Skip to Content
  • 오피스

    오피스

    미주
    • 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
    유럽, 중동, 아프리카
    • 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
    아시아, 호주
    • Bangkok
    • Beijing
    • Bengaluru
    • Brisbane
    • Ho Chi Minh City
    • Hong Kong
    • Jakarta
    • Kuala Lumpur
    • Manila
    • Melbourne
    • Mumbai
    • New Delhi
    • Perth
    • Seoul
    • Shanghai
    • Singapore
    • Sydney
    • Tokyo
    오피스 전체보기
  • 얼럼나이
  • 미디어 센터
  • 구독
  • 연락처
  • Korea | 한국어

    지역 및 언어 선택

    글로벌
    • Global (English)
    미주
    • Brazil (Português)
    • Argentina (Español)
    • Canada (Français)
    • Chile (Español)
    • Colombia (Español)
    유럽, 중동, 아프리카
    • France (Français)
    • DACH Region (Deutsch)
    • Italy (Italiano)
    • Spain (Español)
    • Greece (Elliniká)
    아시아, 호주
    • China (中文版)
    • Korea (한국어)
    • Japan (日本語)
  • Saved items (0)
    Saved items (0)

    You have no saved items.

    관심 있는 내용을 북마크하여 Red 폴더에 저장할 수 있습니다. Red 폴더 에서 저장된 내용을 읽거나 공유해보세요.

    Explore Bain Insights
  • 산업
    메인 메뉴

    산업

    • 우주항공, 방산 및 정부 서비스
    • 농업 관련 산업
    • 화학
    • 인프라, 건설 및 건축 자재
    • 소비재
    • 금융 서비스
    • 헬스케어
    • 산업용 기계 및 장비
    • 미디어 및 엔터테인먼트
    • 금속
    • 광업
    • 석유 및 가스
    • 제지 및 패키징 산업
    • 사모펀드
    • 사회 및 공공 부문
    • 유통
    • 기술
    • 텔레콤
    • 운송
    • 여행·여가
    • 유틸리티 및 재생가능 에너지
  • 컨설팅 서비스
    메인 메뉴

    컨설팅 서비스

    • Customer Experience
    • ESG
    • Innovation
    • M&A
    • 운영
    • 조직
    • 사모펀드
    • 고객 전략 및 마케팅
    • 전략
    • AI, 인사이트 및 솔루션
    • Technology
    • 변화 혁신
  • Digital
  • 인사이트
  • 베인 소개
    메인 메뉴

    베인 소개

    • 업무 소개
    • 베인의 신념
    • 구성원 및 리더십 소개
    • 고객 성과
    • 주요 수상 경력
    • 글로벌 파트너사
    Further: Our global responsibility
    • 다양성과 포용
    • 사회 공헌 활동
    • Sustainability
    • World Economic Forum
    Learn more about Further
  • Careers
    메인 메뉴

    Careers

    • Work with Us
      Careers
      Work with Us
      • Find Your Place
      • Our Work Areas
      • Integrated Teams
      • Students
      • Internships & Programs
      • Recruiting Events
    • Life at Bain
      Careers
      Life at Bain
      • Blog: Inside Bain
      • Career Stories
      • Our People
      • Where We Work
      • Supporting Your Growth
      • Affinity Groups
      • Benefits
    • Impact Stories
    • Hiring Process
      Careers
      Hiring Process
      • What to Expect
      • Interviewing
    FIND JOBS
  • 오피스
    메인 메뉴

    오피스

    • 미주
      오피스
      미주
      • 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
    • 유럽, 중동, 아프리카
      오피스
      유럽, 중동, 아프리카
      • 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
    • 아시아, 호주
      오피스
      아시아, 호주
      • Bangkok
      • Beijing
      • Bengaluru
      • Brisbane
      • Ho Chi Minh City
      • Hong Kong
      • Jakarta
      • Kuala Lumpur
      • Manila
      • Melbourne
      • Mumbai
      • New Delhi
      • Perth
      • Seoul
      • Shanghai
      • Singapore
      • Sydney
      • Tokyo
    오피스 전체보기
  • 얼럼나이
  • 미디어 센터
  • 구독
  • 연락처
  • Korea | 한국어
    메인 메뉴

    지역 및 언어 선택

    • 글로벌
      지역 및 언어 선택
      글로벌
      • Global (English)
    • 미주
      지역 및 언어 선택
      미주
      • Brazil (Português)
      • Argentina (Español)
      • Canada (Français)
      • Chile (Español)
      • Colombia (Español)
    • 유럽, 중동, 아프리카
      지역 및 언어 선택
      유럽, 중동, 아프리카
      • France (Français)
      • DACH Region (Deutsch)
      • Italy (Italiano)
      • Spain (Español)
      • Greece (Elliniká)
    • 아시아, 호주
      지역 및 언어 선택
      아시아, 호주
      • China (中文版)
      • Korea (한국어)
      • Japan (日本語)
  • Saved items  (0)
    메인 메뉴
    Saved items (0)

    You have no saved items.

    관심 있는 내용을 북마크하여 Red 폴더에 저장할 수 있습니다. Red 폴더 에서 저장된 내용을 읽거나 공유해보세요.

    Explore Bain Insights
  • 산업
    • 산업

      • 우주항공, 방산 및 정부 서비스
      • 농업 관련 산업
      • 화학
      • 인프라, 건설 및 건축 자재
      • 소비재
      • 금융 서비스
      • 헬스케어
      • 산업용 기계 및 장비
      • 미디어 및 엔터테인먼트
      • 금속
      • 광업
      • 석유 및 가스
      • 제지 및 패키징 산업
      • 사모펀드
      • 사회 및 공공 부문
      • 유통
      • 기술
      • 텔레콤
      • 운송
      • 여행·여가
      • 유틸리티 및 재생가능 에너지
  • 컨설팅 서비스
    • 컨설팅 서비스

      • Customer Experience
      • ESG
      • Innovation
      • M&A
      • 운영
      • 조직
      • 사모펀드
      • 고객 전략 및 마케팅
      • 전략
      • AI, 인사이트 및 솔루션
      • Technology
      • 변화 혁신
  • Digital
  • 인사이트
  • 베인 소개
    • 베인 소개

      • 업무 소개
      • 베인의 신념
      • 구성원 및 리더십 소개
      • 고객 성과
      • 주요 수상 경력
      • 글로벌 파트너사
      Further: Our global responsibility
      • 다양성과 포용
      • 사회 공헌 활동
      • Sustainability
      • World Economic Forum
      Learn more about Further
  • Careers
    최근 검색어
      최근 방문 페이지

      Content added to saved items

      Saved items (0)

      Removed from saved items

      Saved items (0)

      Forbes.com

      Biggest Doesn't Mean Best: How Leading Companies Get to the Top

      Biggest Doesn't Mean Best: How Leading Companies Get to the Top

      Scale alone is often not enough to confer real economic leadership.

      글 Nicolas Bloch, James Hadley, Ouriel Lancry and Jenny Lundqvist

      • 읽기 소요시간

      Article

      Biggest Doesn't Mean Best: How Leading Companies Get to the Top
      en

      This article originally appeared on Forbes.com.

      Bigger is not always better when it comes to succeeding in business. Who, for example, makes the most money producing tires? It’s not Bridgestone, the industry’s global scale leader. Germany’s Continental AG takes home three times more profit than Bridgestone and is far and away the tire industry’s economic leader. How? What the smaller company lacks in scale it makes up for with lower manufacturing costs and a more lucrative customer mix.

      A lot of corporate strategy revolves around building scale, and for good reason. The largest companies enjoy huge advantages: They can spread costs over the widest base, wield the most market influence and benefit from the most accumulated experience.

      But a recent Bain & Company analysis of 320 companies across 45 markets worldwide demonstrates that scale alone is often not enough to confer real economic leadership. In fact, 36% of the scale leaders in our study didn’t even manage to generate a positive return on capital. And 40% of the economic leaders, like Continental, weren’t the largest companies in their industries.

      None of this argues that scale isn’t a powerful competitive advantage: the scale leader in our study was also the economic leader in its industry 60% of the time. But companies like Continental demonstrate that the classic strategic imperative for challengers—build scale or get out—is only one of several options. Our study also suggests that most scale leaders need to step up to the next level of performance if they want to keep challengers from eating into their profits.

      The best performing companies in our study share four critical attributes: Valuable assets, superior capabilities, the most attractive customers and the benefits of scope. They achieve economic leadership by linking these elements together to develop an ambitious strategy that explicitly targets higher performance. That’s how Continental outperforms scale leader Bridgestone by such a wide margin. Its manufacturing plants in low-cost countries deliver operating margins that its competitors can’t match. It has developed a world-class set of capabilities for running those plants, standardized across all its facilities. Through strong relationships with the leading German auto manufacturers, it has adapted its product mix for the most lucrative customers. And by expanding its scope selectively to provide other automotive systems and components, Continental can bundle products and create distinctive partnerships with its manufacturing customers.

      Among the patterns that emerged from our study, the most powerful challengers tend to take advantage of three broad strategies:

      • The hitchhike strategy: Although large incumbents have scale advantages, they are also married to the rules they set. Challengers can hitch onto an existing market and win by using differentiated capabilities. In smart phones, for instance, Samsung hitchhiked on Apple’s iPhone strategy and pricing. But it used strong network relationships and go-to-market capabilities to carve out a place as the industry’s scale leader and low-cost producer.
      • The hijack strategy: Hitchhiking may be the easiest strategy if the scale leader lets you get away with it. But aggressive challengers can also hijack the industry profit pool by winning over the best customers. BMW, for instance, pulled off this strategy in the global automotive market by developing a premium brand and gradually extending it into every corner of the car business, from city cars to SUVs and super cars.
      • Disruption: The ultimate judo move is to change the rules of the game entirely, as Amazon did when it wreaked havoc on big-box retailers with its ubiquitous internet retailing engine. Southwest showed how to make money in air travel with its low-cost, no-frills service strategy. Digitalization continues to open opportunities for disruption in almost every industry. Witness Netflix: First it disrupted the Blockbuster brick-and-mortar model. Then it disrupted that disruption when it moved from mailing DVDs to streaming.

      All of these strategies have one thing in common: They take direct aim at the weakness that so often accompanies scale. The paradox of leadership is that the largest companies often fail to take full advantage of leadership economics. The top performers in our research returned an average of nearly two times their weighed average cost of capital. But among the scale leaders in each market, only 26% hit or surpassed that target and, as we noted, a full 36% of the scale leaders didn’t even manage to generate a positive return on capital.

      Very often, an industry leader has achieved its scale position by virtue of superior assets and capabilities. But then the company settles in to defend its position and becomes complacent. The strongest scale leaders in our study prevent that from happening. They are significantly more focused about what they do with their leadership, amplifying their scale advantage deliberately in other ways. Typically they follow at least one of three paths:

      • Play by the rules: Industry incumbents have the unique opportunity to extend their economic leadership by sticking to the established rules of the game and executing better than anybody else. While this sounds simple, it is anything but. The company must continuously reduce costs and build quality, learning and investing more, while avoiding the complexity that can crush returns. Intel is a prime example. The semiconductor giant set the rules of the game early on in the chip industry and has not strayed from them. Others have threatened, but Intel has managed to stay ahead by moving rapidly down the learning curve to introduce a more powerful chip every 18 months.
      • Bend the rules: Playing by the rules is fine as far as it goes. But stretching toward full potential may require bending the rules a little bit — or a lot. That often means using core strengths to create new opportunities as Starbucks did when it created an international brand and standardized a carefully designed coffee drinking “experience,” allowing it to transform local coffee markets and extract greater pricing from customers.
      • Break the rules: This is clearly the most difficult strategy for a large, incumbent company, since most leaders are heavily invested in winning by the current rules. Sometimes, however, leading companies can use their size and clout to reshape the rules to their advantage. That’s what IBM did when it used its scale, deep customer relationships and technical expertise to move from being a hardware producer to a high-margin provider of software and services.

      Scale is immensely valuable, without a doubt. But the companies that achieve the highest levels of leadership economics—two times their cost of capital and above—think and act beyond scale. They make important choices about where to focus their time and investments and work rigorously to develop the key assets and capabilities. That’s a path to sustainable, market-beating returns.

      Written by Nicolas Bloch, James Hadley and Ouriel Lancry, co-leaders of Bain & Company’s Strategy practice; and Jenny Lundqvist, who manages Bain’s Strategy practice in Europe, the Middle East and Africa; she is based in Stockholm.

      저자
      • Headshot of Nicolas Bloch
        Nicolas Bloch
        파트너, Brussels
      • Headshot of James Hadley
        James Hadley
        파트너, London
      • Headshot of Ouriel Lancry
        Ouriel Lancry
        파트너, Chicago
      • Headshot of Jenny Lundqvist
        Jenny Lundqvist
        Practice Executive Vice President, Copenhagen
      문의하기
      관련 컨설팅 서비스
      • 전략
      전략
      The Journey North

      Why are so many fast-growing, disruptive companies able to run circles around larger, slower multinationals?

      자세히 보기
      전략
      Strategy Beyond Scale

      Creating a path to leadership economics.

      자세히 보기
      전략
      What Business Leaders Need to Know About AI Sovereignty

      Aligning business strategy with national AI priorities is necessary to compete and scale.

      자세히 보기
      전략
      Don’t Underestimate the Cost of Overcapacity

      Overcapacity is endemic to the paper and packaging industry, but these actions can help you maintain margins.

      자세히 보기
      전략
      What CEOs Bring Home: A Holiday Special

      As the year winds down, Founder’s Mentality: The CEO Sessions takes a festive turn.

      자세히 보기
      First published in 4월 2015
      태그
      • 전략

      프로젝트 사례

      전략 Jump-starting innovation for a telecom solutions provider

      See more related case studies

      전략 New products propel profitability for metals manufacturer

      See more related case studies

      전략 An auctioneer makes a winning online bid

      See more related case studies

      베인에 궁금하신 점이 있으신가요?

      베인은 주저 없이 변화를 마주할 줄 아는 용감한 리더들과 함께합니다. 그리고, 이들의 담대한 용기는 고객사의 성공으로 이어집니다.

      급변하는 비즈니스 환경에서 살아남기 위한 선도자의 시각. 월간 Bain Insights에서 글로벌 비즈니스의 핵심 이슈를 확인하십시오.

      *개인정보 정책을 읽었으며 그 내용에 동의합니다.

      Privacy Policy를 읽고 동의해주십시오.
      Bain & Company
      문의하기 환경정책 Accessibility 이용약관 개인정보 보호 쿠키 사용 정책 Sitemap Log In

      © 1996-2026 Bain & Company, Inc.

      문의하기

      무엇을 도와드릴까요?

      • 프로젝트 문의
      • 채용 정보
      • 언론
      • 제휴 문의
      • 연사 초청
      오피스 전체보기