How can I organize synergies across business units in my company?
Larger companies are often divided into business units, each with a certain measure of autonomy to tailor their approach to the competitive dynamics in their specific market. At the same time, these companies will seek to benefit from having two or more business units by pursuing synergies – added value by leveraging their resources (e.g. knowledge, money), activities (e.g. operations, sales) and / or value propositions (e.g. products, brands) across business units.
These corporate synergies need to be organized. This is tricky, as working together to achieve synergies undermines the autonomy business units need to be responsive to the specific demands of their market. This is called the paradox of synergy and responsiveness.
Conceptual model
The 11C Synergy Model challenges the broadly held assumption that synergy is achieved by centralization while responsiveness requires decentralization. Framing the balancing act between synergy and responsiveness as “centralization-decentralization” negates the fact that there are five other ways of organizing synergies besides centralization.
Key elements
The 11C Synergy Model is a 3X2 matrix with the following axes:
- Synergy mechanism. This axis distinguishes three different methods by which business units can work together. It is an answer to the question “How is added value created?”:
- Concentration. When resources and / or activities are brought together into a single organizational entity (one unit), they are concentrated.
- Coordination. When resources and / or activities split between business units are continuously orchestrated (ongoing alignment), they are coordinated.
- Coalition. When resources and / or activities split between business units are aligned on a project basis (temporary team), a coalition is formed.
- Synergy driver. This axis distinguishes who has the power to get the business units to work together. It is an answer to the question “Who owns added value creation?”:
- This is when working together is initiated at the corporate center and enforced on the basis of formal hierarchy (top-down).
- This is when working together is initiated by the business units and achieved by mutual consent (horizontal).
Put together, these two axes create the six different ways of organizing synergies:
- Centralization. Activities can be taken away from the business units and folded into one unit reporting to the corporate center (e.g. corporate sales team).
- Combination. Business units can voluntarily bring activities together into one unit, which reports to them jointly (e.g. joint sales team).
- Connector. A corporate manager can be given the formal power to enforce ongoing alignment between business units (e.g. corporate key account manager).
- Community. Business units can voluntarily share information and align their activities by building cooperative networks (e.g. key account communities).
- Catalyst. A corporate manager can be given the formal power to drive a multi-business-unit project (e.g. corporate sales project).
- Cross-Unit Project. Business units can voluntarily band together in a temporary team to achieve a joint project (e.g. joint sales project).