The current macroeconomic environment is in a stage of long-term uncertainty, which is posing a number of challenges for enterprise leaders. According to the International Monetary Fund, expectations for growth are being adjusted due to the lasting impacts of the global pandemic, the ongoing war in Ukraine, and persistently high inflation in major markets, all of which increase the likelihood of a worldwide recession.
In this environment, businesses seek sustainable growth sources that capitalize on investments in digital transformation, foster direct customer relationships, and help them achieve their innovation objectives. Increasingly, they are modernizing their value propositions, business models, and go-to-market strategies for the 21st century, with customer relationships at the core.
Today, customers prefer to subscribe to the outcomes they want, when they want them, rather than purchasing a product with the burden of ownership. To be successful in this Subscription Economy®, you need an approach to doing business that is both customer-centric and future-proof. We call this Modern Business.
During our recent Subscribed Executive Summit, Zuora’s Subscribed Institute collaborated with executives and partners to explore what it takes to do Modern Business today — with a vision to improve the way business is conducted for the benefit of people, companies, and the planet. Combining this partner and customer feedback with our own experience, we’ve learned that to grow and scale into a Modern Business, you need:
But, how do you know what these are? We will be exploring each of these components in a series of upcoming insights, but here, we delve into how to achieve the right organizational structure for your business.
Many businesses try to pursue change by making isolated updates to existing systems and processes, but this narrow view often fails to bring about large-scale organizational shifts or new offers into the market to innovate the business. The majority of the organization may exist in silos, with confusion and unclear governance, roles, and responsibilities. Delivering on the original vision can take longer than needed — or doesn’t happen at all. In the end, many companies fall short of the true offer potential and promised value.
Through our targeted research and collaborations, we have identified the obstacles that may stand in the way of successful business transformation and the proven methods of overcoming hurdles, to arrive at the right operating models that will power innovation and growth for your business. To begin the transformation journey, businesses need a proven approach, or roadmap, that can be used to assess existing Modern Business offerings or recalibrate strategies for the next wave of transformation.
We call this roadmap Modern Business Works, which consists of:
“When you take on the role of a transformation agent, you need to give people a vision — a flag, as I like to say — and some methodologies for how to get there, and you’ll be amazed at what a team can accomplish.”
–Rowan Prior, Senior Director Revenue Operations, Formerly: Vimeo, Deloitte, LivePerson
As an executive leading your organization on this journey, you know that transformation needs to happen — but what is the proven path to success?
Modern Business Works is built around five foundational design principles:
Image: In contrast to more siloed traditional business organizational structures, modern businesses use more predictive analytics, are more customer value driven, enable greater internal networking, function cyclically instead of linearly, and empower more speed and agility.
You’re blind without the right data. If you don’t have insights into consumption patterns — or how your customers are using your product — you really don’t know your customers. With the right data, you can better understand customer needs and make constant adaptation based on real-world feedback. This predictive, data-driven decision making can help unlock new offers for the right customer at the right time.
Once the unmet customer needs and changing market demands have been identified through data collection, your organization needs the flexibility to execute change. And because customer demands are constantly changing, the ability to move quickly is critical to create new offerings, and formulate new strategies. Short feedback loops and a system for evaluation and improvement are crucial.
Taking a truly CLV-first approach means crafting offerings oriented towards outcomes.
Modern businesses are constantly asking themselves, What are the outcomes our customers expect from us? And, they’re continually evaluating how well their products and services are delivering against those expected outcomes. Conversely, they’re also looking at their existing products and services to identify value delivered that may not be monetized and asking, Why?
CLV orientation is truly a two-way street. Businesses can make a dramatic shift in their relationship with customers — and grow revenue — with business models designed to create and capture value for customers first, and all stakeholders as a result.
“If you can come up with your customer needs that have never been met yet and occupy that white space in the market, then you’ll innovate.”
–Andy Main, former Global CEO Deloitte Digital and Former Global CEO Ogilvy
The importance of this principle scales with the size and complexity of your business. Nothing else matters if the right people aren’t empowered to make their own decisions. Real transformation requires empowering the right people to have the influence or direct decision-making authority that enables your organization to move fast, adjust investment priorities, and identify the appropriate trade-offs.
Who owns and contributes to the Modern Business Works?
The organizational structure of a Modern Business is optimized when it’s made up of high-performing, collaborative, and integrated teams with shared accountability. The goal is to break down unnecessary silos by expanding responsibilities and broadening focus. For example, a traditional CFO should begin to think like a COO and a CTO needs to be thinking about the product.
Unlike an organizational chart, an operating model is a blueprint for success — the basic organizational architecture that makes it possible to execute strategy at the enterprise, business unit, and functional levels. The right operating model will enable hierarchy and networks within an organization to co-exist to help break down silos, create teams across different functions, and deliver the value that shareholders expect from large companies.
Full integration is not possible or recommended for all organizations. Leaders must identify the blueprint that works best within their industry and then find the balance between the tower and the square, in order to obtain the optimal level of integration.
*Business examples based on Zuora best estimate. Subject to change.
Any one of the four operating model blueprints can be the “right approach” for an organization. It’s also possible that operating model needs will change as the company changes. For example, an organization that acquires a company with a Modern Business approach might run that as a functionally separate business unit to start. As the company aims to modernize other business units, it may transition to a center-of-excellence model, incorporating practices and tools across the organization.
While movement from left to right is plausible, the opposite direction is equally feasible. For example, a company might launch its Modern Business initiative as an embedded cross-business unit team. However, if the company’s traditional culture hinders the progress of the embedded team, they might relaunch as a functionally separate business unit.
“Groups are often trapped in a linear thought process, but if you can disassemble a problem and put it back together in a new way that resonates with people, they forget the old linear thoughts and get on board.”
—Rowan Prior, Senior Director Revenue Operations, Formerly: Vimeo, Deloitte, LivePerson
At Zuora, we’ve worked with thousands of businesses and studied millions of data points across the world’s leading companies. We’ve seen patterns of success, pitfalls to avoid, and lessons that other companies can learn from. We’ve compiled all of these learnings into a guide that outlines the stages your company will go through and the areas you need to focus on to reach the holy grail of business success: long-term customer loyalty and sustainable, predictable revenue growth. This is the Journey to Usership — a framework that provides the data, expertise, and tools that will guide you along the path to becoming a successful Modern Business.
As companies move along the journey, we’ve learned that there are several stages that must be considered:
Learn more about these stages: The Journey to Usership Whitepaper
Modern Business Works, along with the Journey to Usership, reflects the experiences of others who’ve gone before you, elucidating what to do — and what not to do — on the path to successful business transformation. No matter which stage you’re in, what industry you’re in, or where you’re located, the strategies and tactics we’ve covered can help guide you along the path to becoming a successful Modern Business.
Join us as we continue evolving how the world does business — in ways that are better for people, better for companies and ultimately better for the planet
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