BEE Enterprisers: The value drivers and your business purposes

From a business perspective, it is useful to focus the efforts of all employees around these value drivers. Every employee should know how their role contributes to the overall value of the business and how they can increase this value while containing or reducing costs. The resulting focus of the company’s resources around these simple (but not simplistic) issues allows the business to have a constant dialogue on how to achieve their goals, and strategy becomes a living reality rather than a dead document in the CEO’s filing cabinet. Read the rest of this entry »

BEE so called “Business Transformation”

Becoming an empowered company is not good enough. Soon all your competitors will have achieved similar status. Your company will need to do better than that. Whoever has undertaken the transformation process in the best way will be the winners, not those who have merely transformed. The key lies in transforming your business to become black empowered while simultaneously creating a sustainable competitive advantage. Read the rest of this entry »

Typical BEE Business Partners

There is much detail in this section. It is, arguably, one of the most important issues in the context of BEE. BEE, and particularly ownership, has developed a bad name because the wrong partners have been sought. It is all very well to have a paternalistic approach and give ownership to staff members or some unfortunate person, but is this a sound business principle? It may be, but normally it is not. The point is, if an empowerment deal is not based on sound business principles, then a sustainable relationship is unlikely. Read the rest of this entry »

South African Politics of Transition and Negotiation

Faced with both domestic and international pressures, the South African state was “substantially weakened” by the late 1980s and early 1990s. As Pierre du Toit notes, many activities were beyond the reach of state control: corruption, dirty tricks, and clandestine murder among them. Thus the prospect of a negotiated settlement brought great risk (the potential loss of hegemony) as well as opportunity (the prospect of stemming economic losses and maintaining political control) for the government, as it did for the ANC. Nonetheless, both parties anticipated that they might use their positions and the perceived weakness of the other party to gain from negotiation. Read the rest of this entry »

South African Race and the Economy: Whither Redistribution?

Since large residual white populations remained in southern Africa after independence, a considerable degree of accommodation has been required to reduce conflict between the owners of the resources and the new majority “owners” of the state. South Africa’s 4.5 million whites continue to dominate industry, commercial agriculture, the financial sector, mining, and the vast majority of agricultural lands and resources. Read the rest of this entry »

Application of BEE Management for Qualified Small Enterprise Control (QSE) continued

Succession planning

A QSE that is a larger organisation with a formal management structure will have various top management positions available. In this scenario, succession planning is paramount to successful BEE implementation. Succession planning involves considering age, skills requirements and the interests of the employees. Read the rest of this entry »

Application of BEE Management for Qualified Small Enterprise Control (QSE)

Depending on the size of a business, the management control provision presents an interesting challenge in the QSE environment. Many QSEs have a single owner who retains sole management control over the entity. The size of the business does not warrant a second top manager. In practical terms, the business also does not have the cash flow to employ a Black person of the calibre comparable to corporate business. Read the rest of this entry »

South African Practical BEE Socio-Economic Development

A crucial error in socio-economic development is not asking the communities what they need. One-sided decisions on contributions to beneficiaries are often counterproductive because the people may, for example, want a bridge over the stream to get to town more easily, whereas the company instead builds a school that the community cannot service with teachers. Read the rest of this entry »

Opec’s Conspiracy: High prices of oil

The whole week hiking price of oil, nobody can stand still. We need to find out who is indeed stimulate it.

A week after failing to deflate record oil prices at a summit in Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest crude producers and consumers will get another chance to tackle the problem at a new meeting this week.

More than 3 000 delegates, including leading corporate and political figures, are to meet at the 19th World Petroleum Congress (WPC) in Madrid, which runs from tomorrow to Thursday after an official opening reception yesterday.

“It’s the Olympics of the oil and gas industry,” said Pierce Riemer, the director of the WPC. Read the rest of this entry »

Do you know how to prepare for a BBBEE Rating?

It is common practice for your BBBEE rating to coincide with your financial year end. As your BBBEE rating is only valid for 1 year, this is the opportune time to seriously consider your BBBEE rating.As the leading empowerment consultancy in the industry we have the deepest experience in interpreting what qualifies, and what supporting evidence is needed, for your BBBEE scorecard. We have the knowledge to be able to provide you with the tools and information needed to build a comprehensive Pre-Audit pack for the rating process.

The Pre-Audit pack will help you to put together the qualifying data that will be needed for the auditing process. We will help you to understand what supporting evidence is needed for the rating agencies check list. By doing this you will understand what qualifies and what doesn’t qualify for rating. Read the rest of this entry »

South African Global Strengths

The strength of a country and/or a business organisation, and therefore the strength of its strategy, is created by its human capital. At the heart of strategic thinking lies the purpose of preserving the environment: at the macro-level, preservation of the economy, whilst, at the micro-level, preservation of the industry participants. Few firms think about this. Individual agendas focus on maximising profits and, in neo-liberal market economics, maximising shareholder value at the expense of social values. Yet contributing towards industry and economic preservation benefits a nation in the long term and gives it economic strength, as well as the wherewithal for competing on the global stage. Read the rest of this entry »

Using strategy to play the globalisation game

Sun Tzu’s advice to make one’s position unassailable assumes critical proportions for an emerging nation like South Africa, faced with stiff global competition not only from the well-established and First World nations of the world, but also from other developing countries. The world’s more advanced and wealthy nations are deeply entrenched in the global system, and manipulate it for their own benefit. They virtually control it, and have often come under intense criticism for practising double standards, particularly in their application of such issues as, for example, international trade.’

Other emerging nations, as well as the poorer countries of the world, also want their slice of the global pie and their share of global resources. They too possess a desire to improve the standard of living of their citizens, thereby improving their position in the global (or at least their region’s) economic rankings. For any emerging nation to successfully play the globalisation game, there are a number of strategic principles, identified by Sun Tzu, that should be followed. Read the rest of this entry »

Guidelines for Shaping Strategic Thought (No 3 4 & 5)

Investment No. 3: Spend resources to secure your leadership pipeline

Any South African firm today is really an emerging globaliser. Therefore, it has to ensure that it can develop great leaders and, indeed, a succession of them. There is always the temptation for a senior executive or an executive team to focus on building a legacy based on their own policies and achievements, rather than establishing a pipeline of leaders. Establishing a leadership pipeline is a strategic activity built over the long term and is the result of a cumulative process. Read the rest of this entry »

Guidelines for Shaping Strategic Thought (No 1 & 2)

Investment No.1: Invest in time and resources that take a global viewpoint

This does not necessarily mean having business representation in multiple geographies, but it does mean treating the world globally and not multi-domestically. South African business organisations need to take a global view of their business and understand the global dynamics of their industries, especially in relation to the development and implementation of company strategy and the search for competitive advantage. Even companies that are operating purely in the domestic business environment have to take this approach, as globalisation will impact on the way they do business. Part of this global viewpoint is being realistic. Read the rest of this entry »

Guidelines for Shaping Strategic Thought continue…

One of the major problems facing strategic thinkers is the whole issue of competitive advantage. According to strategy guru Richard D’Aveni, in most industries the days of permanent competitive advantages are long gone, because of the nature of what he calls `hypercompetition’.2 D’Aveni contends that the best one can hope for is an ongoing series of temporary advantages, and that that is whatstrategists should be aiming at. This has led many organisations to move from seeking immediate competitive advantage to the development of long-term relationships with customers in the belief that opportunities for the creation of advantage will arise within the relationship. Allied to this is the belief that customers are company assets that need nurturing, rather than income sources that are there to be exploited. Also, more organisations are beginning to place greater value on customer advocates than on powerful management teams. In terms of customer loyalty, greater emphasis is being placed on moving customers up the loyalty ladder, until they become advocates of the company and its products.’ Read the rest of this entry »

Shaping a new breed of South African manager for the global challenge part 11

11. Be prepared to adapt the supply chain

A company’s supply chain should reflect the strategic initiative it takes in its attempts to outmanoeuvre its opposition. Because the supply chain impacts heavily on costs, customer service, asset productivity and revenue, it must play a key role in company efforts at creating an ongoing, seamless transition of responsibilities. This means that customers should perceive a ‘business-as-usual’ focus. Essentially, the supply chain should be assisting the company in searching for competitive advantage, and sustaining it for as long as realistically possible. Read the rest of this entry »

Shaping a new breed of South African manager for the global challenge part 10

The problem in most organisations seems to be that value innovation is kept at the corporate level and does not permeate the entire organisation. Employees need to see themselves as a critical resource in the job that they do, not just for the organisation, but also for themselves. Put simply, if an organisation creates an environment in which value innovation is encouraged and rewarded, the participating individual’s self-worth will improve, which in turn will have a positive spin-off on job satisfaction, job involvement, and, ultimately, customer satisfaction and loyalty. Read the rest of this entry »

Shaping a new breed of South African manager for the global challenge part 7

5. Leverage diversity

One of the most powerful tools of innovative thinking in the South African workplace is that of diversity. In South Africa, with its apartheid past, the temptation is to focus on cultural diversity in order to try to forge a clearer understanding between the various cultures of South Africa. The Rainbow Nation is well represented in business organisations, thereby presenting our companies with a great opportunity for the generation of ideas. However, the prudent manager will appreciate that workplace diversity also covers age, ethnicity, ancestry, gender, physical abilities and qualities, race, sexual orientation, educational background, geographical location, income, marital status, military experience, religious beliefs, parental status and work experience, amongst others. Read the rest of this entry »

Shaping a new breed of South African manager for the global challenge part 5

These are but two examples of a process that was repeated throughout the entire company with stunningly positive results. However, the key to success in an exercise of this nature lies in the extent to which management rethinks the view it has of its business, as well as the extent to which it is prepared to bring its people into the process. In the above examples, subsequent organisational climate surveys indicated a greater feeling of achievement and job-fulfilment in this organisation. Job satisfaction improved, as did customer loyalty. Ceteris paribus, a contribution was being made to the maximisation of shareholder value and a win—win relationship created between these two elements of modern-day capitalism. Read the rest of this entry »

Shaping a new breed of South African manager for the global challenge part 4

Fortunately, management realised that if things continued in the way they had for decades, the company would be vulnerable to attack by global predators. This was of particular concern, as foreign competitors were beginning to eye South Africa’s small but potentially good pickings. In addition to this, global customers such as Johnson & Johnson were beginning to demand justification for their local subsidiary retaining its South African supplier, instead of plugging into the global supply network.

Essentially, it took threats from major customers to bring home to this company the gravity of the situation. Persuading management to think carefully on how they saw themselves, the company and its role in the marketplace, solved the problem. After careful thought, management reached the conclusion that its company was more than simply a manufacturer and distributor of packaging. Read the rest of this entry »

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