Breaking up is hard to do, but it can help a diversified company adapt to a new ecosystem
Why would a giant corporation with a legendary history suddenly decide to split itself up?
It’s been happening a lot lately. General Electric, once the epitome of a sprawling conglomerate, is splitting into three stand-alone health care, energy, and aerospace corporations. The Kellogg Company is trifurcating as well, while Johnson & Johnson is splitting in two: one company for pharmaceuticals and one for consumer products.
What drives companies, some that date back more than a century, to transform themselves in such a radical way? Did the anticipated benefits of “synergy†and diversification become a drain on profits and corporate value? Was it buyer’s remorse for acquisitions that went bad?
In a new paper, Robert Burgelman argues that the decision to split often reflects a process that’s analogous to biological adaptation and the evolution of new species. Like living organisms, he says, corporations are constantly adapting to changes in their environment. If those changes push different business segments in diverging and even conflicting directions, a company may need to evolve into a different — and smaller — kind of species.
“I am an evolutionary organization theorist,†says Burgelman, a professor of organizational behavior at Stanford Graduate School of Business. “The splits of many multibusiness corporations involve a form of corporate speciation. A corporation that was previously viable reaches a point where the ecosystems of its different businesses have diverged and the CEO can no longer develop a viable strategy for all of them. The original species needs to split into multiple new corporate species that are better able to pursue their specific opportunities.â€
This piece originally appeared in Stanford Business Insights from Stanford Graduate School of Business. To receive business ideas and insights from Stanford GSB click here: (To sign up : https://www.gsb.stanford.edu/insights/about/emails ) ]