English - Perspectives Pictet
Transcription
English - Perspectives Pictet
issue six | april 2011 focus on Performance Subramanian Rangan The new era of sustainable performance p4 Ludo Van der Heyden and Theo Vermaelen Control, performance and shareholder value p9 Rolland-Yves and Thierry Mauvernay The biopharmaceuticals entrepreneurs p15 Dominique Jacquet Without profit, there is no future p18 Didier Drogba Sustaining performance at the highest level p22 George G.Farha The service entrepreneur p25 Gianpiero Petriglieri Leadership for the next generation p29 Tricia Guild The design and lifestyle entrepreneur p35 Yves Bonzon Managing risk to achieve performance p39 Foreword The events of the last few years have provided a salutary reminder of the importance of performance in business and investment. As the global economy recovers from the financial crisis, it is clear that short-term performance in both fields is no longer enough. The challenge is to create sustainable performance in a world where the definition of exactly what that means is broadening all the time. In this issue of Pictet Report, we look at what performance is, how it can be measured and how it can be improved sustainably. We asked experts at INSEAD, the leading international business school, to outline what long-term performance, risk and control mean for different business models. We invited the entrepreneurs behind three successful companies to tell us what performance meant to them and how they had sustained it over the years. And for a different perspective, we asked one of the world’s most famous sportsmen how he achieved and maintained his remarkable record on the football pitch. Finally, the Chief Investment Officer of Pictet’s Wealth Management sets out his thoughts on sustainable investment performance. Helping our clients in the art of managing their wealth over the longer term has been Pictet’s single-minded mission for over 200 years. We hope you will find this report stimulating and valuable in thinking about the performance challenges you face. Philippe Bertherat Partner, Pictet & Cie April 2011 Pictet & Cie editorial team–Ninja Struye de Swielande, Stephen Barber and Olivier Capt Design & editorial consultancy–Winkreative | Rapporteur–John Willman Photography–Antoine Doyen, Andres Gonzalez, Rama Knight and Børje Müller contents insead on performance p4 Subramanian Rangan The new era of sustainable performance in business p9 Ludo Van der Heyden and Theo Vermaelen Control, performance and shareholder value p18 Dominique Jacquet Without profit, there is no future p29 Gianpiero Petriglieri Leadership for the next generation Entrepreneurs on performance p15 Rolland-Yves and Thierry Mauvernay The biopharmaceuticals entrepreneurs p25 George G. Farha The service entrepreneur p35 Tricia Guild The design and lifestyle entrepreneur Pictet on performance A different perspective p39 Yves Bonzon Managing risk to achieve performance p22 Didier Drogba Sustaining performance at the highest level pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance 3 INSEAD on performance The new era of sustainable performance in business Companies must embody considerations of justice, diversity and integrity, as well as efficiency Subramanian Rangan PROFESSOR OF STRATEGY AND MANAGEMENT INSEAD Business performance can be analysed on two levels–the enterprise level and the leadership or management level. At both levels, what we mean by performance has changed over the last decade and a half, reflecting changes in the global environment. This requires us to re-examine and reconceptualise performance in these new circumstances. At the enterprise level there has been a shift from the broad view that performance means profitable growth, the mantra of the 1980s and 1990s, to a broader definition of sustainable profitable growth. Sustainability is very hard to nail down, but it reflects a sense that we really care about the future. Five “Rs” come to mind in trying to define it. Risk: profitable growth does not quite get at how the balance sheet looks. Past performance is not a predictor of future performance, because the actions that seem to deliver current performance may engender risk for the future. This is analogous to the farmer who is eating his seeds until he has no more left for replanting. Reputation: intuitively, my sense is that reputational capital is important, as it is when countries or companies try to sell bonds. The premium they have to pay over prevailing rates gives us a sense of both risk and reputation–a speculation or forecast about the future. Reputation is an asset that gives an organisation credibility and means it can be trusted. Risk, Reputation, Resilience, Respect and Recognition–the broadening definition of performance Respect: there is fear and there is respect, and respect is a higher order sentiment, something that others endow you with. The Dalai Lama is respected; some other religious leaders might be feared. Certain enterprises perform in such a way that they elicit the respect of society–in India, Tata is one such enterprise. Because respect is a cumulative type of sentiment, it is not based on just a single outcome but on a durable record. Recognition: when people acknowledge and attribute certain deeply valued characteristics to the enterprise. It may have started the quality movement or be recognised for its professionalism. Apple is recognised for having led a renaissance of design. These are the five Rs I think about when defining the substance of sustainability. There is much more, of course, including traditional factors such as profit, people and planet. But Risk, Reputation, Resilience, Respect and Recognition are terms that signify the broadening definition of performance–factors that organisations are now grappling with in many sectors. Thus profitable growth has been broadened for enterprises to sustainable profitable growth. For management, the evolution has been slower, but it is also happening: a high-performing executive used to be someone who delivered the results, but is now increasingly seen as someone who makes a contribution beyond the current results. What are the contributions that leaders are making that eventually feed into the resilience, recognition, respect and so on of the enterprise? Here are some examples: •Endowing the enterprise with new capabilities that allow it to make innovations and to deliver performance. Resilience: stuff happens–an oil spill, a product recall, a safety accident that •Re-architecting the system to leave the firm in a vastly different condileads to injury or death. The question tion, rather than just optimising it is how rapidly the organisation can bounce back. Has it built in resilience, to deliver slightly better results. For or is it a fragile tall structure that has example, this could involve bringing become way out of proportion to in new technology, or leveraging technology in a different way. its foundations? 4 insead on performance pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance insead on performance 5 •Creating a method, rather than just making superficial changes. That again can lead to recognition, resilience and a reduction of risk, because without methods you do not create scalability, you will not have a future. •Transforming the team–bringing in new human capital to strengthen the team and put it on a completely different trajectory. •Raising the enterprise’s aspirations by setting out ambitions that had not previously been contemplated by the resource allocators. •Transforming the culture. When you upgrade the culture, you make a durable contribution, because culture embodies the memory of the organisation. Very creative ideas and product or service introductions create a lot of buzz and can be fabulous, but they are not durable because eventually the novelty fades. Leaders who make contributions with new capabilities, systems, technologies, methods and aspirations can help create sustainable performance in an organisation. These are characteristics that we associate with companies like IBM, with firms like McKinsey–a certain culture, a certain ethos, a way of working. So performance, which was already a broad concept, is being broadened: on the enterprise level to sustainable profitable growth; at the leadership level, by contributions beyond results. But why has this happened? Are we just tired of the way we measure and conceive performance? Or are there some developments that are causing us to reconceptualise the notion of performance? I would like to propose four developments that have prompted this re-examination. One is the dispersal of power, which used to be highly concentrated–first with landowners and more recently with owners of capital. Physical and financial capital used to be where the power was, but today that power is also with customers, regulators, society, academics, non-governmental organi- 6 insead on performance sations. Power has been dispersed in of other actors–including enterprises. multiple ways to new actors, so our Another development is in the definition of performance has to reflect sphere of ideas, in particular the where that power is going. growth in importance of the notion of fairness over the last 50 years. Issues such as gender disparity, inclusiveness, meeting the needs of the bottom of the In the sphere of ideas, pyramid, the identification of different the notion of fairness has stakeholders, ethical treatment–their grown in importance core idea is fairness. Urbanisation in cities such as Mumbai or São Paulo as well as in If you do not understand power, it developed centres such as Amsterdam, is very difficult to understand what Los Angeles or Berlin concentrates performance is and to deliver it. People humanity so that people are much or entities that have power want to more able to see what unfair or inequisee their interests reflected in the table life outcomes people experience. definition of desirable outcomes. If A book called The Spirit Level suggests China has more power, it would like that equality is a major driver of socito see the G20 economic performance etal well-being–how we feel, what or societal targets incorporate what kind of health outcomes we have. The China considers important. Any entity idea of fairness is at the root of so many defines its own interests and as its developments, including the broadpower increases, it wants to see those ening of performance–and it is only interests reflected in the performance the beginning. pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance Technology is a third factor in the changing definitions of performance. Technology firstly means competition: if I am sitting in Hong Kong, I can start competing in capital markets, I can be a trader. Through outsourcing, I can compete in labour markets such as healthcare or information processing in other countries and continents. Technology is changing how power is concentrated, and diffusing it. Technology also means much more transparency, and not only through WikiLeaks. People now have access to information on a wholly different scale: we can understand what is happening in Saudi Arabia, or in Switzerland, or at BP. They can see animal welfare procedures–how slaughterhouses work and where food comes from. They ask how governments make decisions, and how commercial deals are reached. The spotlight on performance is much broader and somebody is always looking at it critically. Global trends influencing the definition of performance •The dispersal of power–bringing new interests into play. •The rise of new ideas, especially the notion of fairness. •Technological changes–increasing competition and transparency. •The erosion of trust–spreading to affect all institutions. There has been an erosion of trust in government, business, the media, churches and science Finally, there has been an erosion of trust as people see behind the scenes and think about ideas of fairness and the distribution of power. It started first with distrust in politics and government in the 1970s, then spread to enterprises and business leaders and eventually became mistrust in leadership. People see events and anomalies that prompt the idea that the system is not necessarily fair. They feel that they can’t trust the media. They don’t even trust the churches after so many scandals, while controversy over issues such as global warming has undermined trust in science. Trust ultimately is not only about whether reported results reflect actual performance. After so many restatements of performance from enterprises, the question is: if I believe you, how pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance insead on performance 7 could you achieve that? Goldman Sachs, for example, has faced questions about how the firm works and whether it exploits conflicts of interest. BP is being challenged about whether it achieves oil production at high and consistent levels safely. When we see reported results that are so consistently above and beyond what we might expect, people now ask how it is achieved. A couple of years ago, I wrote an article entitled Globalisation the JEDI Way, alluding to the Star Wars character. The E in JEDI stands for Efficiency, which remains very important and will always be an element in performance. But I identified other elements–the J, the D and the I. The J stands for Justice, and I suggested that when we make our reckoning of the 21st century, justice will have a prerogative over efficiency. Enterprises must start to incorporate considerations of justice when making decisions, whether on outsourcing, pricing, the kind of products or the methods that they use. D is for Diversity, essential in thinking about risk and resilience. Enterprises tend to go for one currency (dollars), one computer operat- ing system, one search engine, one language (English)–one single everything because it’s the best today. But diversity is very important, because we cannot know what the future brings. Part of sustainability must be to maintain diversity even though it may not appear to be the most efficient outcome. We need to think much more deliberately about diversity, whether it is gender, age, ethnic, linguistic, intellectual, etc., diversity. A meaningful life is one that is externally oriented, not just internally focused The I stands for Integrity, which brings us back to trust and especially intentions. You cannot have trust just based on efficiency. China might become the most efficient economy, but people still have a lot of doubts about whether they can trust China. Do I trust Russia, do I trust India, do I trust America? We have lived for a long time in a compliance culture which avoids errors of commission, but the best companies now worry about errors of omission. They think about gender disparity, and what they can do about it. They think about ecology and how they use water in agriculture, and what they can do about this without damaging the workers or farmers. They think about the tragedy of suicide rates among indebted farmers in developing countries. They think about youth unemployment and at how to mobilise on the issue. Most of the business leaders that I meet are becoming much more aware of this paradigm shift, and most want to learn and to invest their cultures with the proper practices. Young people certainly want to: the number of MBAs who are now attuned to the notion of contribution rather than just results has grown enormously compared with when I started teaching. There are many more people in their 20s and 30s who want to make a contribution, who understand that a meaningful life is one that is externally oriented, not just internally focused. We can see the symptoms of this in the Giving Pledge that Bill Gates and Warren Buffett are propounding, and the number of people who have signed up to it all over the world. JEDI, as a principle, broadens the assessment of performance to become more robust, more multifaceted, both temporally and in terms of these other dimensions. And I am optimistic when I look at how the best enterprises are performing in response to the new pressures. I have never met a perfect company, but I have met companies that look at the evidence from multiple sources and seek the views of a diverse group of people. They are quite admirable. Subramanian Rangan is Professor of Strategy and Management at INSEAD, where he holds the Abu Dhabi Crown Prince’s Diwan Endowed Chair in Societal Progress. His research and teaching revolve around the strategy and management challenges facing multinational firms. He is working currently on the theme of reconciling business performance with societal progress. Professor Rangan is vice-chair of the World Economic Forum’s global agenda council on emerging multinationals. 8 insead on performance pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance INSEAD on performance Control, performance and shareholder value Two leading business school professors compare the strengths and weaknesses of family-run companies versus public companies LUDO VAN DER HEYDEN PROFESSOR OF TECHNOLOGY AND OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT INSEAD THEO VERMAELEN PROFESSOR OF FINANCE INSEAD or not about short-term stock price variation, and for most investors this is irrelevant because you can’t control it, you can’t manage it, you have to react very quickly. Eventually the share price will reflect long-term value creation–and if you see opportunities where the share Is there a tension between the popular concept price today is much lower than you of short-term shareholder value as measured think it should be in terms of economic by a company’s share price and long-term fundamentals, then invest aggressively performance in a family-run business? and conservatively and wait until the market catches up. Theo Vermaelen: Absolutely not–there is no such thing as short-term share- Theo: There are opportunities in the holder value measured by the stock short term, however–especially when a price. The value of a company is the net company buys back its shares. Because present value of all future cash flows it misses its short-term targets for earnfrom now to infinity. The share price is ings per share, analysts downgrade not the same as shareholder value. it and the share price falls. When the management announces a buyback, Ludo Van der Heyden: There is no disa- the market ignores it completely and greement on that. As an investor, you people who buy that company’s shares have to decide whether you’re worried can make a lot of money if they hold Short-term shareholder value vs. long-term performance pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance insead on performance 9 on to them long-term. The people that sell because of short-term considerations often sell too cheaply. Every year I give my list of such companies and it has proved to be the best investment strategy today. ‘Managerial talent is not an inherited quality’ Theo Vermaelen So if the market is wrong about your company, you should see it as an opportunity and take advantage of it. Of course, some people will be concerned about short-term share prices–if your company is too cheap, someone may bid for it and buy you out below fair value. That can be a concern if your company is not tightly controlled by a family: it’s subject to hostile bids that are not driven by sound, fundamental reasons. An argument could be made that a family-controlled business which is immune to hostile bids is better for the long-term shareholders because they cannot be bought out at the price below fair value. Ludo: There seems to be a premium for stocks in companies that have some type of dominant shareholder such as a family–so long as they do not have a majority holding. The premium becomes negative if there is a majority shareholder because then the other shareholders will have no voice, whatever happens in the short run. The market likes a reference shareholder such as a family which behaves with the mindset of a conservative investor. They’re not going to sell out because they’re going to pass the company on to the children. Even the market recognises that you can’t leave the market to the market when it comes to long-term value creation. If you just have shareholders without a relatively strong minority, then some value can be lost because management can do whatever it wants, there is no supervision. That was what led 10 insead on performance to the adoption of the remuneration approach of Stern Stewart in the 1990s which aimed to tie management incentives to economic value added. But it linked EVA to the share price which is exactly what you don’t want for longterm value creation, because it encourages shorter-term animal spirits to do things that force up the share price. So there are two very different games: to play the market in the short run and play it in the long run. I have visited companies where the CEO would welcome me in the lobby and check the share price, and then check it again after a one-hour meeting. If you’re interested in long-term value creation, it’s a waste of time to look at short-term share valuations. The new manager of a big company has no impact for at least three years. I spent ten years visiting factories and it takes two years minimum to turn round performance if you do everything right–and typically you lose a year because you don’t have the right management. And if it takes three years just to improve a factory, it takes much longer to really change the business–to open a new product line, for example. Long-term value creation can take many years. Ownership for value creation The two professors then turned to the factors that can undermine long-term performance in a family-run company. Theo: If the family intends having their children running the company forever, that limits the pool of potential managers and I do not see how that could be optimal for value-creation. Managerial talent is not an inherited quality–if I’m a good manager, my children will not necessarily be good managers too. You can maybe pass on the colour of your eyes and your hair pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance but not managerial talent. I know of companies where the founding father was a great guy with a great idea, but when he passed the company on to his sons, it brought down the company because they were useless managers. This is the danger if you start limiting your pool of potential managers. Ludo: It’s all about management incentives, understanding how you need to incentivise the managers to create long-term value. And most studies say that family firms which were thought to be inefficient are on average doing that better. Why? Because on average they’re more committed to long-term value creation than nonfamily firms. ‘It is easier to train an owner than a CEO’ Ludo Van der Heyden Theo: You have to incentivise managers, but how do you incentivise them? That’s the question. If you keep the company in the hands of the family and they care about the long run, that’s fine. But holding on to a business for the long run is not necessarily value creation–sometimes someone else is a better manager than you are and can see better opportunities. In such cases, you should sell your business and this is my main problem with family businesses that don’t want to sell their company. Ludo: I advised a big family company, run by the father who was a genius. My advice was to sell the firm: I told him he was half of the value of the firm, and if he sold the firm now he would cash in on its value. But he was in his eighties and wanted to pass it on to his children–and the problem is that the children of geniuses are typically not geniuses. But families don’t sell up often because members of the family say they have been waiting for their chance to run the company. As a family, you always have to ask pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance insead on performance 11 whether we are the best owners. If we are controlling shareholders, are we the right controlling shareholders for the business? Given our interest as family shareholders, is investing in this business still what we want to do? The best way to remain a family firm for 300 years is to keep creating value for the next 20 years: if we as owners provide control and stability that creates value, let’s continue it. It’s easier to train an owner than it is to train a CEO. You can’t train a CEO who needs animal spirits which is an intangible characteristic, but I can train a good shareholder. So a family should certainly not take the view that a family member should be CEO. The family company as incubator The discussion explored the reasons for the premium commanded by family-controlled companies, and what can undermine it. Ludo: One of the benefits of family firms is they can have a culture of longterm value creation. That doesn’t mean they will never sell the business but that they do not overreact to negative developments. It’s continuity, it’s the fact that families care and they care about who represents them. But their focus must be to make sure that the money and are concerned about how family members who are on the board much the family cares about making know what they’re doing. money. As an investor, I want controlling shareholders who are really obsessed with making money–I don’t want people who care about family ‘As an investor, values and other issues. If the company I want controlling is controlled by family whose goal is shareholders obsessed not to maximise returns but to make with making money’ family members happy or do good for the environment or whatever, it should Theo Vermaelen say that in advance to investors so that everybody knows it. Then people like Theo: If the family firm is a public me can avoid such companies and company, it has to raise money from other people who like those goals can other people who really care about invest in them. 12 insead on performance Top: Theo Vermaelen Above: Ludo Van der Heyden Ludo: I think the source of the premium commanded by family firms is not that they’re going to maximise family happiness, but that they’re more credible when they make a commitment to long-term value creation. Why are they more credible? Because it’s part of their culture. In a good family firm, the first school is the family. There is no question that if you are born a Rothschild, you’re going to learn about finance from day one. By the age of 15, the chances are you’re already a trader, and you’re doing it with cousins and people you trust. And you trust them because you know pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance what they’re good at and that people– including your mother and your aunt– will stop you from doing things if they are not good. So the premium that family firms command is often that there is more credibility when they make an announcement to the markets because it’s not going to change. And they are more credible because they’re more careful about training the people who actually manage the commitment to this announcement. pact. That is what the Belgium families behind Interbrew did when they created a long-term pact to merge the business with AmBev of Brazil. They lost sole control of the business, but with the Brazilians they’re in control of the biggest beer company in the world. ‘Companies are not about happiness–they’re about doing things’ Ludo Van der Heyden Theo: But the family mission has to be about value creation and there’s no way to guarantee that. There’s no way that limiting control to a specific group of people is optimal, and there is no theory can justify this. After all, some family members will probably sell their shares. You have to have competition in the jobs market to guarantee that the best people are running the company. I understand there’s a desire for commitment to the long run, but you can easily encourage that commitment by paying people with stocks they have to hold for long periods of time. Does control matter? Theo: Obsession with control can be dangerous. If people are obsessed with power and refuse to issue stock, they might then have to borrow money and leverage up too much. If you end up with debt in a very risky business, you can go bankrupt. Ludo: The issue of control is about the psychology of an entrepreneur. Entrepreneurs don’t do it for value creation, they do it because of their drive–it’s their identity, it’s their project. It has nothing to do with value creation, it’s psychology, it’s an obsession. But it’s also good in the sense that our fundamental driver is ourselves. There are people who say they do it for others, but the more they say that the less I believe them–I think they do it for themselves. manager, someone that really wants to make money. These are the people I trust–the others have got too rich to care about cash flows. Ludo: I agree. Companies are social instruments but the overall logic is an economic one. We need others, but we do it for ourselves. Value creation is a very tedious thing and happiness is a very personal thing. Companies are not about happiness, they’re about projects, they’re about doing things, they’re about changing the world. When you have changed the world then you can sit back and do something different. Ludo Van der Heyden is Professor of Technology and Operations Management and the Mubadala Chaired Professor of Corporate Governance and Strategy at INSEAD. He was also the first holder of the Wendel Chair in the Large Family Firm at INSEAD, which led to the creation of the Wendel International Centre for Family Enterprise. Before joining INSEAD, he was on the faculty of the School of Organisation and Management at Yale University and of the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. Theo Vermaelen is Professor of Finance at INSEAD and Schroders Chaired Professor of International Finance and Asset Management. He has taught at the University of British Columbia, the Catholic University of Leuven, London Business School, UCLA and the University of Chicago. He is also a consultant to various corporations and government agencies, and Programme Director of the Amsterdam Institute of Finance. His research areas are corporate finance, share repurchase, death spirals, IPOs and Call Option Reverse Convertibles (COERCs). Finally, the professors discussed the desire among Theo: That’s why I think a hungry many families to retain control of their busi- manager leveraged up is my ideal nesses, and the implications for performance. Ludo: Families are obsessed with control–but if you don’t have a project, control is worthless. It’s not control that should be the obsession, but the project–and whenever I talk to families about control, my question is control for what? Control by itself has no value unless you use it to execute a long-term project–that’s the premium. For example, if somebody says: let’s merge–you’re going to lose control but it’s going to create a lot of value. Then the family could say, let’s go ahead and exercise control together through a pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance insead on performance 13 14 the biopharmaceuticals entrepreneurs pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance The biopharmaceuticals entrepreneurs Rolland-Yves and Thierry Mauvernay The founder of a Swiss biopharmaceuticals company created a unique business model for bringing innovative drugs to market. His son’s involvement promises the continuity needed for long-term performance in developing new cures. Dr Rolland-Yves Mauvernay has a deceptively simple mission for his biopharmaceuticals business: think of tomorrow and the day after tomorrow. The secret of success in his industry, where it can take many years to develop and commercialise a drug, is to think longterm. So Dr Mauvernay says he is delighted that his son Thierry–a successful entrepreneur in his own right–has become Executive VicePresident of the company. It will, he believes, ensure that the business model he created will continue into the future. “I am very happy to have Thierry with me,” he says, his eyes twinkling. “It is very important to me to ensure continuity tomorrow and the day after tomorrow–it is my goal.” The company is Debiopharm, headquartered at Lausanne in Switzerland in a sleek modern building overlooking Lake Geneva. It was founded 32 years ago by Dr Mauvernay, who adopted an innovative approach to discovering new molecules to treat serious medical conditions. Today the company has well over 300 employees from 18 countries and around 400 external consultants, and an enviable record for developing new drugs, particularly for the treatment of cancer. Thierry Mauvernay says that he had long resisted becoming involved. “When I finished my studies at 23, I told my father that I would never work with him. He has a very strong personality and I thought it would be difficult to work with him.” Instead, he started a cosmetics company in France, which he ran for 23 years before selling it. After a two-year handover, his plan was to buy a vineyard, but his father persuaded him to work one day a week to see if it would work. “I found it was not so difficult,” he says with a smile. That was nine years ago, and now Thierry Mauvernay is responsible for the administration, finance and strategy of the company. He worried that unlike his father, he had no scientific training–he studied administration and market- pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance ing. But his father says there are many scientists, but not so many people with such good business skills. Dr Mauvernay completed his medical studies at the University of Strasbourg in France, where he also later obtained a PhD in biology, bacteriology and pharmacy. In 1953, he created RIOM Laboratories in France, purchasing several pharmaceutical companies and various rare molecules. After selling RIOM, he founded Debiopharm: “My motivation was a feeling that I could use my past experience to develop new drugs addressing unmet medical needs. My multiple scientific background helped me think laterally, but the key principle is to know what you don’t know–and then find those who can provide the knowledge and expertise that you need.” The business model he developed is described by the letters NRDO: No Research, Development Only. Large conventional pharma companies employ many thousands of people to carry out research, develop drugs and then commercialise them to treat diseases. Debiopharm specialises in one key stage of this production chain: developing products through to approval by regulators. It leaves research to biotechnology, pharmaceutical and academic organisations, licensing in promising molecules they discover. And it licences out products to partners who manufacture and commercialise the treatments, paying royalties to Debiopharm and, through Debiopharm, to the researchers who made the original discoveries. “Debiopharm is a bridge between discovery and the market,” says Dr Mauvernay. “We focus on identifying therapeutically interesting molecules, developing them for tomorrow’s world and licensing them out to the right partners. And we have been successful because as a relatively small company, we have a good spirit–creative, pioneering, passionate and open. It is hard to cultivate the same spirit in the big listed pharmaceutical companies.” the biopharmaceuticals entrepreneurs 15 The two most successful molecules developed by the company have been triptorelin, licensed in from Tulane University in New Orleans in 1982, and oxaliplatin, licensed in from Nagoya City University in Japan in 1989. The latter is used to treat colorectal cancer, while the former has been developed into three drugs for the treatment of prostate cancer and other conditions, and more recently a product for the treatment of sexual deviations. ‘Our industry must reach out to the 6 billion people not in developed markets’ The three prostate cancer products are formulations of the same drug with doses that last for different periods of time– one, three and six months. This is another Debiopharm innovation, designed to make treatment more convenient for patients. A 12-month formulation is now being created, which Dr Mauvernay believes will be particularly valuable in emerging markets. “In countries like India, you cannot visit a doctor when you want. With 20 times fewer doctors than Switzerland, patients can only visit a doctor infrequently. Our industry will not be sustainable in the long term if it only treats 20 per cent of the world’s population–it must reach out to the 6 billion people outside the developed markets.” More than a dozen other products are in the company’s pipeline, mostly for cancer treatments. But Thierry Mauvernay, wearing his administration hat, says the length of time it takes to bring a drug to market raises issues in recruiting and retaining the excellent scientists that Debiopharm needs. “It used to take five or six years to develop a compound, and staff used to stay with a company for 15–20 years. It can now take 15 years to develop a compound and people stay with an employer for only six or seven years. We have created a programme called Debio2025 to find ways to keep our people by showing that they can learn more and improve their careers even if they stay with us. We need strong commitments.” defines performance as developing efficacious drugs in a timely manner to address genuine medical needs–using the company’s financial resources in a sustainable fashion. “Every year, we analyse around 1,000 new compounds. Only six are taken forward and just two or three will make it in the end. Large companies measure their performance by setting targets such as discovering ten or 15 products a year. But it is better to do nothing than to waste time on a compound that will not succeed. Performance is not about value, but about finding products that bring value–and success in this will bring income. “When we found our colonic cancer treatment, it was by chance–not because of a target. There are lots of failures before a success.” This aspect makes the biopharmaceuticals industry one of the riskiest businesses in the world, says Thierry Mauvernay. “For every 10,000 compounds, only one will make it to the market. The hardest aspect sometimes is to stop a project when it is not making progress. Each project is the work of a team, but the team needs to be objective about it. The big challenge is to stop at the right time.” Looking ahead, Thierry Mauvernay sees new challenges for the pharmaceutical industry. In addition to producing ‘Performance is not about value, but about drugs for emerging markets, companies must recognise that finding products that bring value’ the environment in developed markets is changing. “The thinking has tended to be that care doesn’t have a price, but it certainly has a cost. The debts of developed countries Relationships with partners must also be lengthy, he mean that price will become much more important, and adds. On top of 15 years to develop a compound, it will be the industry needs to be much more efficient. Add to this commercialised for a period of up to 15 years. This means a the ageing populations, and the aim will be to care for more partnership of 25 to 30 years. people with less money. Our business model is focused on Dr Mauvernay says that a company such as Debio- that, because it reduces the cost of developing drugs and pharm must have a constant focus on performance. He small units can be more efficient than large ones.” 16 the biopharmaceuticals entrepreneurs pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance Personalised treatment is another challenge, and under Thierry Mauvernay’s leadership, Debiopharm has invested in six diagnostic companies. One is Diagnoplex, which has devised a blood test that can detect colon cancer at an early stage. Instead of waiting until a colonoscopy can detect it, treatment can begin much earlier in the development of the cancer. Just as important, tests can probably also help in monitoring the efficacy of the treatment–most drugs either fail with a large proportion of patients or have side effects in many others. “Personalised analysis is the future for everybody,” says Dr Mauvernay. Both father and son are very proud of the group’s philanthropic activities. In addition to supporting various associations, it is involved in three projects: Pinceaux Magiques, which gives hope to children in hospital; the adventurer Sarah Marquis who walks the planet; and the Kantuta Association which works with street children in Bolivia, whose colourful paintings cover the walls on the headquarters meeting rooms. Now well beyond the age when most people have retired, Dr Mauvernay is still very much at the helm of Debiopharm, which he describes as his hobby. Still energetic, he takes a close interest in his employees and their families, continuing to keep all the staff committed to the culture he created. The company has no debt and finances its work from its own resources, and he vehemently rejects the idea of listing Debiopharm on a stock exchange or selling it to a larger buyer. “I would say a big ‘No’–and I would say ‘Never if possible’–and it is certainly possible to continue as a family business for the next 20 years.” Rolland-Yves Mauvernay’s five tips on performance •Think about the future–sustainable performance depends on a vision for tomorrow and the day after tomorrow. •It is important to know what you don’t know–to be humble and search for the knowledge you require. •Be ready to take the decisions necessary to sustain performance, in particular when a project should be terminated. •Accept that you must take risks to achieve performance –risk-takers should be commended, not criticised. •Go for it! ‘One of the key strengths of Debiopharm is that it is not a public company’ The short-term horizons of shareholders would undermine the business model, he says. “One of the key strengths of Debiopharm is that it is not a public company, which allows us to think long-term–essential in an industry where developing a new product takes up to 15 years.” That is why he was so delighted that he managed to persuade his son to come back to the business, because the intention is that it will remain a family-controlled company. The family manages the company as if it was listed, in terms of accounting standards and a board structure that has an audit committee and a strategy committee. Debiopharm thus faces the sort of pressures that shareholders bring to bear on listed companies, but it has its own additional source of inspiration, says Thierry Mauvernay. “My father provides the pressure. He tells us when we have not done enough and always pushes us to go further.” pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance the biopharmaceuticals entrepreneurs 17 INSEAD on performance Without profit, there is no future Financial performance is crucial for the survival of all businesses–including those owned by families DOMINIQUE JACQUET Visiting Scholar INSEAD Social Innovation Centre The generation of adequate financial performance is critical for any business– large or small, listed or unlisted. This is because the most important decision to take in a company is to invest, but it is essential to finance the investment. To mobilise the necessary financial resources, a promise is made to the investors that the return on capital will exceed its cost. If this promise is not fulfilled, it will be the last investment the investors will finance with the company. So profitability is key to business survival–it must be at the centre of the picture. If a company is performing well, it can finance investment in improving its competitive advantage and its productivity. If a company is not profitable, it cannot survive tomorrow and the day after. This is true for every type of business–including those owned by entrepreneurs and families. There are complications when dealing with entrepreneurs and families, especially after the first generation when there will be a variety of perspectives among the owners. Some may be working in the company, some may be not working in the company but still feel part of it, and some may not work in 18 insead on performance the company and do not care about it at all. But financial performance is still key for all of them: if they want to receive a larger dividend tomorrow and the day after, the company has to invest. And if it wants to invest, it has to finance the investment–and to finance the investment it has to be profitable. If a company is not profitable, it cannot survive There is a debate over the degree to which stakeholders should share in the value created by a company, versus maximising shareholder returns. This is dangerous, however, because the day you say profitability is no longer important and we have to provide funds to anybody and give money and resources away, you lose the ability to finance investment. Then the company, the people working for it, its customers, its suppliers and all its stakeholders will be in a difficult situation because the company is not going to be productive enough to survive. pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance This is why whatever the utility function of members of the family, whatever their perspective in looking at the company and interacting with it, financial performance is absolutely critical. Performance for a company is the ability of the company to invest in its future. It is about its sustainability, its survival. It is about being able to hire more people and treat your people well. It is also about being able to have enough resources not to generate negative externalities–to protect the environment, for example. But you can do that only if you are profitable. come from Burgundy, close to L’Abbaye de Cluny which had only two abbots during the eleventh century. This gave it long-term stability over 115 years when there were 33 different Popes. There is a danger with long-term stability: if noone can sell their shares, the owners are protected against a hostile takeover–and they might take bad decisions. For example, they might decide to introduce an unsuitable family member into the business–the son-in-law, say, to please a daughter. But the antidote to this management misperformance is to make financial performance the rule. Profitability is a discipline: profit in order to invest, invest in order to make more profit– Value is created by and be sustainable in the long run. making a good investment Emotion plays a role in a family –the rest will follow business, which is only human, and it can make governance a bit more complicated sometimes. But we are all All companies are a set of conflicts, human beings and emotions can be like any organisation or institution. seen in all walks of professional life, A listed company with a diversified including public companies. The hardshareholder base is just the same as a nosed CEO will sometimes take decifamily company: the market is made up of individuals with different utility functions and risk aversions. The difference is that with a listed company they are anonymous, but with a family company they are sitting around the table–you can put a name and a face on each and every utility function. But the owners need to look to the future even if they have a higher preference for today rather than tomorrow, because preparing the company for the future maximises their own wealth. Managing these conflicts may be easier if the business is put into a holding company, especially when there are many family members and different families involved. Some financial, legal and tax engineering can protect the company from attempts to play some shareholders off against others by making it harder for them to sell out. This approach has created the long-term stability which has allowed many familycontrolled companies to be so successful. L’Oreal, for example, has had just five chief executives in 102 years. There is nothing new in this. I pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance sions which please the stock market in the short run, but undermine the longterm sustainability of the company. Large listed companies are often led by charismatic figures whose success in the past means they will not be challenged when they make decisions based on their emotions. The key to success in all companies is always investment. Value is created by making good investments: select a good investment, and the rest will follow. But to make the investment, you have to raise financial resources and that will depend on the credibility of the promise you make to your investors about profitability. And that is why performance is crucial to the survival of any company. Dominique Jacquet is a Visiting Scholar at INSEAD. He has held, amongst others, positions as Treasurer of Rank Xerox, France and Administrative and Financial Director of Ferinel Industries. His areas of interest are corporate financial policy and the evaluation and control of high-tech projects and corporations. Parallel to his teaching activities he is also a consultant to various companies. insead on performance 19 20 pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance 21 A different perspective Sustaining performance at the highest level Chelsea soccer star Didier Drogba, who attributes his success in sport to hard work and mental strength, has an unparalleled record of achievement on and off the football pitch Ask Didier Drogba what it takes to become a world-class football player, and the Chelsea star reels off five qualities that would be instantly familiar to successful entrepreneurs around the world. Performance in the game of soccer, he says, comes from his passion for the game, hard work, mental attitude, leadership skills and, of course, talent. His family were not well-off, and as a child he practised his football in a city car park. But Drogba denies that his sporting career has been driven by a desire to escape his poor background. “My family was loving and caring–I was a happy child. It was my passion for the sport that gave me the desire to perform, not poverty.” Nor is it money that drives him, playing with the same A late developer by the standards of his sport, Drogba played for minor French sides until the age of 25 when he motivation in European stadiums or on African pitches joined Olympique de Marseille, one of France’s top teams, for Côte d’Ivoire, his national team. “Performance is not in 2003. A year later, he moved to Chelsea, the English linked to earnings, but to my desire to maintain my success. Premier League team owned by Russian oil magnate Roman Whether it’s a friendly game, a World Cup match or a Champion’s League final, I want to perform at all times.” Abramovich, for a fee of £24 million. 22 a different perspective pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance It was only when Drogba joined a professional club at the age of 19 that he began daily football training and his first two years as a professional were marred by injuries. His then manager later remarked that it took him four years to be capable of training every day and playing every week. Drogba now says that he learnt that hard work in training is essential–talent is not enough. ‘The team picks the leader because they know what the leader will bring’ “To perform I need to be at the top in terms of physical ability, but most importantly on top mentally. I need to be ‘fresh’ mentally to completely control my body, to push it to its limits,” and also to sustain his performance. “It’s easy to perform once, but it’s much more important to consistently repeat a high-level performance.” His scoring record in the game shows remarkably consistent results over the years, especially when under pressure in high-stakes matches. In his first season at Chelsea, his 16 goals included the winning goal in the 2004 League Cup final against Liverpool. A year later, Drogba helped the club win its first ever Premier League title, and has since become the only player to have scored in six English Cup finals. He attributes this consistency to his mental preparations for important matches. “I visualise the game and all the potential situations beforehand, I visualise the opponent, I project myself scoring. This feeds back to me when I play. “I do a lot of video analysis, too: I dissect the other team, its defence, each player, his style, body movements and reactions in very specific situations. I study the goalkeeper’s strength and most importantly weaknesses.” Drogba works hard around the year to maintain his performance. “My holidays are always ten days shorter pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance than those of other players–I start preparing for the new season well in advance,” he says. “We play a very high number of games and the games intensity is ever increasing. I have my own medical and physical staff in addition to the staff from the club, inspired by US basketball players. I talked recently to Kobe Bryant, and he has a significant staff around him to stay on top too. “At the end of the day the most important sacrifice is the time I spend away from my family. All the rest is part of the game–it’s my work and my passion.” Drogba says the pressure to outperform comes from fear of failing. “When you play a Champion’s League final you simply don’t want to lose. The importance of the event creates a lot of stress. To control this stress and turn it into an asset I position myself as a team leader. Being a team leader means I am not allowed fail. It forces me to always think one step ahead of the game. “Self-confidence is also important. I know I can make the difference in the game. Often my team-mates tell me ‘If you’re good, we’re good’. This trust helps me overcome the pressure–it is a self-feeding mechanism.” Widely credited as a natural leader who has brought cohesion and ambition to the Ivorian team, Drogba believes that it is the team that makes the leader. “The team picks the leader, because they know what the leader will bring–not the other way round. Leadership is key on and off the pitch, especially in big competitions when you live together for a month. It takes a lot of communication and requires great listening skills. “Leadership comes through direction, followed by actions which in turn produce credibility. It also requires structure–I rely on a few lieutenants who completely buy into my leadership, and can relay my ambition and views to the whole team. “In addition, the leader must set an example to the younger players. Some have more talent than I have, but if they want to succeed they need to improve their mental strength.” Drogba’s achievements have reached beyond the football pitch, in the role he played in 2006 in bringing to an end the civil war that had divided his country for five years. After Côte d’Ivoire qualified for the 2006 World Cup, he issued a plea to the combatants to lay down their arms, which led to a ceasefire. He later helped move an African Cup of Nations qualifying match to Bouake, the former rebels’ stronghold, where both sides united to support their team. His critical involvement in peacemaking led Time magazine to name him one of the world’s most influential people in 2010. But does he feel like getting involved again, with Côte d’Ivoire again divided after an election? “We sent a letter in the name of the national team. We achieved something unique in 2006, but the conflict is now way too complex. We can speak and inspire, but it’s the role of the country’s leaders to act.” ‘It’s easy to perform once, but it’s much more important to consistently repeat a high-level performance’ In 2007, Drogba was appointed a Goodwill Ambassador by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) because of his charity work. He has since created the Didier Drogba Foundation, donating the £3 million fee he received for endorsing Pepsi-Cola to build a hospital in his home town of Abidjan, the Ivorian capital. Now 33, what does he hope to do once his football career is over? “When my uncle stopped playing as a professional player he had a hard time managing his career change. I witnessed that as a child and I will not go down the same route. I will find other activities where I can use my passion and follow new dreams. I like challenges. Challenges and passion are my two main drivers.” a different perspective 23 24 the service entrepreneur pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance The service entrepreneur George G. Farha The founder of a catering and laundry business in Dubai has built up an impressive client list through a focus on performance. Now he has partnered with Qatar’s leading investment bank to expand elsewhere in the Gulf. Destined for a career in chemical engineering, George G. Farha– known universally to his colleagues as GGF–had a rude awakening when he graduated from University College London. The first job he was offered in the UK was on an oil-rig in the North Sea east of Scotland, at £9,000 a year. He decided to head home to the Gulf to join his Lebanese-born father whose business interests were mostly in Dubai. “At the time, there was one large supplier, with a near-monopoly,” he says. “Their margins were healthy enough to sustain a new competitor, which was why we entered the business. I saw that if I could take just 5 per cent of the market, I would be a very happy entrepreneur. Today, we have around 40 per cent of the market, and a lot more competition.” Three years after the launch of Intercat, his business partner decided to sell his stake, and GGF bought him out. “I said that chemical engineering was not going to pay my His brother Dany, who was working for Lehman Brothbills–this was not the business for me. I told my Dad that ers in London, returned to help run the growing business. I didn’t want to work in his business, however: I wanted to Another partner was brought in at a later date when his brother-in-law Wael Hourani joined the company in 2003. do something on my own.” His plans came to fruition during a conversation with “We then became a 100 per cent family-owned business.” His Highness Sheikh Saeed Al Maktoum (brother-in-law of the Ruler of Dubai). When the Sheikh questioned him about what he was doing with his life, GGF said he was ‘We prepare meals in thinking of going into catering. Asked why, he replied that 22 cuisines to feed hospitality food was his passion. “Then let’s start a catering company,” staff three times a day’ the Sheikh suggested. That was the origin of Intercat, now one of Dubai’s largest catering businesses. The company was created in 1992, and won its first contract with the Dubai Ports Authority A key milestone for the growing business came in 1999 when the following year, when GGF was just 23. Starting with Intercat won a contract to supply Dubai Police, the first time just six employees in an office, Intercat now employs 1,300 that a Dubai government institution had outsourced caterstaff, producing 60,000 meals a day which it delivers to 120 ing. “It took two years to convince them that it would be hotels, education institutions and government bodies with cheaper to provide meals for their staff, the police stations and the correction establishments, rather than procure the a fleet of more than 80 vans and trucks. pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance the service entrepreneur 25 ingredients, hire the cooks and handle the logistics themselves. My brother and I personally served food at the counter to convince the senior officers that outsourcing was the way forward.” A year later, the company signed up to feed the staff working for the Burj Al Arab, the world’s first seven-star luxury hotel. Other hospitality contracts have followed, with hotels and resorts groups such as Hilton Group, Rotana and Mövenpick. And in 2008, Intercat landed the contract to provide 4,000 meals three times a day for the enormous Atlantis Hotel at the tip of Palm Jumeirah, the artificial archipelago of islands shaped like a palm tree. “It’s quite a feat to feed the many nationalities working here in Dubai–we prepare meals for 22 different cuisines. And we feed hospitality staff three meals a day, since they are mostly expats who live in accommodation provided at work.” More recently, Intercat has expanded into the restaurant business, initially with Mashawi, a high end Lebanese food chain. The first Mashawi opened in 2005, followed by several more–and even ones in Bahrain and Qatar. Other brands include Toast cafes and the upmarket Burger House restaurant whose signature dish is the Don GGF Corleone Burger. George Farha’s five tips on performance •Be well-capitalised–growth will be much faster if you have enough capital. Without it, there will be delays and performance will suffer. ire an outstanding CFO who can keep the finances under •H control and spot warning signs of underperformance. Finance is everything–it is easy to squander capital. ormulate a strategy–too many entrepreneurs shoot from the hip. •F Decide where you want to be and how you want to get there. tudy your competitors’ performance–and then work out how you •S can beat them. Only by outperforming can you win market share from them. ecome the chief mentor for your managers, so they can help your •B business perform and then take responsibility for it so you can look at new opportunities. ‘The beauty of the laundry business is that it complements the catering operation’ Not content with running only a catering business, GGF created a second company in 1997: Butlers Dry Cleaners & Launderers. This time, the inspiration came from Ali Albwardy, owner of the Spinneys supermarket chain, who suggested that GGF should go into dry cleaning, with collection points in his Spinneys supermarkets. “I knew nothing about dry cleaning, but after studying the laundry and dry cleaning business we went into business. Two years later, he decided it was too small for him, so again I bought him out and ended up owning 100 per cent of the company. The beauty of this business is that it complements the catering operation because most of our clients are interested in both support services.” Hospitality companies are the largest clients for Butlers, but it also provides services for some industrial companies, schools and universities, as well as airlines and luxury golf clubs. It also has retail outlets in several of Dubai’s famous shopping malls. As the business took off, GGF anticipated further expansion by building the largest and most sophisticated laundry and dry cleaning facility in the Gulf whose 400 staff can handle 350,000 pieces of laundry a day. The key to business success is a laser-like focus on performance, GGF says. “We measure, measure, measure everything we do, and monitor key metrics to make sure we are on course for our targets. In the catering business, for 26 the service entrepreneur pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance From left: Dany G.Farha, Wael A.Hourani and George G.Farha example, we measure our yield, our wastage and the productivity of the bakers, butchers and drivers. Then we check that we are achieving our targets for sales and profitability. “In the laundry and dry cleaning business, it’s a science. My brother has spent a lot of time recently doing diagnostics on the cost of cleaning towels and bed-sheets, their weight and the time it takes to process them. Consultants from abroad have analysed the flow through the processing units to see that it is optimal, whether it’s washing, drying, pressing or folding. Benchmarking our performance has shown us to be extremely efficient.” His brother-in-law Wael, who is a Partner, says the 90 per cent customer retention rate is also a good measure of performance. “Our point of difference is that we’re based here in Dubai as owners and we’re on top of the business. Our response to any problem is pretty much instant compared to competitors’ more bureaucratic-style approach. “We see ourselves as partners of the hotels. When the crisis hit Dubai and occupation levels fell, we were prepared to review our menu structure and prices temporarily to help them through.” Recruiting suitable staff is always a problem in the Gulf, with the need to bring people in from abroad and train them. “We end up being our own little internal university,” says brother Dany, founder and also chief operating officer pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance of the Middle East’s largest online recruitment website Bayt.com. “We bring in people with the right attitude and some of the skills we need, and they learn on the job.” Attracting skilled specialists to Dubai is harder as a local regional player, he adds, because big international competitors can bring staff in with promises of repatriation deals. “We have to make sure our staff will be happy here–and that their families will be happy as well.” ‘If you don’t have the right partner, going into other markets can be very tough’ As a successful entrepreneur, GGF has helped foster entrepreneurship in the Gulf. He was a board member of the UAE Chapter of Young Arab Leaders, heading its Entrepreneurship Initiative. He was also a founder member of the first Young Entrepreneurs Organisation in the UAE, becoming its President. “UAE nationals have only very recently started to become entrepreneurs–often after working for family businesses and deciding to create their own company. It is hard to raise the service entrepreneur 27 finance in the region without the support of a family business, and there’s also a lot of bureaucracy and legislation to deal with when establishing a business. I can be an example of success for those thinking of starting something here.” In April 2010, GGF decided that the time had come to expand outside Dubai, and sold a 40.8 per cent stake in the two businesses to QInvest, Qatar’s leading investment bank. “If you don’t have the right partner, going into other markets can be a very tough battle. QInvest was the right partner, because the logical next step was to move into Doha. We’re excited about Doha, because it is developing fast and the FIFA World Cup is coming to Qatar in 2022.” Intercat will open its catering processing unit in Doha in the summer of 2011, and follow it up with two more–in Abu Dhabi and the Saudi city of Dammam. The plan is to build the business for either an IPO or a trade sale to a corporate facilities management services company that wants to add catering and laundry to its offering. “We have grown the business to a point where we could pass it on to an owner who will take it to the next level. So right now, we’re busy building it up for an exit.” Both companies are now run by managing directors from outside the family, with GGF as chairman. But he still regards them as a family business, and pays tribute to the support he has received from family members such as Dany and Wael. 28 the service entrepreneur “When my brother joined me in 1995, he left a USD100,000 a year job at Lehmans in the City to earn USD1,800 a month–a huge pay cut in the heyday of his career. He left his life in London just to come and run a kitchen in Dubai with me.” His wife Suha has also been a huge emotional support, he says–the ‘best partner’ that any busy entrepreneur could ever dream of, who can often see things differently. ‘My father was my brand ambassador, accompanying me to meet potential customers’ “My father, Ghaleb Farha, had his own business, but he supported me–in every way at the start (financially, experience and ambition). He was also essential from a PR standpoint: I was new from London–23 years old, young and single. He gave the business legitimacy. He was my brand ambassador, accompanying me to meetings with potential customers. “We both knew that it would never work if I worked for his business. But he has taken a personal interest in our success, and I have been very lucky to have such support.” pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance insead on performance Leadership for the next generation The performance of good leaders reflects their ability to learn deep lessons from their experiences in life, embody the values and purpose of their organisations and encourage leadership in others GIANPIERO PETRIGLIERI AFFILIATE PROFESSOR OF ORGANISATIONAL BEHAVIOUR INSEAD When people talk about leadership, they tend to associate it with individuals such as chief executives, general managers or well-known politicians. It is a very appealing way of looking at the subject which I call the propaganda of leadership. It is as exciting as it is reassuring, because it takes us back to when we were little and we looked up to individuals who appeared–for good or bad–larger than life. Think of our everyday language. When discussing business, the media often say that under a particular CEO’s leadership, the company achieved a 15 per cent return on investment, or lost 30 per cent market share. Why under CEO X? Why not alongside, regardless of, or even despite? The propaganda of leadership is not just appealing to the press: it is also influential on researchers. A literature review by some colleagues found that over 80 per cent of the published pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance academic studies on leadership essentially equate ‘leadership’ with the activities of the person in a position of authority. As a result, most studies of leadership boil down to looking at what this person does–studying their behaviour and then drawing correlations with some performance measure to see which behaviours produce the best results under certain conditions. Organisations need much more leadership than that provided by the few at the top Both the popular and academic press, in short, often assume a direct causal link between what people in senior management positions do and the current performance of the organisation. This insead on performance 29 raises two questions. First, whether there is such a link–researchers have found it in some studies but not in others. Second, whether leadership in corporations is exercised only in senior management offices. great performance in an organisation. The challenges we face today are so complex and broad that there is no individual with the cognitive capacity or the emotional resilience to deal with them all and to inspire everyone else to do what they think is right. Organisations need much more leadership than that provided by the few at the top. All leaders have one Just because there may not be as thing in common: their direct a link as we imagine between power comes only from senior managers’ behaviour and their their followers organisations’ returns, however, does not mean–as some would have it– that leaders don’t matter. Leaders are Only recently academics, and corporate extremely consequential. Their conseboards, have started to recognise how quence is not just in creating perfordangerous it is to assume that a leader mance, but in shaping the environment is a very special individual who fosters within which performance is pursued. 30 insead on performance I look at leaders as central links in the relationship between organisations’ members’ activities and a broader purpose. And increasingly we recognise that what makes a good leader is the extent to which they enable leadership to emerge at different levels of the organisation. The more people think and act as leaders, the better the company will perform, whether performance is measured in terms of shortterm results or longer-term factors such as innovation, ability to retain talent, or pride in the organisation’s values. Leadership can take many forms, but the key characteristic is that it is an intrinsic property of a group. In any culture, sector or society, wherever there is a group of people pursu- pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance ing a task there will be leadership. It can be provided by an individual who is regarded as superhuman, by a group of people elected democratically or in other ways. But there is no group where there is no leadership, because it fulfils two essential functions: it helps get things done and it represents the group. All leaders have one thing in common: much as they may like to think their power comes from God, exceptional skills, luck, a great idea or hard work, their power comes from one place only, and that is their followers. People like to talk about charismatic leaders who draw people to them through a mixture of magic and authority. But charisma accrues to those who are able to embody authen- pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance tically a cause their followers aspire to be part of. In other words, a leader is a symbol, a story, an embodiment of what people hold dear. The moment that a leader no longer embodies something the followers hold dear, that leader loses his or her appeal, or is sidelined–often very dramatically. You can see that in financial services, where some of the CEOs who were most venerated as exceptional shepherds of incredible organisational performance before the financial crisis then came to be reviled as the people who had landed us all in trouble. Learning for leadership, therefore, takes more than learning to act in a certain way. When I design and direct leadership development programmes, I always centre them around the three key ingredients of genuine leaders’ development: experience, identity and emotions. Research that has analysed what very different leaders have in common is beginning to find that they are able to draw deep lessons from their life experiences. These lessons shape their sense of purpose and the way they operate. Some of that experience may have been tough, involving failure and trauma, but successful leaders are people who have been able to learn lessons from those ordeals that shaped their values, their life purpose and their hopes for the future. We process and learn from experience through the filters of our own history and through the filters of the people around us. To learn the lessons of experience, therefore, you need to understand your identity–the people who shaped you, your education, the companies you worked for. Where you come from historically and where you spend your life (and with whom) are the two big influences on the way you look at reality and act in the world. The other thing you need to learn for leadership is how emotions affect your views, and your relationship with those whom you ask to follow: how do you manage your own emotions and how do you manage others’ emotions? Can you still ask difficult questions when everyone around you is pressing you to provide them with reassuring answers? If you want to learn leadership, it is of course helpful to understand how the theory of leadership has evolved. It is also helpful to develop skills in interpersonal influence–how to manage a team, and to create and sustain a network. And there are skills in selfmanagement–how to avoid kneejerk reactions, how to delegate, how to bite your tongue and let someone do tasks that you may well do faster and better. You have to understand and navigate the forces that make or break leaders But the knowledge and the skills are just the entry ticket to leadership: you have to understand and navigate the forces that make or break leaders. That means learning about how your inner world affects the way you look at the world out there, and how the world out there affects you. Unless you understand that, you can have all the skills in the world but you will not be able to lead. In my research, I say that this understanding of the interaction between the inner world and the social world is learnt in identity workspaces, and there are three ingredients for making a good identity workspace: •A combination of knowledge and skills that allows you to understand your environment and to act competently in it. •A community that sustains your development. Sometimes this means reassuring you, telling you that it is going to be all right; sometimes this means pushing you, saying come on, just get out there. •A rite of passage–the provision of a space where you can enter, experiment and then go out with a broader, wiser, more capable, more resolute perspective. insead on performance 31 Thirty years ago, identity workspaces were provided for most people through a close relationship with their employer. Employees gave their commitment and loyalty and in return employers gave them opportunities to strengthen and develop their sense of self, career ladders to climb and broader opportunities to increase their status. That was the traditional contract. With careers today, the most talented people expect to work in different organisations, changing functions and countries–so places of work no longer function as identity workspaces. This is why people go on leadership development courses to find a place where they can develop the skills, abilities and identities that are necessary to lead and to be regarded as leaders in the contemporary world. One of the key performance metrics today for any CEO is the extent to which they are able to attract and retain talent. But you cannot do that just by showering them with rewards and opportunities; you do it by offering them identity workspaces which allow them to develop the skills and identities that will serve them in the future. Three ingredients for making a good identity workspace •A combination of knowledge and skills–to understand your environment and act competently in it. •A community–to sustain your development. •A rite of passage–a space where you can experiment and emerge more capable. Some companies are very good at developing leadership skills and identities Some companies are very good at that. They say that whether you stay with us for all of your career or go elsewhere, we will help you develop ways that help you to operate in the contemporary business environment. Those companies are regarded as leadership factories– GE, McKinsey and Goldman Sachs have been very good at making sure that even if people leave, they feel the company has helped their development. Doing something similar is often part of the covert agenda of much leadership development, so it is important to understand what sort of identities it is developing. In an identity work- 32 insead on performance pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance space, you can develop completely selfish leaders or you can develop people with an incredible regard for the welfare of the environment in which their organisations operate. So is your organisation like an airport where people come and go–and while they are there, they give and take what they can? Or does your organisation remain within people even when they are no longer working for it? And if it is the latter, the second question is, in what way are you shaping them? What are you teaching them? How are you, either subtly or overtly, helping them answer the questions, what does it mean to lead? What is my duty as a leader? Boards in publicly traded companies are becoming weary of celebrity CEOs This is where the leadership of senior executives matters–a lot. Because, more or less consciously, members of the organisation look at them as role models for how leaders think, what leaders believe, and how they operate. Leadership issues often arise in family firms where the question is pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance see at Google where you have the two founders still leading the company. In family businesses, you often see families destroyed by the choice of the successor: if there are two siblings, the lingering question from very early on is which will be the chosen one. Yet who is the one at Google? Families become even more stressed when there are three or four possible candidates in the next generation. Instead of rejoicing, they find themselves emotionally torn–an enormously painful situation. And if they choose one from the four people who could become the next CEO, they risk giving up three potential futures of the enterprise by choosing the candidate who will make the enterprise look like their vision. An alternative sacrifice would be to abandon looking at leadership as which member of the family will be the preserve of one individual at the the next CEO. But the more impor- expense of others. Instead of picking tant question is how to make sure the one person in the next generation to family continues to exercise leadership groom as the leader, you can develop in the next generation, and what we the leadership of the business so it want that leadership to look, feel and can be shared in ways which involve act like. Often much potential leader- taking different formal roles, and let ship talent is squandered by select- the future emerge from an ongoing ing a candidate who is identical to the vigorous debate rather than a single, present CEO. momentous choice. After all, the future Interestingly, in publicly traded keeps flowing and cannot be predicted, companies, many boards do not want despite our best efforts to assure it once that. They are becoming weary of and for all. celebrity CEOs. They prefer a strong management team where leadership is Gianpiero Petriglieri is Affiliate Professor of Organisational Behaviour at INSEAD, where he distributed. For example, when John directs customised leadership development Mackey, the co-founder of Whole Foods, programmes for executives from a variety appointed a co-CEO, he said that five of industries. He also consults to a range of international organisations on the design people could have the title because the and implementation of programmes for senior team takes decisions by consen- developing high potentials into effective and sus. If you have a team that is diverse responsible leaders. A psychiatrist and former psychotherapist, his research explores–among enough, you will have leaders who other subjects–the influence of unconscious represent the different cultures, values factors in leadership and the emotional dilemmas and identities of today’s diverse work- of high potential managers. force. They will have the perspectives that allow the enterprise to stay committed and moving in a coherent direction. I believe we will increasingly see much less of an obsession in public companies about who is the leader, and much more about the leadership team and how leadership is exercised. There will be more shared titles, as we insead on performance 33 34 the design and lifestyle entrepreneur pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance The design and lifestyle entrepreneur Tricia Guild The founder of a design business has revolutionised the way people think about their living space, giving them access to contemporary lifestyles. Together with her brother, she has created a business that spans the globe and is constantly introducing new collections. Soon after Tricia Guild started her design business in 1970, she opened a shop at the unfashionable end of London’s King’s Road with the aim of helping people create a contemporary lifestyle. Today, Designers Guild turns over more than £50 million a year, operates in 40 markets worldwide and employs more than 280 people. And the original shop—greatly enlarged and with a much wider range of merchandise—is still central to her mission of making a difference for customers by offering them beautiful designs to fit any pocket. languages, because people all over the world are very interested in what we do.” She has also worked with hospitals and hospices in helping create designs that make a difference to the patients. “My experience is that when people love their surroundings, they feel energised. It helps them feel more healthy.” Headquartered in a purpose-built head office, the company has a large distribution centre in West London, as well as offices in Munich and Paris. Its fully comput“We have grown from three to nearly 300 staff, but the erised customer service operation handles over 1,000 orders concept hasn’t changed,” says the striking and vivacious Ms and enquiries daily, processes more than 2 million metres of Guild. “I wanted to create beautiful fabrics that you could fabric and wallpaper annually and despatches orders around buy in a retail environment and see how to use those fabrics the globe through a network of couriers within 24 hours. to create a lifestyle. I always had the view that that would be the way I wanted to work, to show what I was doing.” Designers Guild’s first collection was made up of Indian ‘One important lesson is that hand-blocked printed textiles that Tricia Guild had reyou have to be disciplined and coloured. When the shop opened, it also sold ceramics and selective about what you do’ furniture—already providing an environment to demonstrate her design concepts. More than 40 years later, the company designs and wholesales nearly 9,000 furnishing fabrics, 2,000 wall coverings, upholstery and bed and bath It is a remarkable achievement for a woman who has had no collections throughout Europe and further afield. formal training in design—apart from working with an inteIn addition, Ms Guild has written 15 books on design, rior designer. But Ms Guild’s home environment had been lavishly illustrated with the company’s products in real quite contemporary, and she always knew that she wanted settings to demonstrate how they can be used to create to be involved in design. contemporary lifestyles. “They are published in seven “The fact that I had no formal training has always pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance the design and lifestyle entrepreneur 35 bugged me, because three years at college teaches you a large amount that you can use in this business. It also gives you the freedom to experiment, so that you can make your mistakes before you start a business.” Nevertheless, she quickly learnt valuable lessons that contributed to the success of Designers Guild today. One was that the retail organisation she had created could wholesale the products she sold in the shop, which expanded the business. Another was the realisation that it was not limited to the UK: the first real exhibition was in France in 1974, when the tiny staff headed for Paris. “We loaded up a van and set up the tiniest little exhibition beside some very famous designers, who were very kind to us and introduced us to other people. It was very exciting, and when we signed up our first distributor in France, I realised there was a place for this in Europe. Two years later, we started selling in America—all from this very small shop in the King’s Road.” Ms Guild also had to learn fast on the business side of the company. “Business can’t be separate, but when I started up I had no financial plan. One important lesson is that you have to be disciplined and selective about what you do: you can’t expect things to happen just because they are good. “Going to a bank in my twenties with no financial training was so difficult. I didn’t have the language, and at times they were very difficult. But I had a new business model, and I was determined to make a success of it and be independent. 36 the design and lifestyle entrepreneur “Creative people are often seen as a bit ditsy, but if you’re running a business, that can’t happen. You have to be disciplined with a decent work ethic and be able to multi-task— which women are quite good at.” A critical milestone in the growth of Designers Guild came in 1986, when Ms Guild was joined in the business by her younger brother Simon Jeffreys who became chief executive. A chartered accountant with a business degree, he was working for the accountancy firm Coopers & Lybrand in Hong Kong. “I had taken the company to a certain size with turnover of nearly £4 million a year,” says Ms Guild. “But I needed his brilliant skills to move it on to become what I thought it could be.” ‘I’m very hands-on, but I also love delegating to really good people I trust’ Mr Jeffreys says that he had always wanted to run his own business and was not interested in being just part of a large company. “I could see that Designers Guild had great potential, and the idea of joining her evolved in discussions over a year and a half. pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance “In some ways it was quite a scary decision—moving from a professional career to an entrepreneurial role. But in the end it was a very easy decision to make and since we have always been very close it has been very easy to work together.” His first move was to bring new management skills in to what was still operating as a start-up company run by creative people with little business experience. And with no formal financial planning, budgeting and monitoring, he established a management information system that allowed the company to measure its performance. Ms Guild says that her brother’s arrival preserved Designers Guild as a family business, and that she remains very involved in the business side. But she is now freer to focus on the company’s design performance, which she says is all about quality at every level—creativity, innovation and the service offered to customers. “I’m very hands-on, but I also love delegating to really good people that I trust. The only way we can measure our performance is in sales, so we pay a lot of attention to those figures. But while sales figures can give you guidelines when designing the next collection, they can’t design it. “Every new collection is a risk—you can never know what the response will be. But you can know that you have to be absolutely committed to it. Unlike with fashion, we commit before we show our collections to the outside world. It can take a year to prepare a collection, and we will present it to the board three or four times before launching it. If it is successful, it will be around for five years, perhaps ten.” Constant innovation is part of Designers Guild’s success. From the start Ms Guild worked with artists such as Kaffe Fassett and Lilian Delavoryas, and more recently has added William Yeoward and Jasper Conran fabrics and wallpaper to the company’s distribution. Tricia Guild’s five tips on performance •Focus on quality in all its forms—it is not enough for things to look beautiful, they must perform as they are meant to perform. •Be careful about your business partners—be really fussy on upholding quality and be prepared to change partners who do not meet your standards. •Service is vital—if you promise three-day turn-around, that is what you must deliver. •Be bold—push as far as you can within the resources at your disposal. •Be selective—when designing a product, explore all the options, but then choose the best that you can afford within your budget. ‘I want to see something innovative in every collection... I like feeling being nearer the edge’ Earlier this year, she launched the first collection for the iconic international luxury brand Christian Lacroix under licence, and the company exclusively distributes Ralph Lauren fabrics and wallcoverings in Europe. And in 2006, she created the Royal Collection of Fabrics and Wallpapers in 2008 on behalf of the Royal Household, inspired by the interiors of royal residences such as Buckingham Palace and Windsor Castle. “I want to see something innovative in every collection,” she says, “though not everything works. I like this—I like feeling being nearer the edge.” Brother Simon sees continuing innovation as essential to the growth of the business, particularly after the financial crisis. “Turnover didn’t drop, but our 15 per cent annual pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance the design and lifestyle entrepreneur 37 growth plateaued for a couple of years. We’re growing again, with turnover up 8 per cent this year to £53 million— but I want to get back to 15 per cent.” He sees opportunities to expand sales worldwide by distributing brands such as the Royal Collection and Christian Lacroix through new outlets. There is also great potential, he believes, in the Essentials range of plain and semi-plain fabrics that are relatively inexpensive, the Kids collections for children of all ages and the edgy Unlimited products for the young and the young at heart. ‘I work because I love what I do, and I love the fact that people enjoy what I do’ “We also have a growing e-commerce business for the Bed and Bath range in the UK and USA which we want to extend to Europe. And there is growing interest in the emerging markets such as China where we are seen as a luxury brand in home furnishing. Our Chinese distributor is now producing bed linen under licence for us.” The two owners both describe Designers Guild as a family business. Noone from the next generation is working for the company, but they both extend the definition to the team working for the company. “People stay here a long time,” says Ms Guild. “We have celebrated careers here of 20, 25 and even 30 years, and we 38 the design and lifestyle entrepreneur make it a warm place to work. We expect our staff to be disciplined and hard-working, and it can be all-embracing— but a lot of my team come back after having children.” One of brother Simon’s innovation on joining the company was to make the business side much more inclusive. “Like many start-ups, it was a bit too secretive about the financial side. We now talk to staff about all aspects of the business—they get daily sales data at their desks. I like to be open and transparent, even when things are not going well. The recent recession was just such a time, but Designers Guild managed to avoid lay-offs and even found money for a small pay rise. Staff also participate in the success of the company through share option schemes and profit-sharing for managers and those above. Both say they want the company to remain a family business and carry on its unique approach. “We get approaches all the time,” says Ms Guild. “If an approach was right and we both felt it was exciting, we’d probably look at it—not to do so might be closing off a fantastic opportunity. “It’s good to be open-minded, but we would not want to make compromises.” Simon adds that it is important to have the right people in the business. “We want it to carry on—some of the directors could do my job.” Ms Guild has revolutionised the way that people think about their living space, but she is not about to step back from the front line. “I work because I love what I do, and I love the fact that people enjoy what I do. “Noone would ask a painter when he plans to retire. I absolutely love what I am doing right now.” pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance Pictet on performance Managing risk to achieve performance Private investors have significant advantages over institutions when it comes to portfolio management, so long as they understand that mathematical modelling must be augmented by judgment and experience YVES BONZON CHIEF INVESTMENT OFFICER PICTET WEALTH MANAGEMENT Finding the right balance between performance and risk requires judgment, experience and an understanding that today’s opportunities are often very different from those of yesterday. Investment philosophy How we manage the trade-offs between risk and return reflects Pictet’s investment philosophy and beliefs. Creating sustainable investment performance and solid risk management are the twin pillars of our philosophy; in pursuit of those aims, we draw on high-quality advice to select the right investments for the needs of clients. As for our beliefs, we like applied mathematics–our approach uses quite a lot of quantitative modelling. But this research work is supported by two other very important principles. First, we believe there is always a role for judgment: we do not apply mathematics in a vacuum, but try to under- pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance stand what is happening in the real world. Second, we believe in making our recommendations with a forwardlooking perspective. On the role of judgment, it is essential not to cede control to models, particularly when assessing risk. Models can seriously underestimate the risks of particular types of asset, as we saw in the sub-prime crisis, especially when the approach relies on past correlations. Financial institutions that relied on value-at-risk models found they were overtaken by risks thought to be well outside the probability of occurrence–the so-called black swans. The mathematical tools are helpful, but it is all about interpreting the results and understanding what can go wrong. A forward-looking approach is also essential, yet too many investment institutions rely on past performance, pictet on performance 39 rather than a static one. When new asset classes such as private equity or Asian real estate investment trusts emerge, those who buy into them early usually benefit most from their initial performance. International portfolio diversification was very successful when there were barriers to capital flows, but since those barriers fell, the returns in a globalised world have become correlated in different markets. Another example is provided by stock selection, where performance can Too many investment fluctuate tremendously when market institutions rely on past drivers change. In the early 1990s, I performance, regardless of was seen as a stock-picker because my current valuations economics background told me that concepts such as the return on capital invested and weighted return on capiRelying on the past also ignores the tal were important. At the time, most evolution of the investment land- institutional investors did not pay scape. New regulations, changes in attention to these factors and this led investment classes, improvements in to stocks being neglected as overpriced, investor knowledge and other devel- when in fact they were deploying their opments require a dynamic approach, capital at returns much higher than its regardless of current valuations. Modern portfolio theory relies on underlying hypotheses which are such a simplification of a complex world that they are often scarcely credible. I have been shocked at the extent to which institutional investors may rely on extrapolations of return data from the past, without considering whether the assets are cheap or expensive. cost. When investors came to understand the importance of the cost of capital in long-term performance, the anomaly disappeared–and with it my stock-picking edge. Markets change Markets do change dramatically. When the dominant pools of capital in the 1990s were long-only funds, stock valuations and prices did not move in the same way as they have done in the last decade when hedge fund managers have dominated the market. The market drivers are constantly changing and investment processes cannot therefore be static. Good investors have to change their approach to be effective in the new environment. The example of Warren Buffett is instructive: people believe his success as an investor has been to apply the lessons of Benjamin Graham. But the markets he operates in are very different to those when Graham wrote his guide. If Buffett had applied the investment principles of Graham, he wouldn’t have generated great returns. He was smart enough to adapt those principles to deploy capital very profitably for Berkshire Hathaway shareholders. Our central belief is that we should use mathematical models with caution Structural breaks such as these are much harder to model and their impact is felt over longer time periods–in an industry where time horizons and incentives are much too short. So our central investment belief is that we should use mathematical modelling with caution, thinking about the future and movements in the investment environment. And we are pragmatic about how we invest, because even if over the longer term economic fundamentals on the pricing of assets prevail, there are shortterm factors that influence markets which are hard to predict. 40 pictet on performance pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance An edge for private investors In a fast-evolving world, private investors do have some advantages in terms of both performance and risk when compared with investment institutions. Perhaps the most important is that they are not constrained by rules and regulations. The financial crisis in 2008 was made possible because of regulatory actions that allowed banks to hold triple-A senior structured credit with very little capital, and forced institutional investors searching for yield to invest in instruments that appeared to meet rules about ratings. These ratings turned out to be based on fake mathematical models that blew up. Private investors often underestimate the strength of their own balance sheets Private investors have a significant advantage, because they are not forced by securities regulations to make sub-optimal investment decisions. This allows them to make significant hedges against such investment trends if they can handle the apparently difficult short-term results. With appropriate support from advisers such as Pictet, they also have the advantage of a relatively concentrated investment process, where a limited number of individuals on an investment committee can take decisions that may be difficult to live with for a period. Another advantage for private investors is they often underestimate the strength of their own balance sheets. In a leveraged world, it is easier for them to be counter-cyclical: when the world is blowing up and there are a host of forced sellers who are scared to death, a private investor with no debt does not need to follow the herd and sell. There is an opportunity to be in the unique position of holding positions, looking beyond the valley to the rebound and taking advantage of it–a pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance luxury not always available to regulated institutions. One important role that we play at Pictet is to guide clients in making these decisions, by helping them to understand the risk issues and their impact on performance. The growing body of knowledge in behavioural finance has shown the emotional biases that influence investment decisions. For example, it can be very hard to take decisions that fly in the face of market sentiment, such as the belief in the merits of sub-prime credits in the run-up to the crisis. Solid long-term performance may involve periods of short-term underperformance that tempt investors to sell before recovery. Sometimes our mental accounting processes put more emphasis on cost than on future return prospects. Risk overlay strategy One very important part of any portfolio, we believe, is the risk overlay strategy to hedge against risks in asset allocation and currencies while maintaining performance. Clients often ask whether the cost of this is justified, because often those risks do not materialise for many years and it appears to be a needless expense. But just as drivers only realise the benefits of their car insurance when they have a crash after years with no accidents, the risk overlay proves its value when it is most needed. Our job is to hold the hands of clients to help them to understand these emotional biases. It is a significant component of the wealth manager’s services to be able to do this when discussing portfolios and market developments. There can be significant gains in both risk and returns from having a more structured view of how human emotions work in finance, so that they do not negatively influence investment decisions. The clear understanding of the influence of risk on decision-making that Pictet brings to every private client is an essential contributor to maximising sustainable long-term performance. Pictet’s investment beliefs •Mathematical models are useful tools in producing sustainable investment performance, but they are not enough: judgment and experience are essential, especially in assessing risk. •A forward-looking approach is also essential in creating investment portfolios. Too many investors rely on extrapolations of past performance, ignoring fundamentals such as valuations. •The investment landscape is constantly evolving, with dramatic changes that mean that today’s opportunities may be very different to yesterday’s. A dynamic approach to investment is required. •Investment performance is easier to achieve for investors who are not bound by regulations. Such regulations force institutions to make sub-optimal decisions, running with the herd when holding positions may produce higher returns. •Maximising sustainable long-term performance is easier if investors understand the emotional biases that can distort decision-making–for example, the temptation to sell when going through periods of short-term underperformance. pictet on performance 41 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We are grateful to Dominique Jacquet, Gianpiero Petriglieri, Subramanian Rangan, Ludo Van der Heyden and Theo Vermaelen of INSEAD for their insights on performance. We should also like to thank the entrepreneurs who generously shared their experiences with us: George G. Farha, his brother Dany and brother-in-law Wael Hourani; Tricia Guild and her brother Simon Jeffreys; and Dr Rolland-Yves Mauvernay and his son Thierry. Last but not least, we are indebted to Didier Drogba for giving us a different perspective on performance. Pictet & Cie 42 acknowledgements pictet report | april 2011 focus on performance Pictet & Cie Founded in 1805 in Geneva, Pictet & Cie is today one of Switzerland’s largest private banks, and the leading independent asset management specialist in Europe, with CHF372 billion (EUR297 billion) in assets under management and custody at 31 December 2010. Pictet & Cie is a partnership owned and managed by eight general partners with unlimited liability for the bank’s commitments. The Pictet Group, which is based in Geneva, employs more than 3,000 staff. The Group has offices in Barcelona, Basel, Dubai, Florence, Frankfurt, Geneva, Hong Kong, Lausanne, London, Luxembourg, Madrid, Milan, Montreal, Nassau, Paris, Rome, Singapore, Turin, Tokyo and Zurich. Disclaimer This publication is issued and distributed by Pictet & Cie based in Geneva, Switzerland. It is not aimed at or intended for distribution to or use by retail clients, or any person or entity who is a citizen or resident of, or located in, any locality, state, country or other jurisdiction where such distribution, publication, availability or use would be contrary to law or regulation. The information and material presented in this publication are provided for information purposes only and are not to be used or considered as an offer or invitation to buy, sell or subscribe to any securities or other financial instruments. Furthermore, the information expressed herein reflects a judgement as at the original date of publication and is subject to change without notice. This publication and its contents may be quoted provided that the source is indicated, but it may not be reproduced or distributed, either in part or in full, without prior authorisation from Pictet & Cie. All rights reserved. Copyright © 2011 Pictet & Cie. www.pictet.com
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