Literature DB >> 18159792

Simple rules for making alliances work.

Jonathan Hughes1, Jeff Weiss.   

Abstract

Corporate alliances are growing in number--by about 25% a year--and account for up to a third of revenues and value at many companies. Yet some 60% to 70% of them fail. What is going wrong? Because alliances involve interdependence between companies that may be competitors and may also have vastly different operating styles and cultures, they demand more care and handling than other business arrangements, say Hughes and Weiss, management consultants at Vantage Partners. The authors have developed five principles--based on their two decades of work with alliances -to complement the conventional advice on alliance management: (1) Focus less on defining the business plan and more on how you and your partner will work together. (2) Develop metrics pegged not only to alliance goals but also to performance in working toward them. (3) Instead of trying to eliminate differences, leverage them to create value. (4) Go beyond formal systems and structures to enable and encourage collaborative behavior. (5) Be as diligent in managing your internal stakeholders as you are in managing the relationship with your partner. Companies that have adopted these principles have radically improved their alliance success rate. Schering-Plough, for example, engages in a systematic "alliance relationship launch": four to six weeks of meetings at which the partners explore potential challenges, examine key differences and develop shared protocols for managing them, and establish mechanisms for day-to-day decision making. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Florida measures the quality of alliance progress through regular surveys of both its own staff and its partners'. These companies have learned that the conventional advice is not so much wrong as incomplete. The five simple rules can help fill in the blanks.

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 18159792

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Harv Bus Rev        ISSN: 0017-8012


  3 in total

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Authors:  Wayne N Welsh; Michael Prendergast; Kevin Knight; Hannah Knudsen; Laura Monico; Julie Gray; Sami Abdel-Salam; Shawna Malvini Redden; Nathan Link; Leah Hamilton; Michael S Shafer; Peter D Friedmann
Journal:  Crim Justice Behav       Date:  2015-10-29

2.  Managing health research capacity strengthening consortia: a systematised review of the published literature.

Authors:  Nadia Tagoe; Sassy Molyneux; Justin Pulford; Violet I Murunga; Sam Kinyanjui
Journal:  BMJ Glob Health       Date:  2019-04-14

3.  A framework for managing health research capacity strengthening consortia: addressing tensions and enhancing capacity outcomes.

Authors:  Nadia Tagoe; Justin Pulford; Sam Kinyanjui; Sassy Molyneux
Journal:  BMJ Glob Health       Date:  2022-10
  3 in total

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