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Partnership Defined
Partnership is a voluntary collaborative
agreement between two or more parties in which all participants
agree to work together to achieve a common purpose or undertake a
specific task and to share risks, responsibilities, resources,
competencies and benefits.
Why Partner with
Others?
Meaningful partnerships are
the foundation for success. Partnerships is what enables many
companies to make continuous improvements. By sharing with others,
you can direct your resources and capabilities to projects you
consider most important.
The 80/20
Principle asserts that 80% of results come from 20% of effort.
Thus, to achieve more with less, you must be selective, not
exhaustive. In every important sphere, work out where 20% of effort
can lead to 80% of returns. Strive for excellence in the few key
areas, rather than for good performance in many.
Focus your firm's resources on
what you do best and what creates sustainable
competitive advantage and tap to the resources of others for the
rest. To decide why, when and how to partner with others for
complementary resources, weight the small amount of cost savings
that doing non-core-competence tasks might bring against the
distraction and investment that will be required to stay up to date
over time.
Growing Role of
Partnership in the New Economy
Barriers between companies,
which used to be solid and absolute, are now permeable. "Iconoclasm
and creativity
are now the keys to success", writes Mark Stevens1. "For
generations companies built moats between themselves and their
competitors. Today the most successful companies build bridges. And
that's only the beginning".
Increasingly corporate leaders
must adopt, practice, and orchestrate what appears to be conflicting
policies, such as joint-venturing with competitors. In today's new
world, the competitive pressure has been intensifying, it is
becoming harder to achieve leadership and stay on top, and, thus,
competitor in one market may establish alliances in another.
Acquisitions of and mergers with competitors have also become a
common practice. "More and more, those who can examine the code,
challenge it, and rewrite it for success in their companies, fields,
and industries will be the leaders and role
models."1
Strategic
Alliances
In the new
economy, strategic alliances enable business to gain competitive
advantage through access to a partner's resources, including
markets, technologies, capital and people.
Teaming up with other adds complementary
resources and capabilities, enabling participants to grow and
expand more quickly and efficiently. Especially fast-growing companies rely heavily
on alliances to extend their technical and operational resources.
In the process, they save time and boost productivity by not
having to develop their own, from scratch. They are thus freed
to concentrate on innovation and their core business...More
Joint Ventures
Joint ventures involve sharing
the risks and rewards in an enterprise or project co-owned and
operated for mutual benefit by two or more business partners. There
are good business and accounting reasons to create joint venture
with a company that has complementary resources, skills or assets,
such as distribution channels, technology, or finance...More
New
Employer-Employee
Partnership
Today, people are your firm's most precious
and underutilized resource. They are your firm's repository
of knowledge and they are central to your company's competitive advantage. Well
coached, and highly motivated people are
critical to the development and execution of strategies, especially
in today's faster-paced, more
perplexing world, where top management alone can no longer
assure your firm's competitiveness. A successful people partnership
is a coherent set of people systems and processes that reflect
the business environment, the enterprise strategy, and organizational
values. Each one will be unique to an organization and its employees,
but there are some key principles that are common to all the
companies that are exploring the New People Partnerships...
Customer
Partnership
"Customer partnership is a shared journey
to create a future for both parties that is better than either
could have developed alone."3 The customer is the
foundation of your organization's success. In today's turbulent
times of rapid and chaotic change, "no force is more grounding
and stabilizing than a partnership with customers."3
Creating a partnership with customers will help your organizations
maintain the focus you need to make good decisions and harness
the power and commitment you need to weather volatile times.
Customer partnership is more than "putting customers first",
or finding mutually satisfactory solutions to shared problems,
or a dedication to excellence in every sale or service
encounter. It also requires commitment to forging long-term
relationships that create synergies of knowledge, security,
and adaptability for both parties...
Case in
Point: Cross-Sector Partnership
Postgraduate Certificate
The Cross-Sector Partnership Postgraduate
Certificate was established in 2001 by the Cambridge Programme
for Industry, at the University of Cambridge. Its mission is
to provide intellectual challenge and practical training for
people who are leading their organizations in the development
of cross-sector partnership. The participants of this nine-month,
part-time course are experienced partnership practitioners selected
from international agencies, companies, Governments and civil
society organizations and from a wide range of cultures, experiences
and traditions, in order to ensure diverse and challenging interaction
and learning. (www.cpi.cam.ac.uk)
Defining Your Core Competences...
Three Key
Questions to
Answer...
Extended
Enterprise:
Virtual Integration...
Building Trust Between Organizations...
Eight
Conditions for Trust
Between Organizations...
Lessons from Successful
Partnerships...
Case in Point: Joint Development of a New
Tool by British Petroleum and Schlumberger
Case in
Point: Partnering for Auxiliary Capabilities in Silicon
Valley
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