The Nokia transaction is especially vexing to those who saw this company as a counter model to the view that the best that a small, hi-tech savvy country (such as Finland) can expect is to develop great technology and IP, which is then sold to one of the world's hi tech behemoths (read Oracle, Google, Microsoft and the like). Au contraire, it was believed, it is possible for a great small country company to succeed as a world-beating manufacturer and sale of branded products. After all, it is in ongoing manufacture and sales, rather than in a one-off exit via sale or acquisition, where a company will be most successful in the long run. Moreover, it is difficult to create a "national champion" in a start-up that is sold, no matter what the price. Given the importance of nations to be able to point to hi-tech "national champions", the rise and fall of Nokia in the mobile phone and smart phone business is especially disheartening.
A major argument made in explaining the rise and fall of such companies is that they were doomed from the outset because of their location. That is to say, a headquarters located in Finland or Canada is simply too detached from the broader ecosystem that is necessary for it to keep its hand on the pulse on the dynamics of the industry. Stated otherwise, when the company's headquarters is removed from, e.g., Silicon Valley or Seattle/Richmond, and even if the company can overcome the risk of "company town" complacency (witness Kodak and Rochester, New York), there is not enough systematic creative tension to enable the company to maintain a dominant position.
If all of this be true, then it suggests that small, savvy hi tech countries may well have limited chances of ever succeeding in the hi-tech Premier League. At their best, start-ups will continue to be acquired, enriching the owners of the start-up (and giving a one-time tax boost to the host country's coffers), but doing little for sustained long-term growth. In certain circumstances, a manufacturing niche might be developed. I am thinking here especially of the generic drug business, where India and Israel have continued to do well. Where there is no Big Pharma industry to serve as a counter-weight in such countries, talented generic drug companies have a chance to do well. But the generic drug business is a special case and there may not be many other industries where such development of niche manufacturing companies is possible. There is also the example of Taiwan, which has done such a marvellous job at being the hi-tech manufacturer for the world, but it has done much less well at selling its own products on a branded basis.
All of this leads to the "elephant in the room" question—so what about Samsung? The response is that Samsung may well have created the kind of ecosystem, similar to Silicon Valley, necessary for ongoing success. In that respect, Samsung is not Nokia or BlackBerry. After all, as we observed above, the predominance of the US ecosystem was not preordained nor will it necessarily continue. In addition to South Korea, think China and its hi tech industries. But the observations made above do counsel caution for companies in most countries, even with the best technology and R&D, about how far they can expect to leverage these developments into on-going manufacturing success.
Neil, the days of national champions are over in this field. The only companies that can succeed in the long run are those that are inherently international. Microsoft is HQd in Redmond but its research is now worldwide and that is what has to happen if you are to get the huge pools of best talent.
ReplyDeleteUmmm... Japan?
ReplyDelete"Is it possible for a great small country company to succeed as a world-beating manufacturer and sale of branded products"--Yes it is. Nokia failed not because it is in Finland but because it missed the boat on implementing a new product type (smartphone) that came to dominate the market. I can off the top of my head mention 3 world-beating companies from the country where I grew up: Lego, Novo Nordisk, Oticon. It must also be said, as one of the other comments pointed out, that these companies, while based in Denmark, are thoroughly international in their outlook and operations.
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