Success Cases: The Three Turnaround Methodology
The following case studies demonstrate the practical application and success of the Three Turnaround Methodology in real-world scenarios.
(Note: Company names have been kept strictly confidential at the request of the companies.)
Company A was a Small and Medium-sized Enterprise (SME) specializing in the manufacturing and trading of industrial products. Diagnosed with 'corporate cancer,' the disease was fortunately caught early enough to save the business. While it didn't require a funeral service just yet, the company urgently needed to be placed in the intensive care unit for a complete business overhaul.
During its heyday in the 1960s, Company A boasted a thriving string of product lines spanning from A to Z. However, its fortunes took a sharp dive in the 1990s when direct sourcing became prevalent, significantly diminishing its role as a middleman. As its raison d'etre faltered, the lack of direction turned the company into a 'jack-of-all-trades, master of none.' Departments operated in silos with scant regard for profitability, and the unstructured organization was weighed down by an unsystematic, laissez-faire management style.
Through the Surgical Process, Company A executed a successful turnaround within the first year, returning to profitability. In the subsequent years, the company went on to achieve the highest record profits in its entire history.
Company B was a Multinational Company (MNC) operating in the contracting and engineering sector. Similar to many established companies that eventually turn into 'old dinosaurs,' Company B was weighed down by a lack of new initiatives to revitalize its core business. It had grown too bloated and was suffering from a severe 'corporate heart problem.'
Its primary conundrums were eroding margins, sustained financial losses, and high staff turnover. Drifting aimlessly with the tide, the company's orientation was heavily technically biased - taking on projects for the sheer love of the technical challenge rather than being market-oriented - and entirely reactive. Management was remote, top-down, and impersonal. The organization was paralyzed by incessant infighting, and a closed communication style fueled strong rumor mills. As Sun Tzu noted: 'The sight of whispering together in small knots or speaking in subdued tones points to disaffection among the rank and file.'
Following the Resuscitation Process, Company B returned to profitability within a single year. The company successfully transformed its operations to pivot toward a brand-new, sustainable business model.
Company C was a marketing organization dealing in a variety of services. Despite boasting a highly experienced staff, the company continuously lagged behind the rest of the industry. The root cause was a severely weakened 'immune system' caused by a dysfunctional corporate culture inherited from the past.
The staff suffered from a non-committal attitude, a total lack of urgency, and a deeply negative mentality. This culture was heavily inclined toward a bo chap (a Hokkien term for a 'cannot be bothered') attitude, resulting in a highly demotivated workforce. As a direct result, the company's service quality deteriorated, morale hit rock bottom, and the business was trapped in a cycle of constant fire-fighting rather than proactive growth.
Using the Therapy and Nursing Process, the corporate culture was entirely transformed to become innovative, fast, and flexible. Earnings drastically improved from a mere breakeven position, and within two years, Company C rose to become the recognized leader in its industry.