Skip to Content
  • オフィス

    オフィス

    北米・南米
    • Atlanta
    • Austin
    • Bogota
    • Boston
    • Buenos Aires
    • Chicago
    • Dallas
    • Denver
    • Houston
    • Los Angeles
    • Mexico City
    • Minneapolis
    • Monterrey
    • Montreal
    • New York
    • Rio de Janeiro
    • San Francisco
    • Santiago
    • São Paulo
    • Seattle
    • Silicon Valley
    • Toronto
    • Washington, DC
    ヨーロッパ・中東・アフリカ
    • Amsterdam
    • Athens
    • Berlin
    • Brussels
    • Copenhagen
    • Doha
    • Dubai
    • Dusseldorf
    • Frankfurt
    • Helsinki
    • Istanbul
    • Johannesburg
    • Kyiv
    • Lisbon
    • London
    • Madrid
    • Milan
    • Munich
    • Oslo
    • Paris
    • Riyadh
    • Rome
    • Stockholm
    • Vienna
    • Warsaw
    • Zurich
    アジア・オーストラリア
    • Bangkok
    • Beijing
    • Bengaluru
    • Brisbane
    • Ho Chi Minh City
    • Hong Kong
    • Jakarta
    • Kuala Lumpur
    • Manila
    • Melbourne
    • Mumbai
    • New Delhi
    • Perth
    • Shanghai
    • Singapore
    • Sydney
    • Tokyo
    全てのオフィス
  • アルムナイ
  • メディア
  • お問い合わせ
  • 東京オフィス
  • Japan | 日本語

    地域と言語を選択

    グローバル
    • Global (English)
    北米・南米
    • Brazil (Português)
    • Argentina (Español)
    • Canada (Français)
    • Chile (Español)
    • Colombia (Español)
    ヨーロッパ・中東・アフリカ
    • France (Français)
    • DACH Region (Deutsch)
    • Italy (Italiano)
    • Spain (Español)
    • Greece (Elliniká)
    アジア・オーストラリア
    • China (中文版)
    • Korea (한국어)
    • Japan (日本語)
  • Saved items (0)
    Saved items (0)

    You have no saved items.

    後で閲読、共有できるようにするためにブックマークしてください

    Explore Bain Insights
  • 業界別プラクティス
    メインメニュー

    業界別プラクティス

    • 航空宇宙、防衛、政府関連
    • 農業
    • 化学製品
    • インフラ、建設
    • 消費財
    • 金融サービス
    • ヘルスケア
    • 産業機械、設備
    • メディア、エンターテインメント
    • 金属
    • 採掘・鉱業
    • 石油、ガス
    • 紙、パッケージ
    • プライベートエクイティ
    • 公共、社会セクター
    • 小売
    • テクノロジー
    • 通信
    • 交通
    • 観光産業
    • 公益事業、再生可能エネルギー
  • 機能別プラクティス
    メインメニュー

    機能別プラクティス

    • カスタマー・エクスペリエンス
    • サステイナビリティ、 社会貢献
    • Innovation
    • 企業買収、合併 (M&A)
    • オペレーション
    • 組織
    • プライベートエクイティ
    • マーケティング・営業
    • 戦略
    • アドバンスド・アナリティクス
    • Technology
    • フルポテンシャル・トランスフォーメーション
  • Digital
  • 知見/レポート
  • ベイン・アンド・カンパニーについて
    メインメニュー

    ベイン・アンド・カンパニーについて

    • ベインの信条
    • 活動内容
    • 社員とリーダーシップ
    • プレス・メディア情報
    • クライアントの結果
    • 受賞歴
    • パートナーシップを結んでいる団体
    Further: Our global responsibility
    • ダイバーシティ
    • 社会貢献
    • サステイナビリティへの取り組み
    • 世界経済フォーラム(WEF)
    Learn more about Further
  • キャリア
    メインメニュー

    キャリア

    • ベインで働く
      キャリア
      ベインで働く
      • Find Your Place
      • ベインで活躍する機会
      • ベインのチーム体制
      • 学生向けページ
      • インターンシップ
      • 採用イベント
    • ベインでの体験
      キャリア
      ベインでの体験
      • Blog: Inside Bain
      • キャリアストーリー
      • 社員紹介
      • Where We Work
      • 成長を後押しするサポート体制
      • アフィニティ・グループ
      • 福利厚生
    • Impact Stories
    • 採用情報
      キャリア
      採用情報
      • 採用プロセス
      • 面接内容
    FIND JOBS
  • オフィス
    メインメニュー

    オフィス

    • 北米・南米
      オフィス
      北米・南米
      • Atlanta
      • Austin
      • Bogota
      • Boston
      • Buenos Aires
      • Chicago
      • Dallas
      • Denver
      • Houston
      • Los Angeles
      • Mexico City
      • Minneapolis
      • Monterrey
      • Montreal
      • New York
      • Rio de Janeiro
      • San Francisco
      • Santiago
      • São Paulo
      • Seattle
      • Silicon Valley
      • Toronto
      • Washington, DC
    • ヨーロッパ・中東・アフリカ
      オフィス
      ヨーロッパ・中東・アフリカ
      • Amsterdam
      • Athens
      • Berlin
      • Brussels
      • Copenhagen
      • Doha
      • Dubai
      • Dusseldorf
      • Frankfurt
      • Helsinki
      • Istanbul
      • Johannesburg
      • Kyiv
      • Lisbon
      • London
      • Madrid
      • Milan
      • Munich
      • Oslo
      • Paris
      • Riyadh
      • Rome
      • Stockholm
      • Vienna
      • Warsaw
      • Zurich
    • アジア・オーストラリア
      オフィス
      アジア・オーストラリア
      • Bangkok
      • Beijing
      • Bengaluru
      • Brisbane
      • Ho Chi Minh City
      • Hong Kong
      • Jakarta
      • Kuala Lumpur
      • Manila
      • Melbourne
      • Mumbai
      • New Delhi
      • Perth
      • Shanghai
      • Singapore
      • Sydney
      • Tokyo
    全てのオフィス
  • アルムナイ
  • メディア
  • お問い合わせ
  • 東京オフィス
  • Japan | 日本語
    メインメニュー

    地域と言語を選択

    • グローバル
      地域と言語を選択
      グローバル
      • Global (English)
    • 北米・南米
      地域と言語を選択
      北米・南米
      • Brazil (Português)
      • Argentina (Español)
      • Canada (Français)
      • Chile (Español)
      • Colombia (Español)
    • ヨーロッパ・中東・アフリカ
      地域と言語を選択
      ヨーロッパ・中東・アフリカ
      • France (Français)
      • DACH Region (Deutsch)
      • Italy (Italiano)
      • Spain (Español)
      • Greece (Elliniká)
    • アジア・オーストラリア
      地域と言語を選択
      アジア・オーストラリア
      • China (中文版)
      • Korea (한국어)
      • Japan (日本語)
  • Saved items  (0)
    メインメニュー
    Saved items (0)

    You have no saved items.

    後で閲読、共有できるようにするためにブックマークしてください

    Explore Bain Insights
  • 業界別プラクティス
    • 業界別プラクティス

      • 航空宇宙、防衛、政府関連
      • 農業
      • 化学製品
      • インフラ、建設
      • 消費財
      • 金融サービス
      • ヘルスケア
      • 産業機械、設備
      • メディア、エンターテインメント
      • 金属
      • 採掘・鉱業
      • 石油、ガス
      • 紙、パッケージ
      • プライベートエクイティ
      • 公共、社会セクター
      • 小売
      • テクノロジー
      • 通信
      • 交通
      • 観光産業
      • 公益事業、再生可能エネルギー
  • 機能別プラクティス
    • 機能別プラクティス

      • カスタマー・エクスペリエンス
      • サステイナビリティ、 社会貢献
      • Innovation
      • 企業買収、合併 (M&A)
      • オペレーション
      • 組織
      • プライベートエクイティ
      • マーケティング・営業
      • 戦略
      • アドバンスド・アナリティクス
      • Technology
      • フルポテンシャル・トランスフォーメーション
  • Digital
  • 知見/レポート
  • ベイン・アンド・カンパニーについて
    • ベイン・アンド・カンパニーについて

      • ベインの信条
      • 活動内容
      • 社員とリーダーシップ
      • プレス・メディア情報
      • クライアントの結果
      • 受賞歴
      • パートナーシップを結んでいる団体
      Further: Our global responsibility
      • ダイバーシティ
      • 社会貢献
      • サステイナビリティへの取り組み
      • 世界経済フォーラム(WEF)
      Learn more about Further
  • キャリア
    人気検索キーワード
    • デジタル
    • 戦略
    前回の検索
      最近訪れたページ

      Content added to saved items

      Saved items (0)

      Removed from saved items

      Saved items (0)

      論説

      To Transform Performance, Transform Productivity

      To Transform Performance, Transform Productivity

      Sustained performance improvement requires more than just blunt cost cutting.

      著者:Simon Henderson, Marco D'Avino, Eric Thompson, and Danielle Stekelenburg

      • min read
      }

      論説

      To Transform Performance, Transform Productivity
      en
      概要
      • The most successful transformations balance short- and long-term objectives by focusing on growth as well as efficiency.
      • Companies that excel at performance improvement build the capabilities to sustain results over time.
      • Agile organizations are best suited to manage ongoing change.

      A volatile macro environment and threats of a recession have prompted many companies to cut costs aggressively. Leadership teams are scrambling to adapt to high inflation, supply chain disruptions, ESG commitments, changing customer needs, and a higher cost of capital. All face uncertain economic growth.

      Continual cost and productivity improvements can address those challenges—and they remain fundamental to any firm’s success. A low-cost position wins in nearly every industry, as it allows a company to outearn and out-invest its peers for growth. Bain & Company analysis shows that top performers in total shareholder return focus on productivity, not just revenue growth, in all phases of the economic cycle (see Figure 1).

      Figure 1
      Cost productivity is key to determining winners and losers
      Cost productivity is key to determining winners and losers
      Cost productivity is key to determining winners and losers

      Yet all too often, urgent cost-cutting programs are too blunt, limiting a company’s chance for recovery and future growth. Clumsy cost reductions treat all functions and activities as equal, even if some activities are more critical to the firm’s strategy. As a result, these programs inadvertently cut organizational muscle, not just fat. Companies that slash customer service, for example, risk increasing customer churn. Leadership teams focused on a cost target can overlook the chance for productivity gains, such as getting more out of existing equipment or processes by clearing bottlenecks.

      Companies beginning a transformation, whether prompted by distress or the desire for future growth, need more than a blunt cost program. An accelerated transformation requires careful planning and a cross-functional approach to balance short- and long-term objectives. The benefits are cost and cash savings, topline growth, and sustained value. Above all, top-performing companies make organizational agility a key goal to ensure managers have the skills to adapt to ongoing change long after the transformation ends.

      Behave like an owner

      Most companies seeking to improve their performance apply more rigor to quantifying efficiency than to increasing effectiveness. Anyone can cut 10% from a department’s budget, but to design intelligent and sustainable cost reduction measures, executives need to understand which activities are critical to the business and which add little or no value. Complicated trade-offs require deeper analysis.

      The most successful transformations are those in which leadership teams adopt an owner-activist mindset. They focus on productivity improvement and growth, as well as cost reduction. That means identifying the costs that contribute to the firm’s competitive advantage so those leading the change effort can prune in the right areas and reinvest for revenue growth in others. We are not advocating an investor-activist approach, which tends to exploit volatility for short-term gain. Owner activists usually want to build the best business possible for the short and long term, because they intend to retain ownership. That leads to more reasoned, sustainable decisions on resource allocation.

      An owner-activist mindset increases the odds of sustained results. It focuses on quickly lifting the business on all fronts: customer advocacy, core revenue growth, and efficiency. That unifying objective informs every part of the transformation.

      Using that strategic lens, owner activists manage operating expenses with the same level of rigor as capital expenditures. They view opex as the funding source to build human capital and analyze the return on these investments. They also see such expenditures as a multiyear investment in an asset that can help a firm execute its strategy better than competitors.

      Take the example of a European e-commerce platform that aimed to reduce its packaging costs and improve its environmental performance by shipping goods to customers in a single box instead of one box inside another. Since some customers value the additional box to provide a layer of privacy, the e-retailer invested in the capability to allow customers the option to select additional packaging, satisfying the needs of customers while meeting cost and environmental targets.

      Shape the organization from the future back

      Basing a transformation on a detailed assessment of the company’s current state is useful, but it’s far from sufficient. Focusing on today’s business tends to promote incremental adjustments, one cautious step at a time, and can overlook bold changes that are more effective.

      Successful leadership teams imagine the future state of the market and the company’s desired position in that market, anticipating customer needs and growth three to five years from now. That approach forces management to consider all the activities and conditions that must change for the company to thrive in the future. A future-back view combines external benchmarks with other determinations of cost, notably what activities should cost given their role in the company’s strategy.

      Of course, no one can predict what the market will look like in three to five years. The most agile companies focus on the vital few uncertainties that matter, lay out the possible scenarios that could develop, and identify the critical trigger points or signposts that indicate swings in direction. Planning becomes a cycle of “execute, monitor, and adapt” that dynamically redirects the company to the best opportunities over time.

      An Australian radiology company used a future-back approach to assess major market forces and trends over the next 10 years. The process helped the leadership team identify new opportunities, test them in future scenarios, and prioritize 20 major initiatives. It also helped the company develop a strategic roadmap for delivering those initiatives.

      Redesign how the work gets done

      Complexity is at the core of high costs and ineffective decision making. To permanently reduce costs, managers often need to change what and how work gets done (see Figure 2). Leaders look for opportunities to redesign or automate processes using digital or artificial intelligence (AI) tools. This could involve the use of advanced analytics to understand how to serve customers better and more efficiently. Another option is deploying generative AI to improve the frontline customer experience, reduce cost, and increase productivity. 

      Figure 2
      Zero-based redesign leads to breakthrough changes in what work is done and how it gets done
      Zero-based redesign leads to breakthrough changes in what work is done and how it gets done
      Zero-based redesign leads to breakthrough changes in what work is done and how it gets done

      An Australian airline identified opportunities to improve its ground operation efficiency by automating certain tasks. Its flight dispatchers were reviewing automatically generated calculations and tweaking plans based on factors such as timing, weather, runway, and restricted airspace. The team responsible for creating flight plans configured a new system that could automate flight plan calculations to a greater degree. The change would increase capacity for more than half of the flight desks from 40 to 100 flight plans per day.

      Often the greatest opportunities are found in the seams between functions or departments. Why? Business units tend to optimize their own operations without considering the impact on other parts of the organization. One department’s effort to save costs may trigger higher costs in another, undermining efficiency. The most efficient companies find large sources of potential value by scanning the seams for duplicated work or inefficiencies and taking an end-to-end view of a process or product.

      At one specialty chemicals company, cross-functional initiatives generated about 30% of the overall value of its transformation program. To sustain the benefits, the company ensured a comprehensive view of operations across functions, including monthly reviews of costs. A transparent view of benefits helped protect the savings of one function from being offset by increase in costs from another (e.g., headcount savings being whittled away by the hiring of contractors).

      Simon Henderson, a partner with Bain's Performance Improvement practice, discusses how to increase efficiency and position your business for growth.

      Move fast even if you lack decimal-point accuracy

      Time is a precious currency. Companies that fail to manage transformations well risk spending months identifying and launching the right initiatives, especially those that require changes to IT systems. And competitors are not standing still. Owner activists know the virtues of moving quickly. They’re willing to test promising new ideas and scale them up or kill them quickly depending on the early results.

      For example, a global beverage bottling company launched a transformation by piloting process improvement initiatives on a single production line at one plant. When the pilot proved successful, the leadership team scaled it across other facilities. Despite uncertainty in how much value changes would create at scale, the company pushed ahead. One initiative focused on setting standards at the backend of the production line, so it ran with the same specifications. That meant operators could easily audit the line and adjust standards if required. The pilot delivered $1 million in annual EBITDA improvement and generated $8 million at full scale.    

      Change the culture to keep costs from creeping back

      An accelerated transformation should ultimately build the organizational muscles to manage ongoing change (see Figure 3). A one-time, blank sheet realignment of the operating model and core processes can reduce cost and simplify the organization. But cost leaders change their culture by adopting continuous cost-management improvement. That includes installing repeatable budgeting and performance management processes and instilling a zero-based mindset. Tools and incentives make it easier for employees to consistently do the right thing when weighing cost and value. Top-performing companies provide their people with cost visibility across the whole organization and hold individual owners accountable for results. Training plays an important part too.

      Figure 3
      Leaders focus on five themes to improve productivity and profitable growth
      Leaders focus on five themes to improve productivity and profitable growth
      Leaders focus on five themes to improve productivity and profitable growth

      Cost leaders make visibility a basic element in how the company does business, as it helps ensure continued change after a transformation program wraps up. At a Japanese automotive parts supplier, a multiyear transformation program recently ended, but the company plans to continue using digital project management tools for target setting and initiative approvals to make progress, approvals, and benefits tracking more transparent.

      Change programs with a beginning, middle, and end are poorly suited to an increasingly volatile business environment. Most companies are (or should be) in a state of constant transformation. Successful change efforts today deliver breakthrough improvements in performance while building the capability to remain highly competitive in a turbulent landscape.

      著者
      • Headshot of Simon Henderson
        Simon Henderson
        パートナー, London
      • Headshot of Marco D'Avino
        Marco D'Avino
        パートナー, Rome
      • Headshot of Eric Thompson
        Eric Thompson
        パートナー, San Francisco
      • Headshot of Danielle Stekelenburg
        Danielle Stekelenburg
        パートナー, Amsterdam
      関連するコンサルティングサービス
      • コスト・トランスフォーメーション
      • フルポテンシャル・トランスフォメーション
      CFO Insights
      Improving Capital Project Delivery Systems

      Bain experts reveal how top energy companies are revolutionizing their capital project delivery to excel in cost, timing, and quality in the energy transition.

      詳細
      CFO Insights
      The 2026 Retail Executive Agenda

      Here are letters to the C-suite to help strengthen strategy, catalyze collaboration, and expand value creation in the AI age.

      詳細
      フルポテンシャル・トランスフォメーション
      Automotive Profitability: How OEM and Supplier Margins Are Faring

      The post-pandemic profit surge has reversed, as OEM margins have fallen more than 50% since 2023.

      詳細
      CFO Insights
      Stablecoins Could Make Cross-Border Payments Faster, Cheaper, and More Transparent

      Most CFOs are not using stablecoins today, but evolving regulations could reduce risk and create competitive advantage.

      詳細
      フルポテンシャル・トランスフォメーション
      Perform Today, Prove Tomorrow, Propel the Stock Valuation

      Leading banks build credibility with investors by aligning their strategy, execution, and equity story.

      詳細
      First published in 6月 2024
      Tags
      • CFO Insights
      • コスト・トランスフォーメーション
      • フルポテンシャル・トランスフォメーション

      クライアント支援事例

      戦略 Virgin Australia: From Turbulence to Triumph

      ケーススタディを見る

      Digital A Traditional Bank Pursues Digital in a Nontraditional Way

      ケーススタディを見る

      Automation A BPO Leader Embraces Automation to Transform Its Cost Structure

      ケーススタディを見る

      お気軽にご連絡下さい

      私達は、グローバルに活躍する経営者が抱える最重要経営課題に対して、厳しい競争環境の中でも成長し続け、「結果」を出すために支援しています。

      ベインの知見。競争が激化するグローバルビジネス環境で、日々直面するであろう問題について論じている知見を毎月お届けします。

      *プライバシーポリシーの内容を確認し、合意しました。

      プライバシーポリシーをご確認頂き、合意頂けますようお願い致します。
      Bain & Company
      お問い合わせ Sustainability Accessibility Terms of use Privacy Cookie Policy Sitemap Log In

      © 1996-2026 Bain & Company, Inc.

      お問い合わせ

      How can we help you?

      • ビジネスについて
      • プレス報道について
      • 採用について
      全てのオフィス