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Australia: Taking Bigger Steps In many ways, Australia is the envy of the world. But the country could do much more to prepare for the imminent wave of technology disruptions. Are Australia’s best days behind it? Or do they still lie ahead? Australia: Taking Bigger Steps 1 The Strategic Transformation Imperative After 25 years of uninterrupted growth, Australia and its companies are in a position of strength. Over the next decade, however, corporate leaders face a pivotal choice: adopt a defensive, risk-averse position and protect the country’s good fortune, or go on the offensive, by doubling down on innovation, aggressively entering international markets, and insisting on world-class standards in everything they do. Today, Australia ranks in the second quartile in productivity, innovation, and globalisation among the world’s 40 largest economies. The country is in the early stages of a downturn in the commodities super-cycle, with the full force of a decelerating Chinese economy and a wave of new disruptive technologies about to hit its shores. We believe that, without a compelling strategy to improve its long-term competitiveness, Australia is at risk of decline. Recently, we discussed our analysis with more than 20 CEOs and board chairs from the major Australian economic sectors who collectively control or influence close to 10 percent of the nation's economy. While reactions vary—we explore these in more detail on page 16—everyone agrees that the next decade will reset the nation’s trajectory with significant implications for generations of future Australians. Have the best days slipped by, or can Australia act now to ensure that the best are still ahead? Positioning the economy for the future begins at the firm level. For Australian companies to reach their full potential, corporate boards, CEOs, and executive teams must adopt more expansive, dynamic, and potentially higher-risk five- to 10-year strategies with more aggressive execution programs. Now is the time to pursue sustained strategic transformation, taking bigger steps in three areas: Productivity. Australia risks losing its cost competitiveness. Companies must therefore radically reset their cost structures by redesigning their work practices, operating models, and collaboration arrangements, taking advantage of the full range of digital possibilities. Innovation. Rather than offering lip service to innovation, corporate leaders must be more methodical in building innovation into their end-to-end management systems, including outlining how innovation is defined, measured, and rewarded as well as how it is developed and unleashed. Globalisation. Australia’s relatively small market and modest growth rate will not be enough to sustain success. For long-term survival, companies must tap into the scale and growth of other select markets. Beyond this, strategies must be forged within the context of profound uncertainty about the future path of globalisation. Have the best days slipped by, or can Australia act now to ensure that the best are still ahead? In this paper, we begin with a wide lens to look at global trends and future scenarios for the global operating environment. Then, we narrow the focus to Australia’s strengths, vulnerabilities, Australia: Taking Bigger Steps 1 and risks of disruption. We also discuss 12 disruptive technologies and how they will impact the economy, offering deep dives into three vital sectors. Finally, we lay out the over-arching choices leaders face—in the board room and the executive suite—and show where bigger steps must be taken to promote future competitiveness and business success. Zooming Out: Global Scenarios The global geopolitical and macroeconomic environment will have profound implications for Australian companies. As Australia has matured, its role in world affairs has become more interconnected, with a rise in the flow of ideas, people, capital, goods, and services. Globalisation is mostly beneficial for Australia and Australians. Will it continue as an interminable force? Or like the tide, has it begun to recede after reaching its high water mark? Since the fall of the Berlin Wall, we have seen three distinct phases of globalisation: Globalisation 1.0 (1989 to 2000) occurred when the former Soviet bloc countries and China liberalised their economies and integrated into the Western-led global economic system. Global trade grew by 85 percent, and the flow of foreign direct investment (FDI) rose by an astonishing 580 percent. Globalisation 2.0 (2001 to 2008) began with the back-to-back shocks of the US dotcom crash of 2000 and the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. Soon the rapid economic development of Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa became the new fuel driving the engine of global growth and integration. International trade in goods hit an all-time high of 52 percent of GDP in 2007, and FDI inflows peaked at more than US$2 trillion.1 A global pause ensued after the 2008 financial crisis. Although the global economy managed to return to modest growth in 2010, thanks in large part to strength in emerging markets (particularly China), profound cracks were seen in many of these same economies by 2015. Now, seven years since the financial crisis, global trade in goods and the flow of international investment remain well below the peaks experienced before the crisis. The seemingly constant march of globalisation has been slowed or even halted. Since the financial crisis, the world economy has been in intermission. Economist Herbert Stein famously observed, “If something cannot go on forever, it must stop.” The current global economic pause cannot continue, so eventually it too will stop. What will come next? And what are the implications for Australia? Scanning the future: four scenarios for the global economic order A variety of emerging forces could push the economic order in wildly divergent directions (see figure 1 on page 3).2 Two unknowns will shape the global economic environment over the next decade and beyond: the degree to which geopolitics continues to fragment the international system and the overall level of global economic growth. The first scenario, Globalisation 3.0, is a renewed chapter of cross-border integration in which systemic deficiencies are corrected and a new era of continuously rising cross-border movement begins. The second future, Polarisation, marks a return to historical normalcy in which rising geopolitical tensions and economic rivalries divide the global economy into competing blocs All monetary amounts in this paper are AUD unless indicated US$. 1 See "From Globalization to Islandization," Global Business Policy Council Perspective, January 2016 2 Australia: Taking Bigger Steps 2 High Figure 1 Four economic scenarios could play out on the world stage Commonisation Addressing climate change Rise of knowledge economy Globalisation 3.0 Automation and 3D printing Increased prosperity Geopolitical cohesion Growth in sharing economy Regional trade agreements Dramatic improvements in ICT Low commodity prices Polarisation Islandisation Rising inequality Persistent macroeconomic uncertainty Heightened nationalism and protectionism Low Return of geopolitics Low Economic growth High Note: ICT is information and communication technologies. Source: "From Globalization to Islandization," Global Business Policy Council Perspective, January 2016 of countries. Islandisation is the third potential future, in which nationalism gains ground in key economies around the world, leading to dramatic protectionist measures and drastically reduced global economic flow. The fourth possible future represents a greater break from the past than ever before. We refer to it as Commonisation because it entails the rise of a new global common featuring additive manufacturing and the sharing economy and a corresponding fall of consumer capitalism that has defined the recent past. Each of these possible futures is plausible based on a variety of leading indicators present in today’s global operating environment. In Globalisation 3.0, restored geopolitical stability is paired with renewed high levels of economic growth—a welcome return to pre-2008 dynamics. Multilateral and regional trade agreements, low commodity prices, and a growing global middle class present opportunities for growth. Furthermore, dramatic improvements in communications technologies allow for the emergence of new business models and create a competitive global environment that is more challenging and diverse than it was in the 1990s and 2000s. In Polarisation, the world is defined by low geopolitical cohesion combined with high levels of economic growth. Increasing competitive friction and animosity between the United States and China hinders business strategies—both in globally integrated supply chains and in growth from sales in diversified markets around the world. Trade agreements are predominantly regional, while heightened nationalism and protectionism fuel continued macroeconomic uncertainty. Australia: Taking Bigger Steps 3 Islandisation is a more extreme scenario: the global economy contracts, and countries fracture geopolitically. Identity politics drives regional, country, and sub-state fragmentation and atomisation, resulting in protectionist measures that reduce the flow of global trade and capital. Consumer preferences turn against goods manufactured abroad, giving an advantage to smaller firms with local identities. Economies with vast resources, particularly in energy and agricultural production, fare much better than others as each country relies more on its own resources for the necessities. Macroeconomic uncertainty persists as commercial and geopolitical distrust of outsiders fuels an atmosphere marked by fragility and fear. The final scenario is Commonisation, a post-capitalist world of local, low-cost production and more modest patterns of consumption. Although economic growth is low, advanced technologies and new youth attitudes and behaviours cause high levels of geopolitical cohesion. As the sharing and knowledge economies proliferate, more people are neither traditional consumers nor traditional employees, which disrupts business strategies. Digitisation reduces overall costs by removing the middlemen, but these vanishing businesses and service firms represent growth slowdowns. The implications for each scenario vary (see figure 2). Which scenario is most likely to unfold? Unfortunately, since 2014, evidence has been mounting that Islandisation is most likely. Consider these trends and indicators: • Global trade is falling, and protectionism is rising. Global trade in goods peaked in 2008 at 52 percent of global GDP, reaching only 49 percent in 2014 after falling each year since 2011. According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), of the 1,244 trade-restrictive measures implemented by G20 economies since the financial crisis, only 282 have been eliminated. • Many traditional fiscal and monetary policy instruments are no longer as relevant. Negative interest rates and quantitative easing demonstrate how difficult a task central banks have to respond to the current disruptive environment. Figure 2 The outcomes for each scenario are significantly different in the next global economic order Globalisation 3.0 Polarisation Islandisation Commonisation Economic growth High Moderate Low Low Unemployment Low Moderate Moderate Low Inequality Moderate Moderate High Low Trade flow High Moderate Low Moderate Capital flow High Moderate Low Low International migration High Moderate Low Low Regulatory convergence High Moderate Low Low Source: “From Globalization to Islandization,” Global Business Policy Council Perspective, January 2016 Australia: Taking Bigger Steps 4 • Fringe and populist political movements are ascendant. Cosmopolitanism has given way to nationalist, fundamentalist, xenophobic, and sectarian identity politics, including in leading democracies with politicians such as Donald Trump and Marine Le Pen. • Geopolitics have returned. From Russia’s invasion of Crimea to China’s militarisation of disputed islands in the South China Sea, global tensions and rivalries—some familiar, others new—have appeared. They make all the more complicated the new challenges of dealing with pan-regional terrorist groups such as Al Qaida and ISIS. • The international system is under serious strain. Multiple forces are tearing at the fabric of international institutions, with the Syrian conflict, the European migrant crisis, an Ebola outbreak, and the potential fraying of the European Union as the latest examples of existing architectures and approaches that are unable to deal with the challenges of the moment. The dangers of Islandisation The drivers and characteristics of Islandisation—turning inward, self-optimising, and tolerating structurally low growth—are very real risks to Australia and evident in today’s political and economic issues. The degree to which these risks materialise will largely depend on the courage, ingenuity, and commitment of Australia’s political and corporate leaders to address them. Politically, labour reform continues to be the third rail of Australian politics. Following the senate's rejection of a bill aimed at establishing greater oversight of the construction industry, and unions in particular, the Australian government will hold a double-dissolution election for the first time in almost 30 years. This spirit of protectionism remains pervasive in Australia, resulting in more rigid labour laws and ultimately higher labour costs. Meanwhile, despite Australia's relative safety (ranked fifth-safest large country in the world by the US Federal Bureau of Investigation), the spectre of ISIS and Islamic fundamentalists continues to amplify a sense of vulnerability. Australian political leaders will need to adroitly balance legitimate defence issues on the one hand with sustaining personal freedoms on the other. Economically, Australia has the opportunity to further increase its trade with Asia through the pending ratification of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a regional free agreement that will cover 40 percent of the global economy and affect more than $100 billion in Australia exports. Unlike many European economies, Australia maintains relatively low unemployment rates and continues to sustain steady increases in its median wage. However, with China's decelerating economy, the falling price of commodities, and an end to the capital boom, Australia's industrial sector is now beginning to reveal how deep the impacts could be. This is evident in the recent display of Arrium and Queensland Nickel going into administration. More bankruptcies will follow. From a wealth perspective, Australia's current median home price is $660,000, which is the third-highest in the world.3 New home buyers are increasingly being priced out of the housing market, which not surprisingly is fueling a heightened sense of cynicism among Millennials and Gen-Xers about the “great baby boomer swindle.” All of these political and economic issues are creating a toxic environment that is ripe for the rise of reactionary fringe movements such as those seen in several European countries and in the United States. Australia must resist the temptation to settle for similar base forms of response. For continued prosperity and to achieve its full potential, Australia must build on—but not rely on—its wealth of natural resources while doubling down on new growth industries and working toward continued reforms. Median house prices are as of June 2015. As of September 2014, the International Monetary Fund ranked Australia the third most expensive place to buy a house, and the Bank of International Settlements ranked Australia second most expensive. 3 Australia: Taking Bigger Steps 5 Zooming In: Australia’s Diagnosis Billionaire Warren Buffett once quipped that he won the “ovarian lottery” by being born in the United States in 1930. Under the current circumstances, it begs the question: What country now offers the best future to its newly born citizens? The Economist Intelligence Unit tried to answer this question by reviewing a variety of forwardlooking indicators covering not only material well-being but also quality of life, political freedoms, quality of community life, and gender equality, among others. Australia ranked second after Switzerland, making the country in many ways the envy of the world (see figure 3). Figure 3 Australia is the second best place in the world to be born 8.5 1st Quartile 8.0 2nd Quartile 3rd Quartile 4th Quartile 7.5 7.0 6.5 6.0 5.5 Russia Pakistan India Indonesia Egypt Philippines Turkey South Africa China Thailand Colombia Mexico Argentina Brazil Saudi Arabia Malaysia Spain Poland United Kingdom Japan France Italy Chile Israel South Korea United States United Arab Emirates Belgium Germany Ireland Austria Finland Canada Netherlands Denmark Singapore Norway Sweden Australia Switzerland 5.0 Sources: The Economist, The lottery of life; A.T. Kearney analysis Can Australia maintain this position? Will future generations enjoy the same potential? Are Australians who are in decision-making positions today making the same degree of sacrifices for their grandchildren as their grandparents made for them to ensure future prosperity? A formula for sustained prosperity While the where-to-be-born index provides a useful snapshot of who is winning today’s ovarian lottery, Australia must also think about how to win tomorrow. Digging deeper and using more of a forward-looking economic growth and wealth creation lens, three dimensions stand out as important drivers of sustained prosperity: productivity, innovation, and globalisation. These three dimensions are intrinsically linked and essential to resisting the centripetal force of the Islandisation vortex. Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman wrote, “A country’s ability to improve its standard of living over time depends almost entirely on its ability to raise its output per worker.” Improved productivity enables Australian companies to offer more competitive Australia: Taking Bigger Steps 6 prices, both at home and abroad, and to accumulate cash to invest in innovation. Innovation is essential for creating new products and services (or new approaches to productivity) that are especially valuable in the face of oncoming disruptive technologies. And globalisation gives Australian industry access to larger, faster growing markets, while keeping companies at home fit and competitive. Australia’s relative positioning on these forward-looking dimensions of sustained prosperity does not appear as strong. When compared to the world’s 40 largest economies against productivity, innovation, and globalisation, the country is in the second quartile in each dimension (see figure 4). Figure 4 Australia must raise its game to achieve its full potential1 Productivity2 Q1 1 Norway 1 Switzerland 1 Ireland 2 Netherlands 2 Netherlands 3 United States 3 Sweden 3 Belgium 4 Netherlands 4 United Kingdom 4 Austria 5 Ireland 5 Ireland 5 Singapore 6 France 6 Germany 6 Sweden 7 Germany 7 United States 7 Denmark 8 Denmark 8 Finland 8 Switzerland 9 Switzerland 9 Finland 10 Canada 11 Singapore 11 Israel 11 Spain 12 Austria 12 Norway 13 Finland Q4 9 South Korea 10 Denmark 12 Austria 14 Australia Q3 Globalisation4 2 Belgium 10 Sweden Q2 Innovation3 13 Singapore 13 United Kingdom 14 China 14 France 15 Canada 15 Canada 15 Australia 16 Spain 16 France 17 Australia 16 Italy 17 Italy 18 United Kingdom 18 Norway 18 Malaysia 17 Poland 19 Japan 19 Japan 19 Germany 20 Israel 20 Belgium 20 United Arab Emirates 21 South Korea 21 Spain 21 United States 22 Turkey 22 Italy 22 Israel 23 Poland 23 Malaysia 23 Chile 24 Chile 24 Saudi Arabia 24 Thailand 25 Malaysia 25 Turkey 25 Turkey 26 Russia 26 Chile 26 Russia 27 Argentina 27 Russia 27 Japan 28 Mexico 28 Thailand 28 Saudi Arabia 29 South Africa 29 Mexico 29 South Africa 30 Brazil 30 Poland 30 South Korea 31 Colombia 31 South Africa 31 Mexico 32 Thailand 32 Argentina 32 China 33 Indonesia 33 India 33 Brazil 34 Philippines 34 Brazil 34 Colombia 35 China 35 Colombia 35 Argentina 36 Pakistan 36 Philippines 36 Indonesia 37 India N/A Egypt 37 Indonesia 37 Philippines 38 Egypt 38 Egypt N/A Saudi Arabia 39 United Arab Emirates 39 Pakistan N/A United Arab Emirates 40 Pakistan 40 India Top 40 countries by 2015 GDP selected for comparison Ranking based on labour productivity per hour worked in 2014 US$ (with updated 2011 PPPs) for year 2011 and year 2015; source: The Conference Board 3 Innovation change from 2009 to 2012; source: GII Index (2015) 4 Globalisation change from 2009 to 2012; source: KOF Index (2015) Source: A.T. Kearney analysis 1 2 Australia: Taking Bigger Steps 7 In a world that is nearly standing still, such second-quartile performance and incremental improvement might be enough. But in the face of unprecedented disruptive technologies and other shocks from elsewhere in the world, there can be little doubt that a new and intensified period of creative destruction with more firms going bankrupt—and getting created—lies ahead. Combined with the volatility in the global operating environment, 20th-century economist Joseph Schumpeter’s gale of creative destruction could become Schumpeter’s hurricane. The Coming Disruptive Technologies The wave of disruptive technologies approaching the shores of Australia (and the rest of the world) is unprecedented in its scale, scope, and speed. Over the next 10 years, 12 disruptive technologies will cross the chasm, gaining adoption not just from technology enthusiasts but also from the majority of early adopters, with profound implications for the structure of the Australian economy (see figure 5). Figure 5 12 disruptive technologies are hurtling towards Australia; four are already here Near term (now)1 Medium term (<5 years) Longer term (>5 years) Mobile technology and applications Cloud technology and applications Virtual reality 3D printing Autonomous vehicles Advanced robotics Connected mobile devices and supported applications Data, applications, and services stored, secured, managed, and accessible remotely Simulation of physical presence in a real or imagined world Successive layers of material formed under computer control to create an object Driverless or self-directed machines Machines with enhanced senses, dexterity, and intelligence Internet of Things Renewable energy Blockchain Energy storage Genomics Artificial intelligence Objects transferring data to one another Systems that generate electricity from non-depleting natural resources Mechanism of storing ledgers across a network of connected computers Devices that capture energy produced at one time for use at another Reading and writing the genome of organisms, including humans Computer system capable of generating its own insights Technologies are grouped by the estimated time it takes for the technologies to “cross the chasm” between the early adopters (technology enthusiasts) and the early majority (pragmatists). The idea of such a chasm is introduced by Geoffrey A. Moore in his book Crossing the Chasm, HarperCollins, 1991 Source: A.T. Kearney analysis 1 These 12 technologies have a double edge: they could negatively impact or even eviscerate elements of Australia’s economy, or they could offer unprecedented opportunities to achieve accelerated growth on a global scale. This is not necessarily an either-or proposition. These technologies could positively impact one industry and adversely impact another. For example, electric car batteries will positively impact the electricity and solar power industries but will negatively affect the oil and gas industry. Australia: Taking Bigger Steps 8 One need not look far to see how these technologies are rapidly combining to change how we operate as individuals, businesses, and as a society. Today, Australians can go to the beach, park the car, and pay for parking by inserting a credit card into a solar-powered parking meter that remotely connects to a network and debits the transaction from a financial platform. By 2025, Australians will be able to order driverless, battery-powered vehicles for a ride to the beach and pay for the trip using a cryptocurrency. These disruptive technologies will not come all at once but in waves. The first wave is already here. Mobile technology and applications are enabling consumers to digest digital information and entertainment anytime, anywhere, while enabling industry verticals to monitor performance of machines in the field (for example, logistics supply chains) or improve workforce safety and productivity (such as police officers on the beat). The Internet of Things (IoT) is connecting our homes, our cities, our pets, and even ourselves with wearables such as Fitbits and Apple Watches. Cloud technology and applications are enabling businesses to bypass expensive infrastructure investments and pay for computing power and storage on a usage basis and allowing consumers to store personal information in cloud platforms that do not become obsolete every time they upgrade their hardware. Though adoption is slower than predicted and heavily subsidised, renewable energy continues its march forward, generating 14 percent of Australia’s electricity in 2015 and forecast to generate 24 percent by 2020. By 2025, Australians will be able to order driverless, battery-powered vehicles for a ride to the beach and pay for the trip using a cryptocurrency. The second wave is still emerging, but adoption is accelerating. Though yet to gain wide-spread application, virtual reality offers a new genre of entertainment, but perhaps its most significant impact will be in online learning and education and in transforming business communication. The initial foray of virtual reality into education is centred on the hard sciences, such as biology, but the opportunities are immense. Imagine students learning about the wonders of the world by being virtually transported to the Pyramids of Giza. A large number of manufacturing companies are exploring the use of 3-D printing for prototyping; lower costs, better speed, and greater ease of use will drive the large-scale adoption of industrial 3-D printing capabilities. For example, Anatomics, a Melbourne-based medical device company, used 3-D printing to create a metal vertebra that has been implanted into a patient’s spine, and L’Oréal has announced plans to 3-D print skin. Cryptocurrencies elicit sceptical reactions from many financial industry experts, but companies such as Expedia, USAA, and 1-800-Flowers are already allowing customers to make purchases using Bitcoin. Underlying Bitcoin is a technology with a much broader application. Blockchain, a distributed database that maintains a ledger of transactions, will impact not only finance services, but also the luxury goods, media, and health industries, among others. More Australians are adopting new forms of energy storage; there are already almost 4,000 fully battery-powered vehicles on the road. Industrial use of energy storage such as grid-scale backup power in a local distribution network are still further out. Australia: Taking Bigger Steps 9 Technologies in the third wave are more than five years away but merit the attention of today’s corporate boards, executives, and strategy teams. Autonomous vehicles are one example, with Google leading the way, as its autonomous fleet powered by Google Chauffeur has clocked more than 2.3 million kilometres in California. In January, Google’s DeepMind artificial intelligence (AI) program used deep neural networks to beat the world champion at Go, the ancient Korean game that, unlike chess, relies on intuition because it has an incalculable number of permutations. DeepMind’s victory was achieved 10 years faster than most predicted. Advanced robotics combine many of the above technologies—AI, mobile, cloud, IoT, and energy storage—into a wide variety of emerging prototypes, including robots that can clean the house, play in a band, help autistic children, provide therapy to the elderly, and remediate a chemical weapons site. Finally, genomics is experiencing a cost curve that rivals Moore’s law, which says computer power doubles every two years at the same cost. The Human Genome Project took 13 years and US$2.7 billion to complete; today, a human genome can be sequenced for US$1,000 in a few hours. Synthetically rewriting human or animal DNA is still in the early stages of development, but it introduces profound metaphysical questions: are we creator, healer, designer, or destroyer? For example, the new CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing technique promises to usher in a new era in biotechnology, from curing diseases to designing babies. Collectively, these 12 disruptive technologies create an astounding set of implications for Australia, both for individual businesses as well as for the country’s overall economy. The Industrial Impact No Australian industry is immune from these 12 disruptive technologies (see sidebar: The Silicon Valley Earthquake). By segmenting Australia’s $1.5 trillion economy and 11.9 million-person workforce into its respective industries and mapping these industries against the 12 technologies, one thing is clear. It is not a question of if each industry will be disrupted, but rather when it will be disrupted, how many technologies will affect it, and to what degree each technology will have a positive or a negative effect (see figure 6 on page 11). The following is an exploration of how three Australian industries could be affected. Retail has been going through the shift from bricks to clicks and now to apps for almost a decade. However, Australian retailers have been slow to embrace their customers’ e-commerce preferences: the country’s Internet retailing is 6.7 percent of the total versus 10.1 percent in the United States and 14.5 percent in the United Kingdom. The Silicon Valley Earthquake At A.T. Kearney’s annual global partner gathering in San Francisco in June, we met with more than 25 disruptive organisations, including Google, Facebook, Adobe, and Singularity University, to take a close look at Silicon Valley, a source of profound change—like viewing an offshore earthquake before it creates a tsunami. Along with other global innovation hubs such as Tokyo, Boston, and Tel Aviv, the area is incubating disruptive technologies that promise to transform business and society in far-reaching ways. Visiting the epicentre of those changes was an emotional experience: some people left the meeting feeling daunted, others inspired. But no one was unmoved. We collectively realised that no industry is immune from these disruptive technologies, including management consulting. Australia: Taking Bigger Steps 10 Figure 6 No Australian industry is immune to technology disruption Disruptors Genomics Advanced robotics Artificial intelligence Autonomous vehicles Longer term Energy storage 3D printing Blockchain Virtual reality Medium term Renewable energy Cloud technology Internet of Things Mobile tech Disruption impact Near term Select disruptive players GDP ($Bn)2 Number of employees (k)3 Retail 72 1,277 Kogan.com, Amazon.com Health 105 1,522 Scanadu Manufacturing 100 848 Stratasys Telco and tech 47 223 WhatsApp, Snapchat, Google Utilities 44 140 Tesla, Nest Finance 141 450 Bitcoin, Nest, Simple Logistics 74 609 PiggyBee, FedEx Education 76 937 Khan Academy Mining 139 226 Komatsu Professional services 96 1,020 Xero Agriculture 36 309 The Climate Corporation Tourism 39 823 Airbnb Others1 544 3,514 Total 1,512 11,900 Industry High Med Impact: High Low Others include construction, wholesale trade, transportation, real estate, and government ABS Cat. No. 5206.0, table 37, Jun 2015 ABS Cat. No. 6291.0, table 04 (seasonably adjusted), Nov 2015 Source: A.T. Kearney analysis 1 2 3 Australia: Taking Bigger Steps 11 Technologies will disrupt the entire end-to-end retail value chain. Mobile and social media are increasingly influencing consumer buying behaviours through platforms such as Groupon, Pinterest, and Facebook. Retailers can continually yield new marketing insights on shoppers by harnessing the vast information trove of customer data and location-based services stored in the cloud. IoT will enable more precise, faster, and cheaper movement of goods from production to consumption. For example, Amazon’s Dash Button and Echo bypass computers and put ordering directly into the hands of the customer. In addition, 3-D printing will alter the fundamental process of production, individualising it with shorter and faster fulfilment. Nestlé and Hershey are already experimenting with 3-D printing chocolate. Lastly, renewable-fuelled food production systems such as Sundrop Farms can generate fresh year-round produce using solar energy and desalinated water at greenhouses located in desert areas. Financial services has already embraced many new digital technologies to enhance the customer experience. Today, a customer can open an account, transfer money overseas, and manage investments in real time on a mobile phone. However, disruptions to financial services may have only just begun. The category killer has yet to emerge, but payments, loans, and even insurance are on the verge of being offered over the top (OTT) of mainstream financial institutions, which are also regulated. Insured assets and their movements can be monitored remotely to increase an actuary’s ability to measure the risks of accident or theft or to improve asset recovery rates. Cloud technology reduces the IT infrastructure costs of the big and small players alike and increases the chances of new entrants, including the aforementioned OTT players. Robo-advisers are helping investors increase their returns and reduce their fees, while robotic process automation is reducing back-office costs. Lastly, blockchain-secure cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin could significantly reduce highly profitable fees incurred from a variety of transactions, including foreign exchange, merchant services, and card networks. Mining and other traditional heavy industries will also be affected. The contribution of Australia’s mining investment grew from 2 percent of GDP in 2002 to 8 percent in 2012, largely driven by significant capital expansion to cater to demand from China. However, China’s economy continues to decelerate, weakening total global demand for natural resources and driving prices down as producers chase tonnes to prop up bottom-line results. Consequently, the focus has shifted toward productivity necessary to maintain returns. New techniques, processes, and tools will be needed to create a sustainable commercial model for this new normal. Mobile machine-to-machine technology enables mining vehicle assets to be constantly connected and remotely monitored and tracked from a central control centre, measuring for optimal capital efficiency and anticipating vehicle maintenance requirements to minimise downtime. Drones can survey new areas and existing operations from the air, relaying information to cloud-based, solar-powered storage facilities where sophisticated data analytics techniques can be applied in real time to uncover new operational performance insights. More vehicles are becoming autonomous as Komatsu and Caterpillar demonstrate their greater productivity, and robots can be used to improve productivity in the field, especially in the dullest, dirtiest, and most dangerous jobs. The three industries highlighted above are symptomatic of the potential disruption to all of Australia’s key sectors. While the extent of risk (or opportunity) may vary by specific disruption and industry, no industry is immune, highlighting an urgent call to action. Australia: Taking Bigger Steps 12 Figure 7 Australian companies must take bigger steps in three key areas Discrete, business unit-led programs Productivity Australia-focused innovation Innovation Smaller, low-risk bets, proximal markets Growth and globalisation Whole-of-company mega transformation Innovation for the world Bigger, long-term investments Source: A.T. Kearney analysis Will Australia Rise to the Challenge? The next 10 years will transform Australia’s corporate landscape, for better or for worse. We anticipate an increasingly winner-takes-all competitive dynamic where the best offensive approach offers the best defence. In the boardroom, patience and prudence are indeed virtues, but in the face of a crisis, they can induce paralysis or even cause death. Over the next decade, the businesses that play it safe and fail to anticipate—and embrace—these emerging technologies are likely to fail (see sidebar: Australia’s Choice: Defensive Crouch or Aggressive Offense on page 14). Boardrooms must outspokenly advocate to their shareholders that an offensive approach with a higher risk appetite or a much longer time investment horizon will be required for success. And in a context supportive of pursuing bigger returns, albeit with greater risks, companies must launch sustained strategic transformations and take bigger steps in three areas: productivity, innovation, and globalisation (see figure 7). Productivity is the platform of a sustainable strategic transformation—productivity gained from the core business can be invested in innovation or translated into lower prices to make products more competitive at home or overseas. Based on our work with thousands of organisations worldwide over the past 90 years to improve productivity performance, we offer several lessons learned: • Unproductive companies die sooner or later. Productivity is one of the vital signs of a company. If it dips too low, the company will not survive. Growth and efficiency must go hand in hand. • Productivity must be CEO owned and involve the entire company. A top-down, ongoing target with full CXO backing and written into performance metrics offers the greatest chance of success. Unless there is a strong economic rationale to remove it, all structural measures should be on the table, including divestiture, automation, product portfolio, Australia: Taking Bigger Steps 13 Australia’s Choice: Defensive Crouch or Aggressive Offense David Campese may have been Australia’s most dazzling rugby player. Nominated as Man of the Tournament for the 1991 World Cup champions the Wallabies, he symbolised a plucky, irreverent, aggressive, goose-stepping style of play for which the Wallabies have become renowned. He scored six tries during the tournament, but perhaps the most scintillating moment came in the semi-finals against the All Blacks when Campese gathered up a chip-kick from Michael Lynagh, side-stepped oncoming full-back Kieran Crowley, then, while being tackled by Timu, blind-threw the ball over his right shoulder to Tim Horan, who scored a try. Horan commented years later that it was the best 40 minutes of rugby the Wallabies had played in about five years. When the Wallabies needed to rise to the occasion, they did— and they did so on their own terms. Contrast that with the Wallabies’ style of play during the 2003 World Cup (see figure). The 2003 team was no doubt one of the great Wallabies teams—with Sterling Mortlock’s strength up the middle, the pace of Tuqiri, Sailor, and Rogers out wide, and the ferocity of George Smith and Phil Waugh in the back row. However, they failed to secure a World Cup victory, even on home soil. In the final match versus England, England’s coach Sir Clive Woodward, a technician who had studied American football training techniques, dictated the game plan, not Australia’s coach Eddie Jones. Woodward played England’s game—scrum-oriented, structured, disciplined, awaiting a mistake to extract a penalty. In the end, the Wallabies lost. So what is the lesson from this aside into Australia’s rugby legacy? To win, Australians must focus on their own strengths and use an offense-first strategy. What does a full-throated Australian-style offensive look like? Figure Australia faces two legitimate choices: protect its position, or launch an aggressive offense Global offensive Defensive crouch 1991 World Cup David Campese, Man of the Tournament; INPHO 2003 World Cup Final The Wallabies pack down against England; Newspix • Focus and invest in R&D and innovation • Take risks and embrace disruptions • Double down on traditional core business • Pursue new international opportunities • Structurally insulate from imminent disruptions • Limit or exit international investments Higher risk, higher growth potential Lower risk, lower growth potential Source: A.T. Kearney analysis Australia: Taking Bigger Steps 14 pricing, sales force effectiveness, consolidation, reengineering, incentives, outsourcing, offshoring, and sourcing. • Productivity is a strategic capability, not a program. Many organisations attempt to address productivity by launching a 12-to-24 month tactical program to reduce costs. True productivity is a strategic capability and a competitive advantage, but it takes many years to build and, when attained, is difficult for the competition to beat. • Productivity focuses on both the inputs and the outputs. Most productivity efforts focus on cost inputs, not revenue outputs, but both should be looked at in equal measure. For example, productivity is hugely sensitive to sales force productivity and pricing. Conversely, cutting into capabilities that detract from long-term top-line growth is penny wise but pound foolish. In the face of disruptive technologies hurtling towards Australian businesses, innovation is more essential than ever. A.T. Kearney has been systematically tracking global innovation performance for more than a decade with its Best Innovator competition, which encompasses more than 2,000 large companies in more than 20 markets. The Best Innovators have outperformed the market by a factor of five since we began tracking them in 2003.4 What do Best Innovators do? • Think 10X. The scale, scope, and pace of the wave of disruption is fundamentally different from the past, requiring a new mind-set and new behaviours from board members and other leaders. Incremental adjustments will be inadequate; much bigger bets are needed. • Ready, fire, aim. “Innovation is 5 percent analysis and 95 percent fast and focused implementation,” said Rolf Hollander, chairman of Best Innovator winner CEWE, the European online print services company that anticipated and capitalised on the rise of digital photography. Meanwhile, Kodak went bankrupt after 124 years of success. • Apply the 70-20-10 rule. Google invests 70 percent of its projects in the core, 20 percent adjacent to the core, and 10 percent unrelated to the core. Best Innovators seek to create a culture of yes and “what-if” thinking. • Systematically manage innovation from the market to the market. Best Innovators clearly define their innovation strategy and search fields; collaborate widely and source ideas from suppliers, customers, and employees; beat their competitors to market with better products; and exploit the products in the marketplace longer to achieve maximum profit. Globalisation will also be essential to success. Australia has a $1.5 trillion economy with 24 million people and a 2 to 3 percent average annual economic growth rate. Its economy accounts for only 2 percent of the world’s GDP. This relatively small market structure eventually becomes a constraint to growth, and leaders must look abroad to find larger, faster-growing markets. Globalisation is not new to Australian companies, but it is the area where they have had mixed success. This is especially the case in Asia, where the most proximate—and in our view, most significant—opportunities lie. Engaging Asia requires a more nuanced approach than Australian companies have pursued in the past. Forward-thinking business will need to recognise a few truths: • There is no such thing as Asia. Asia consists of 29 countries and autonomous regions with 3.9 billion people. Twenty one Asian countries have populations larger than Australia. Each market has a different competitive set and requires an individualised strategy. • Both the investment timeline and the appetite for risk need to be reframed. Asian investment offers both strategic and financial returns; the former could express itself in higher Kai Engel, Violetka Dirlea, Jochen Graff, Masters of Innovation: Building the Perpetually Innovative Company; LID Publishing, 2014 4 Australia: Taking Bigger Steps 15 multiples, the latter in the income statement. This view can be hard to navigate for companies focused on quarterly earnings. If existing ratios and targets are used to assess Asian investments, there will be a temptation to focus only on Australia. • Drag-and-drop business models do not work. The value proposition, the delivery model, and the decision to build, buy, or partner and other aspects of the business model must all be deconstructed and reconstructed inside each market to arrive at the best strategy and business model. • A sense of humility goes a long way when dealing with Asian leadership. Just like Australian corporate leadership, Asian leaders are proud of what they have achieved, are well-respected in their communities, and have developed sophisticated cultural protocols for engagement. Seek to understand these subtle norms. Market experience in the specific Asian markets at all levels—from the board to the leadership team to the team on the ground—will help, but Australian leadership must also embrace these different cultural dynamics. The Outlooks of CEOs and Boards Must Change We recently met with more than 20 CEOs and chairpersons to discuss their roles in determining Australia’s future. Part of our discussions centered on strategic vision and decision making, specifically, why business continues to produce short-term answers at the expense of long-term solutions. From these conversations, three structural factors stood out. First, the ASX dividend yield (at 5.5 percent) is the highest in the world—as capital markets desire it, and Australian boards and CEOs are committed to delivering it.5 Second, less than 15 percent of ASX 200 board members are from other countries, and less than 5 percent are from Asian countries.6 This lack of international experience can result in a failure to identify an international opportunity or worse, steer management away from pursuing a good one. Finally, board cultures tend to be over-indexed to the three Cs: consensus, caution, and compliance. Chairs point to directors who play it safe to protect their careers, and directors point to chairs who frown on provocative outside challenges. Both admit to concerns about personal liability, with 85 percent of directors Joe Skrzynski, AO, Co-Chairman and Co-Founding Partner, CHAMP Private Equity Leigh Clifford, AO, Chairman, Qantas; Director, Bechtel Group Libby Roy, CEO, Paypal Australia and New Zealand Bloomberg, January 2015 5 6 “The Challenges of Attaining Growth,” Blenheim Partners & Macquarie University Greater School of Management, 2016 Australia: Taking Bigger Steps 16 Andy Holmes, President, BP Australasia; Peter Munro, Partner, A.T. Kearney; Nigel Garrard, Managing Director and CEO, Orora Limited Ziggy Switkowski, AO, Chairman, nbn; Chairman, Suncorp; Chancellor, RMIT University pointing to personal liability as the reason for overly cautious decision making.7 No wonder fewer than half of Australian CEOs believe they are adequately supported by their boards to pursue more than incremental growth, and instead are relegated to a steady low-growth, low-risk path. What will it take to break out of this cycle and free Australian business of the three Cs? A wide range of regulatory and policy issues must be dealt with—from director liabilities and franked dividends to tax policies and labour laws. However, CEOs must be the catalyst to start the process. CEOs and their management teams must produce bolder, more compelling and dynamic strategic narratives that empower boards to offer shareholders and capital markets a long-term vision to actively opt into. Yes, there will be challenges. Announcing a strategy that reduces near-term dividends to fund long-term investments is anathema to many Australian boards and could mean a CEO loses his or her job. But as one CEO put it, “that's what we’re paid for.” Together, we devised three ways in which boards can immediately help their CEOs deliver sustained long-term success: • Stretch the time horizon of expectations; short-term incentives for CEOs and executive teams are too big and planning cycles are too short Peter Harmer, CEO, IAG Paul Laudicina, Partner and Chairman Emeritus, A.T. Kearney; Chairman, Global Business Policy Council AICD, Director Sentiment Index, November 2015 7 Australia: Taking Bigger Steps 17 • Focus on the real audience—on shareholders who want long-term gains rather than highvelocity day traders • Actively engage with government to help instigate the needed reforms to labour, tax, and other industry impediments In the end, we all agreed that for Australian corporations to grow and prosper, boards and CEOs need to take a good long look in the mirror. “If we want change, the change begins with us,” explained one executive. Another quipped: “If not you, then who? If not now, then when?” Carpe Diem, Australia The wealth and prosperity Australia currently enjoys come partly from good fortune and partly from design. With abundant land and natural resources, a stable government, a strong sense of civic duty, and generally sound business practices, Australia is in many ways a role model for other countries. Indeed, the country offers a great future to its children and grandchildren. However, in the next decade and beyond, the global operating environment will experience a fundamental dislocation from the past. Disruptive technology will create fewer but bigger winners and more losers. Success will require increasing Australian businesses’ risk appetite, discovering more profound ideas, pursuing more radical business models, and taking bigger steps. Perhaps the biggest challenge for all of us will be doing things different. The question is, in the face of future adversity, how will Australian leadership respond? Authors Paul Laudicina, partner, chairman emeritus of A.T. Kearney and chairman of the Global Business Policy Council, Washington, D.C. [email protected] Erik Peterson, partner and managing director of the Global Business Policy Council, Washington, D.C. [email protected] Adam Dixon, partner and leader of the Australia-New Zealand Communications, Media, and Technology practice, Sydney [email protected] Sarovar Agarwal, principal, Melbourne [email protected] The authors wish to thank Peter Munro, Nigel Andrade, Chong Feng, Ariel Hersh, Sally Yue, Samuel Brannen, and Terry Toland for their valuable contributions to this paper. Australia: Taking Bigger Steps 18 A.T. Kearney is a leading global management consulting firm with offices in more than 40 countries. Since 1926, we have been trusted advisors to the world's foremost organizations. A.T. 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