http://rpc.technorati.com/rpc/ping Corporate Portfolio Management: February 2007

Friday, February 23, 2007

This blog has moved. Just click on this link.

I've decided to move this blog to another service provider so you can just click here to be taken to the new home of this blog.

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

My author site just launched

I've just launched my author site to support and augment my book. You can learn more by clicking here or by just going to http://www.anandsanwal.com.

Tuesday, February 6, 2007

Thursday, February 1, 2007

The problem of narrowly defining what you manage in your corporate portfolio. What is a discretionary investment?

Organizations generally spend a lot of time optimizing their capital investments/capital expenditures aka CapEx. And this is logical given that these initiatives generally involve significant investment of money, time and personnel resources. But, scrutinizing only CapEx fails to consider a huge discretionary investment pool that exists within most companies - operating expenses.

Most companies consider their operating expenses as business as usual, and they look to minimize them instead of managing them. And they often 'manage' them cavalierly with proclamations that operating expenses should only go up by x% this year or demanding they go down by y% over some period. And, unfortunately, this is a very poor way to manage these 'expenses'. Because in reality, a huge portion of what constitutes operating expenses would be better described as "operating investments". Investments because they generate returns, financial or strategic, for the firm and are vital to the long term success of the organization. Missteps in the allocation of operating expenses can put you at a competitive disadvantage and ultimately out of business. If where you invest your money is, by default, your strategy, then isn't not actively managing your operating expenses an indication of poor strategic planning? And from a shareholder perspective, if company managers are stewards of shareholder money, isn't it incumbent on them to actively manage ALL of their discretionary investment resources to maximize shareholder value?

Operating investments include areas like advertising & promotion, IT, salesforce, R&D, and even some operating initiatives. And these investments should be optimized as part of your CPM efforts. And most striking is the portion of operating expenses which are discretionary. Benchmarking several industries and organizations revealed that that 20-35% of operating expenses are discretionary meaning they can be turned on/off, reallocated, and ultimately managed. In fact, at American Express, the amount of discretionary operating investment dollars managed as part of our CPM efforts is squarely in this range and is several billion dollars on a per annum basis.

Of course, there is a portion of operating expenses that are not discretionary, i.e. those things that keep the lights on and keep you in business. For an internet company, it's ensuring that their website is up and available. For an automobile company, it's ensuring their manufacturing assembly line is producing cars. For us at American Express, it's making sure that when someone wants to use their card, the transactions works seamlessly for the consumer and the merchant. But, ultimately, not managing these operating expenses as investments does your firm, the people who run these investments and shareholders a disservice. From a behavior perspective, framing these expenses as investments serves to demonstrate to people that these are not simply areas to be re-engineered and minimized.

In fact, minimizing operating expenses can have very real and very deleterious impacts on share price performance. For discretionary branded consumer goods companies, cutting marketing expenses actually has been shown to lower total shareholder returns in subsequent periods.

Changing your organizational mindset about operating expenses will have major positive implications for your organization so I'd encourage you to begin this transformation asap. I welcome comments from those of you have managed to transform your organization's thinking towards operating expenses to a view that they are operating investments. What did you do in order to enable this behavioral change? For organizations struggling with this, what are the main roadblocks you are facing?