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Extra10/22/2009 12:01 AM ET

Wall Street run amok? Blame Harvard

A Harvard Business School alumnus argues that the brand of business taught today at his alma mater and elsewhere needs a serious overhaul.

By Charles H. Green, Businessweek

Earlier this month, Michael Moore's new movie, "Capitalism: A Love Story," spooled out in theaters nationwide. Like most of Moore's films, it will likely do well -- spectacularly so for a documentary.

It will also likely stoke the Main Street sentiment that Wall Street is a den of iniquity or even something worse.

How did this schism come about? Just where did Wall Street go wrong? It's popular to blame misaligned incentives, lack of regulation or just plain greed. Those would be conveniently simple explanations. We could just fix incentives, regulate more and prosecute the guilty.

The truth is, sadly, more complex, but it boils down to this: Harvard Business School is to blame. Not solely and specifically HBS, but HBS as representative of business's best thinking and the preferred finishing school for the American System of Free Enterprise. Our best and brightest did it.

Harvard Business School led the charge away from an approach to business centered on relationships and commerce and toward one rooted in markets and competition. It promised us competitive advantage and efficiency, and it delivered.

But those benefits came at a cost. The cost included a Hobbesian view of business -- nasty, brutish and every man for himself -- and a rejection of the idea that ultimately we're all in this together. Which is precisely what we do not need at this time of increasing global interdependence.

How did this happen?

In 2006, I attended my 30-year reunion at Harvard Business School. A few things had changed visibly.

The fading role of experience

In the mid-1970s, HBS viewed itself, and was viewed, as graduating leaders of industry. Management consulting and investment banking together were the hot new segments, but they still employed only about a quarter of total new graduates (a proportion that roughly doubled over the next few decades).

The curriculum had a limited number of courses. Faculty members, many with significant business experience, took pride in referencing concepts across courses.

Most cases (remember, HBS uses the case method of instruction) personalized the manager's role. They'd begin with "As Joe gulped down his first coffee, he pondered the situation of . . . " and ended with "What should Joe do? What would you do?"

For three cases a day, five days a week, for two years, this was the intensely pragmatic approach HBS taught us: What is the problem, and what should Joe/you do about it?

Today, HBS offers many more courses. There is less cross-referencing, so the experience is less integrated. Faculty members are more likely to be professional academics. Fewer have degrees in business, and they are less likely to have business experience.

But most interestingly, Joe is reportedly gone from the cases. In his place? Structural analyses of competitive dynamics and business redesign through markets and outsourcing.

Growing focus on competition

Joe's absence reflects the two major intellectual trends of our time: a view of strategy as competition (think sustainable competitive advantage) and a view of business as optimizing systems (think business process re-engineering and outsourcing).

The competitive view literally redefined suppliers and customers as subcategories of competitors. So we learned to compete with our customers. The process view replaced markets with organizations. So we now outsource human resources in the name of efficiency (and, tellingly, speak of employees as "human capital").

Video: Why Harvard deserves the blame

Harvard Business School was a leader in the New Strategy thinking and a significant participant in the Business Process movement. This view of business is less about commerce, more about competition; less about managers, more about management; less about relationships, more about systems and processes.

In this worldview, "business ethics" is an oxymoron, not because of bad behavior but because ethics can't even exist apart from some notion of a "relationship" to something or someone else. Subordinating everything to shareholder value is, literally, anti-ethical.

Mortgages gone wild

One example is the mortgage industry. It was completely redesigned since the 1980s along good HBS guidelines -- to maximize efficiency, lower costs and increase liquidity. Collateral damage: no relationships, skewed incentives, incompetent regulation and greed run amok.

Meanwhile, the world is moving in precisely the opposite direction. The salient fact of business nowadays is that it's all connected. In a connected world, a focus on competitive relationships is no longer useful. What we need are connectivity, trust, and collaboration. And it starts with the way we think. Which means Harvard and other business schools have a huge obligation to correct their teachings.

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HBS needs to teach less competitive differentiation and more collaborative value-adding; less how to win supply-chain negotiations and more how everyone gains by operating as collaborators; less about transactions, more about relationships; less about winning individually and more about succeeding jointly.

Where's a good place to start? We could do worse than to bring back Joe.

Charles H. Green is the founder of TrustedAdvisor Associates and a co-author of "The Trusted Advisor." He is a 1976 graduate of Harvard Business School.

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#196
Sunday, November 08, 2009 8:45:30 AM
I would agree with ponderosa that technology has played a role. People and relationships have been many times replaced by text messages and emails in the last few decades. I see sales people trying to negotiate agreements by email all the time, they usually fail. I would also agree that not much has chained by way of the morays and norms of doing business since 1973. The biggest changes came out of the industrial revolution and we have been living out of that same model ever since. I would have to disagree on what constitutes "pushing the edge of the envelope", however. Initiative, innovation, creativity and professional discipline are not the same thing as cutting corners, managerial manipulation, shorting stake holders and putting individual profits over the health of the organization. Competitive greatness is not a zero sum game either, where everyone fights for a piece of the pie until there is none left. My father worked in a steel mill at age 14, I've heard the "pushing the edge" stories first hand. One of my first business mentors used to say, "In business you must lie to get ahead." True, you will never remove dishonesty and manipulation from the human condition, but the tolerance level of it in the market place can be changed. When professionals no longer get a pat on the back or financial reward for such behaviors but rather held truly accountable from their own peers, the direction will shift.
Thursday, November 05, 2009 11:06:41 PM
Topcat2,

htdjpf is correct.

Many reasonable and logical statements have been presented by both Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh, but you don't look at WHAT is being said, just WHO is saying it - sounds like you're too busy trying to talk over everyone that doesn't agree with you.


Thursday, November 05, 2009 10:57:25 AM

From '74 for 31 years I worked for two global corporations.  My opinion is that business ethics have not changed.   Then as now, those that "push the envelope" often come out ahead. I did witness the intrusion of the MBA and the computer simultaneously (and cell phone).  Looking back at that period I do think the business world was changed by this.   The change was a move away from higher reliance on personal relationships to the cold (but no less subject to unethical manipulation) world of graphs, numbers, micromanagement and never ending fad management theories.   Harvard teachers shouldn't be slammed for making our ethics worse but rather for failing to make it better!

 

Thursday, November 05, 2009 9:17:57 AM
I worked for a well known company who's management has a very arrogant way of thinking. The premise is and still remains, "I don't have to know the product , I'm a professional manager". Their mindset and with dreadful decision making has hurt the company deeply and all who work there are asking why they are trying to run the business into the ground. I've spoken with people in Europe and I get the same feedback. I'm so glad I'm retired and not one of those who have to watch this company self destruct .
#192
Thursday, November 05, 2009 7:25:20 AM
I would suggest that most higher learning institutions suffer from the shift in focus that you have described. Historically, higher learning, especially at the university level, focused on character at least as much as knowledge if not more...much as you have described with HBS. Today, the focus is almost totally on knowledge, systems and process. Many leaders seem to acknowledge this, even the president in a speech I heard recently stated that education in the US needs a paradigm shift back to principled and leadership driven approach. Now that we are so self-aware, the real question is what will we do about it?
Wednesday, November 04, 2009 8:59:02 AM

This is the general problem with academia, no real world experience in their field of "expertise." The PhD world is all about the mantra of the thesis and research where reality is defined by the results of your t-test and your Ho and Ha. As an example, it is one thing to teach Bernoulli's theory of why planes fly and actually land a plane on the Hudson River when you have to.

 

This has resulted in too many CEO's that got their business "wings" in Mircosoft Filght Simulator versus actually developing and selling the products their companies produce and meeting and servicing their customers. In most cases they vastly overrate their knowledge and value to the organization.  And as far as having vision goes, for most of them it is usually something they have checked once a year at their optomitrist.

 

If Havard is the cause of all of this, we need to get out the pitchforks and torches and march on the place today. Of course, we have a prime example of this "all theory no experience" in the White House today with a Havard grad. As they say in Texas,  big hat no cows. You may have hated W, but at least he knew the difference between a steer and a bull.

Wednesday, November 04, 2009 7:47:47 AM
The morals of the country have dipped to an all-time low! The country that has promoted freedom of the individual to such an extent that it has forgotten the group. The concept Economic Darwinism seems plausible in the intellectual sense but not the social consequences. Having to care about someone else creates a weakness in their thinking instead of a strength. Remember that christmas is coming soon. Watch "A Christmas Carol" a Dickens classic! Is this the type of capitalism that we wish to return to!?
#189
Saturday, October 31, 2009 6:52:16 PM
I am a 1974 MBA from the Sloan School at Cornell and while Cornell has not completely abandon ethics as a basis for a business education, it is a very different approach than I studied.  In my class, several students were actually terminated for breaches of the ethics standards of the school.  Today they might be applauded for their ingenuity.  Great, thought provoking article.
#188
Thursday, October 29, 2009 2:55:07 PM
When industry turned their operations over to the MBA degree, America Industry LOST.  When liberals took over our institutions of higher learning, America LOST. 
Thursday, October 29, 2009 1:17:13 PM
The incentive for maximum profit based on short term performance will always skew management thinking and in fact has contributed to the demise of the US as an economic power.  Wall St. demands for ever increasing revenue and profit coupled with reduced cost means that companies want to sell everything but make nothing.  Cost, in the form of human capital and infrastructure is now too risky to keep on the balance sheet and drags down earnings due to depreciation, salary costs, fringe benefits, etc.  It's like Gordon Gecko in Wall St., "We make nothing but we own everything".  It seems like the Wall St. mentality is to drive everything to the highest return on capital.  Well, construction and retail grocery are notoriously low margin businesses.  Given this mindset, all high capital / low margin companies should stop the business they are in and become bank holding companies using other people's money to buy and sell while making money on the transactions.  Another wise saying coming from Hollywood in Trading Places, "It doesn't matter if our clients make money or lose money, we at Duke & Duke still get our commission".
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