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Motivation_Quality_and_Individual_in_Third_wave_Companies
| Motivation, Quality and Individual in Third wave Companies
Second-wave companies are in the business of getting bigger.
Size is their religion. Third-wave companies are more interested
in finding a better way.
This leads to a primary third-wave goal: to make yourself and
your own products obsolete. No one should be more competent at
that than you. Our Macintosh replaced the Lisa; Apple IIgs was
designed to replace the earlier Apple IIs. What we do is find
ways to give people a growth path – upgrade – to the next
product, to the future, not abandon customers who have bought
the now-obsolete product. The way we renew ourselves is to
supply our customers with meaningful differences. In second-wave
companies, the product objective is generally meant to give
customers better sameness – an improved version of their same
old product.
This is a very contrarian’s idea. Second-wave companies’ do
everything they can to defend what is already theirs. They will
spend more and more money to do so or acquire a company to
control the competition.
Second-wave people are motivated by promotion, salary, and
bonuses. Third-wave people are motivated by commitment to an
ideology, by the chance personally to change the world, the
chance to grow as a person. The second-wave company does not
offer this as a possibility, not in the promise of lifetime
employment and the lure of a pension. As a result, third-wave
people are more likely to take risks, to court failure. They are
playing according to a different standard – their own, not the
company’s. Their attitudes are based on the possible rather than
the actual. They must, as a result, be given high rewards for
their high risk, especially in stock options.
In this new wave, quality takes on a broader definition. It
doesn’t apply only to the product; instead, quality is pervasive
throughout every part of the organization. Quality, without
compromise, is expected in every function and every department,
from finance to sales. It’s everyone’s job. And it’s defined by
anyone who wants to compete – not just who is bigger and has
more clout.
That’s one of the reasons why so many American companies fell
into trouble. They measured quality in terms of what was
affordable, rather than insisting upon perfection at the start.
The proof of this is in some of the gains traditional
corporations have registered in quality since the early 1980s;
the increases are shocking not for their improvement but because
thy reveal how bad things actually had got.
So what does all this mean? The differences between second- and
third-wave companies required vast revolutions in attitude and
behavior. These differences are worth nothing during the time of
transition we are in currently. The third wave is a model we
would do well to being implementing.
About the author:
This article may be re-printed as long as following resource box
is included as it is with out any alteration.
Article by Arvind Kumar. Arvind Kumar is one of prominent writer
and consultant on Marketing and Management. You can reach him at
arvind@nuttymarketer.com. For more on Gorilla Marketing Strategy
and planning visit www.nuttymarketer.com
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