PRAISE FOR VALUE CREATION PRINCIPLES
"In Value Creation Principles, Madden introduces the Pragmatic Theory of the Firm that positions the firm as a system fueled by human capital, innovation, and, at a deeper level, imagination. He challenges us to understand how we know what we think we know in order to better discover faulty assumptions that often are camouflaged by language. His knowledge building loop offers guideposts to design experiments and organize feedback to facilitate early adaptation to a changed environment and to avoid being mired in ways of thinking rooted in 'knowledge' of what worked well in the pasta context far different from the context of today. His book explains a way of being that enables those who work for, or invest in, business firms to see beyond accounting silos and short-term quarterly earnings and to focus on capabilities instrumental for creating long-term future and sustainable value for the firm's stakeholders. I can't recommend this astounding book enough especially given its deep and timely insights for our world today."
John Seely Brown, former Chief Scientist for Xerox Corp and Director of its Palo Alto Research Center (PARC); co-author with Ann Pendleton-Jullian of Design Unbound: Designing for Emergence in a White Water World
"In contrast to existing abstract theories of the firm, Madden's pragmatic theory of the firm connects management's decisions in a practical way to a firm's life cycle and market valuation. The book promotes a firm's knowledge building proficiency, relative to competitors, as the fundamental driver of a firm's long-term performance, which leads to insights about organizational capabilities, intangible assets, and excess shareholder returns. Value Creation Principles is ideally suited to facilitate progress in the New Economy by opening up the process by which firms build knowledge and create value, which is a needed step in revising how neoclassical economics treats the firm."
Tyler Cowen, Professor of Economics, George Mason University; co-author of the popular economics blog Marginal Revolution
"Bartley Madden rightfully points out that both textbook and more advanced economic theories of the firm fail to address the concerns of top management and boards of directors. He offers a tantalizing pragmatic alternative that directly connects to quantitative changes in the firm's market value. His framework gives recognition to the importance of intangible assets, and his pragmatic approach is quite complementary to the Dynamic Capabilities framework that strategic managers implicitly and sometimes explicitly employ."
David J. Teece, Thomas W. Tusher Professor in Global Business, Faculty Director, Tusher Center for the Management of Intellectual Capital, Haas School of Business, University of California, Berkeley
Table of Contents
Preface and Overview xv
I A Firm’s Role in Society
1 Overview of the Pragmatic Theory of the Firm 3
The Nucleus of the Pragmatic Theory of the Firm 4
The Evolution of Thinking about the Theory of the Firm 7
Kindred Spirits for the Pragmatic Theory of the Firm 10
Innovation and Economic Growth 16
The Purpose of the Firm 24
The Pragmatic Theory of the Firm 30
2 Knowledge Building and Firm Performance 33
The Knowledge-Building Path to Improved Performance 34
The Knowledge-Building Loop 35
Human Behavior, Culture, and Firm Performance 44
Elegant, Parsimonious, and Reliable Theories 48
3 Work, Innovation, and Resource Allocation 53
Lean Thinking - “No Problem is a Problem” 55
The Theory of Constraints 60
Ontological/Phenomenological Model 64
Innovation 69
Resource Allocation 71
The Key Constraint in Sustaining a Knowledge-Building Culture 75
II The Pragmatic Theory of the Firm Connects Innovation and Valuation
4 Life-Cycle Performance and Firm Risk 81
The Firm’s Competitive Life Cycle 84
A Paranoid Optimist Restructures Nokia 90
A Case Study of Innovation - Amazon 93
The Life-Cycle Valuation Model 96
What Does a Stock Price Say about a Firm’s Future Investments? 99
Forward-Looking, Market-Implied Discount Rate 101
The Roots of Modern Finance 103
Firm Risk Offers a Different Mindset 106
Summary of Key Ideas 110
A Research Methodology for Advancing the Life-Cycle Framework 111
Better Estimates of the investor Discount Rate 116
5 Intangible Assets, Brands, and Shareholder Returns 121
The New Economy and Connectivity-Enabled Business
Models 123
Empirical Evidence about Intangible Assets 126
Brands Impact a Firm’s Market Value 129
A Conceptual Roadmap for Handling Intangible Assets 133
Integrated Reports, Life-Cycle Reviews, and Intangibles 139
Expect More Than Coffee - Starbucks 143
Costco Starts by Caring for Its Employees 145
Ringing Doorbells and Changing Times - Avon 148
Why Did Illumina Outperform the Stock Market 18-Fold from 2004 to 2014? 150
The Efficient Market Hypothesis and the Factor Zoo 153
Excess Shareholder Returns and Three Levels of Cause-and-Effect Logic 157
Useful Ideas for Investors, Managements, and Academic Researchers 164
Investors 164
Managements 166
Academic Researchers 167
System Principles and Effective Language 168
III Value Creation
6 Life-Cycle Position, Adaptability, and Organizational Structure 181
Life-Cycle Guideposts 182
Focused Execution of an Innovative Business Model - Netflix 183
Innovation in the Operating Room - Intuitive Surgical 188
Nothing Runs Like a Deere 191
Smith Corona and NCR 194
The ABCs of Organizational Structure 198
Organizational Experimentation at the Haier Group 204
Value Creators Drive Dynamism in China 209
7 Achieving Progress Through Knowledge Building and Value Creation 213
The New Economy and the Pragmatic Theory of the Firm 214
Life-Cycle Track Records are a Scorecard and a Learning Tool 222
Politics and the Greater Good 224
Progress Studies 230
About the Author 239
Index 241