Fortune 50(0) - Antony Consulting

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Transcript Fortune 50(0) - Antony Consulting

Fortune 50(0) Companies
2004-2006
BSC – Fortune 50 “Most admired companies”
2004 All-Stars
Rank
Company
Industry
1
Wal-Mart
Merchandise
U.S.
2
General Electric
Electronics
U.S.
3
Microsoft
Computers
U.S.
4
Johnson & Johnson
Pharma
U.S.
5
Berkshire Hathaway
Property & C. Insurance
U.S.
6
Dell
Computers
U.S.
7
IBM
Computers
U.S.
8
Toyota Motors
Motor Vehicles
9
Procter & Gamble
Household & P.products
U.S.
FedEx
Delivery
U.S.
…
…
BMW
Motor Vehicles
…
…
Nestlé
Consumer Food
…
…
GlaxoSmithKline
Pharma
10
…
15
…
21
…
50
Source: Fortune Magazine, March 2004
Country
Japan
…
Germany
…
Switzerland
…
Britain
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BSC – Fortune 50 “What does it take?”
Companies are divided into two groups: the most admired (top three to five of each industry)
and those who ranked lower
All of the functions
critical to our business
success are in place
Most admired companies 76%
Peer Group 66%
We have translated
our strategy into clear
Action plans with clear
accountabilities
84%
74%
Roles & responsibilities
are sufficiently clear that people
know where to go for the information
& support they need to do their jobs
effectively
Decision-making
accountabilities and
processes are well-defined
Source: Fortune Magazine, March 2004
81%
74%
79%
64%
3
BSC – Fortune 50 “What does it take?”
Companies are divided into two groups: the most admired (top three to five of each industry)
and those who ranked lower
Leaders surround themselves
with people who will challenge them
on their thinking
Leaders devote
a significant amount of time
to hiring and develop talent
Most admired companies
81%
Peer Group 60%
67%
48%
Performance measures
are directly tied to our business
strategy
92%
79%
“The challenge is to put the strategy, systems and
capabilities in place, and then drive deployment &
execution.” (A.G. Lafley, CEO of Procter & Gamble, 2004)
Source: Fortune Magazine, March 2004
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BSC – Fortune 50 “Most admired companies”
2005 All-Stars
Rank
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
…
11
15
…
22
…
49
Company
General Electric
Wal-Mart
Dell
Microsoft
Toyota Motors
Procter & Gamble
Johnson & Johnson
FedEx
IBM
Berkshire Hathaway
…
BMW
Sony
…
BP
…
Tesco
Vodafone
Continental Airlines
Colgate-Palmolive
Source: Fortune Magazine, 7th March 2005
Industry
Country
Electronics
U.S.
Merchandise
U.S.
Computers
U.S.
Computers
U.S.
Motor Vehicles
Japan
Household & Pers.
U.S.
Pharma
U.S.
Delivery
U.S.
Computers
U.S.
Property & Insurance U.S.
…
…
Motor Vehicles
Germany
Electronics
Japan
…
…
Petroleum Refining
Britain
…
…
Food & Drug Store
Britain
Telecommunications Britain
Airlines
U.S.
5
Household
U.S.
BSC – Fortune 50 “Most admired companies”
Snapshot 2005
 U.S. companies still dominate the list
 From 52 companies in the All-Star List, 35 are US-based
 From 30 industry groups surveyed, 24 were led by US companies
 Responded very well to competitive challenges, taken advantage of the
opportunities of globalisation by tapping talents & markets around the
world
 GE as most admired company in the world
 But more non -US companies made it onto the list than
ever before
 Samsung (39.) as first Korean company; Siemens (43.), Novartis (48.)
Swiss Pharmaceutical Giant
 Toyota (10.) only non-US company among the Top Ten
 BMW as the highest ranking European company on the list (11.)
 Companies who fell of the list, often got bad headlines
 Royal / Dutch Shell – overstated its oil & gas reserves
 AIG - Penalty payments for inflating financial statements
 Merck – Vioxx Scandal
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BSC – Fortune 50 “Most admired companies”
Snapshot 2005
“ Those wining companies tend to push the envelope for their
industries. They are setting standards and raising the bar in their
markets.” (Mel Stark, Vice President Hay Group)
Companies on Top of the List scored high on
Superior Management
Innovativeness
Industry Leadership
Technological Prowess
Other Categories assessed
Globalness
Financial Soundness
Long-term Investment Value
Employee Talent
Social Responsibility
Use of Corporate Assets
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BSC – Fortune 50 “Most admired companies”
2006 All-Stars
Rank
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
…
…
11
12
…
…
21
22
…
…
49
50
Company
Industry
General Electric
Toyota Motor
Procter & Gamble
FedEx
Johnson & Johnson
Microsoft
Dell
Berkshire Hathaway
Apple Computers
Wal-Mart Stores
…
Electronics
Motor Vehicles
Household & Pers. Pdts
Delivery
Pharma
Computers
Computers
Property & C. Insurance
Computers
General Merchandise
…
IBM
Target
Computers
General Merchandise
…
U.S.
U.S.
Citigroup
Coca-Cola
…
Mega Banks
Beverages
…
U.S.
U.S.
Royal Bank of Scotland
Dow Chemical
Mega Banks
Chemicals
Britain
U.S.
8
…
Source: Fortune Magazine, 13th March 2006
Country
U.S.
Japan
U.S.
U.S.
U.S.
U.S.
U.S.
U.S.
U.S.
U.S.
BSC – Fortune 50 “Most admired companies”
Snapshot 2006
 U.S. companies still dominate the list
 From 50 companies in the All-Star List, 32 are US-based
 From 27 industry groups surveyed, 21 were led by US companies
 GE as most admired company in the world for 3 years running
 Some changes for non -US companies that made it onto
the list
 Toyota Motors now ranked No. 2. Highest Asian ranked company Only
non-US company among Top Ten
 Total 18 companies non-US (2005 – 17 companies)
 BMW as the highest ranking European company on the list (13.)
 Only 7 Asian companies (5-Japan; 1-S.Korea; 1-Singapore) (2005 – 7
companies)
 Chinese companies are expected to enter Top 50 in the next 2 to 3
years. Highest ranked is Shanghai BaoSteel – No. 227 of 351
companies surveyed. Lenovo is expected be prominent soon.
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