Improving Business Performance Week 5 Discussion Response Colleague 1

Improving Business Performance

Week 5 Discussion Response

Colleague 1

Lyndsay Camaroto

Hello,

According to Senge (2006) he discusses that system archetypes have the purpose of reconditioning the perceptions that to see the structures in a more conducive way that will be able to demonstrate patterns and areas needed for change. He further states that it is a key to learning and helps further provide experience that not all problems are unique (Senge, 2006)

After reviewing the case study, we see a small company invest in themselves and had an identified product that they felt would be highly successful in their market, which it was. It was hard for me to examine the different archetypes to determine the most suitable options, but there were three that stood out the most. I feel that based on the case study they show a pattern that could correlate to limits to success and growth and underinvestment (Kim, 2000). I would identify growth and underinvestment, as it took the opportunity to grow and invest, but once sales plummeted and they met with competitors, they failed to extend innovation and further invest in their product and means increasing their competitiveness. Kim (2000) states that by reviewing this archetype you can see the deteriorating performance, which is evidenced in the graphs provided. Kim (2000) also identifies this archetype as a special case for “limits to success” which is the second archetype I identified with this case study. I felt that it further aligned with limits to success as it discusses that the company can push forward and be innovative until they “plateau” and then their efforts also stall out, or their attempts lead them further astray. Kim (2020) greatly describes it as when it’s going well, the company is too busy to further invest, and when things go south, they don’t have to invest resources.

Different things I would do, is make sure I am taking the time to review and research the competition, as the “bigger” companies did in the case study. How Can I incorporate a team to continue to do research and development, by inclusion of the research on other companies, and find different characteristics outside of financial feasibility that would be attractable to remain competitive. I think my takeaway from this would be to recognize the importance of implementing time and resources to always better the company or expand its visions. I also think that if presented with this problem, utilize a root cause analysis to identify areas of focus that are factual and not on assumption, such as the company did think it was a failing on marketing.

 

References

Kim, D. H. (2000). 

Systems archetypes I: Diagnosing systemic issues and designing interventionsLinks to an external site.
Links to an external site.

. The Systems Thinker. 

Links to an external site.

 

Senge, P. M. (2006). Systems archetypes. In The fifth discipline: The art and practice of the learning organization (pp. 389–400). Doubleday.

Colleague 2

Femi Jacob Owoeye

Hello everyone.

The “Rise and Demise of the Innovative Entrant” case study presents a compelling narrative of a promising startup’s downfall, offering a rich context for applying systems archetypes. As Senge (2006) highlights, these archetypes provide invaluable frameworks for diagnosing systemic issues and formulating effective interventions.

Assessment of System Archetype(s) in Control

Based on evaluating the innovative entrant’s dilemma, several systems archetypes appear to be in Control, often interacting to accelerate the company’s demise. The most prominent archetype is “Limits to Growth,” followed by aspects of “Success to the Successful” (in reverse, or “Failure to the Failing”) and “Shifting the Burden.”

Limits to Growth

The “Limits to Growth” archetype is arguably the most fitting and pervasive in this case. This archetype describes a situation where a reinforcing (growth) process eventually encounters a limiting or balancing process that slows down and eventually halts the growth (Senge, 2006). The reinforcing process (Growth) initially led to rapid sales growth due to a groundbreaking algorithm and strong marketing. However, a balancing process (Balancing) emerged as large competitors, drawn by the entrant’s success, flooded the market with better, cheaper products. With their deep pockets and ability to lock in customers, these giants quickly stifled the entrant’s growth. The small company’s persistent but futile increases in marketing, even as sales declined and customers became price-sensitive, highlighted their encounter with these inherent limits.

Success to the Successful (in reverse/Failure to the Failing)

While typically illustrating how initial success reinforces further success for one entity at the expense of another, in this case, we see the inverse playing out for the innovative entrant. As the giants gained market share and built loyalty, the entrant’s initial success quickly turned downward, making it harder to compete. The competitors were “success to the successful,” while the innovative entrant was “failure to the failing.” The dynamic is that the giants’ ability to leverage their resources (deep pockets, established networks, existing customer base) allowed them to dominate quickly. This created a reinforcing loop for the giants and a negative reinforcing loop for the innovative entrant, where declining sales led to less cash, less ability to innovate or market, and further sales decline.

Shifting the Burden

The company’s management initially attributed the flattening and declining sales to a “lack of proper sales efforts” and responded by boosting their sales and marketing budget. This demonstrates a “Shifting the Burden” archetype (Senge, 2006). Instead of addressing the fundamental problem (superior competition, price sensitivity, high switching costs for competitors), they focused on a symptomatic solution (more marketing). This short-term fix ultimately failed and depleted their cash reserves, making pursuing the long-term, fundamental solution (e.g., radical innovation, strategic pivot, or partnership) even more challenging.

How to Improve the System

Addressing the underlying system archetypes was critical to changing the innovative entrant’s trajectory.

Countering “Limits to Growth,” the company needed proactive early warnings like competitor R&D tracking, not just sales figures. Strategic adaptation was key: focusing on niche markets, integrating their technology into other products, or pursuing partnerships. As initial advantages are fleeting, continuous, beyond-core innovation in applications and user experience was vital.

A strategic resource reallocation was necessary to halt “Failure to the Failing” when sales stalled, not just increased marketing. This meant prioritizing R&D, cutting costs, or even downsizing to conserve cash. Strengthening existing customer loyalty through premium support or unique features was crucial to combat competitor-driven switching costs.

Solving “Shifting the Burden,” management should have performed root cause analysis, identifying competition and pricing as the real issues rather than just boosting sales efforts. Fundamental solutions included strategic repositioning: launching genuinely differentiated new products, competing on cost if viable, shifting to value-added services, or considering an acquisition or orderly exit.

Lessons Learned and Application to City Government

The case study offers vital lessons on innovation, resource allocation, and adapting to change, which are highly relevant to my current role in a city in the US here.

First, innovation is never static. The city must continuously improve digital services and infrastructure, leveraging user feedback and benchmarking. We must proactively enhance initiatives, like our open data portal, with new tech to prevent stagnation and address “Limits to Growth.”

Second, avoid “Shifting the Burden.” Do not mistake symptoms for root causes. My department needs to use root cause analysis (e.g., “5 Whys”) before solutions. If public forum participation drops, we need to ask why (accessibility, perceived value) instead of just increasing advertising, preventing ineffective fixes.

Furthermore, strategic foresight is crucial. The city needs robust strategic planning with environmental scanning. Monitoring trends like EV adoption or remote work allows proactive adaptation of policies and services, mitigating “Limits to Growth” by preparing for change.

Finally, resource allocation must be agile. My department will be advised to adopt agile budgeting, regularly assess program effectiveness, reallocate funds from underperforming areas, and sunset obsolete programs. This disciplined approach prevents a “Failure to the Failing” spiral, ensuring efficient use of taxpayer dollars.

By internalizing these lessons, a city government, like any organization, can foster a more resilient, adaptive, and ultimately more effective operational model, avoiding the “rise and demise” narrative the innovative entrant exemplifies.

References

Landel, R. D. & Timoshin, D. (2001, March 8). Rise and demise of the innovative entrant. Darden Business Publishing. 

Links to an external site.

Senge, P. M. (2006). Nature’s templates: Identifying the patterns that control events. In The fifth discipline: The art and practice of the learning organization (pp. 92–112). Doubleday.

Senge, P. M. (2006). Systems archetypes. In The fifth discipline: The art and practice of the learning organization (pp. 389–400). Doubleday.

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