking about a wholesale change from optimizing to innovating. I would rephrase it for the purposes of the communities represented by People, Ideas & Objects as from where we are today; innovating on top of optimization, to change it to a culture of optimizing on top of innovations.
Our appeal should be based on these eight "Focused on" priorities and values of how better the oil and gas industry and its operations could be handled. They may not initially be the right way to go, but we are committed to working with the various communities to discover and ensure the right ones are. If your an enlightened producer, an oil and gas director, investor or shareholder, who would be interested in funding these software developments and communities, please follow our Funding Policies & Procedures, and our Hardware Policies & Procedures. If your a government that collects royalties from oil and gas producers, and are concerned about the accuracy of your royalty income, please review our Royalty Policies & Procedures and email me. And if your a potential user of this software, and possibly as a member of the Community of Independent Service Providers, please join us here.
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