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Bruce Henderson

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Bruce Doolin Henderson
President and CEO, The Boston Consulting Group
In office
1963–1980
Preceded byNone - position created
Succeeded byAlan Zakon
Chairperson of the board, The Boston Consulting Group
In office
1980–1985
Preceded byNone - position created
Succeeded byAlan Zakon
Personal details
Born(1915-04-30)April 30, 1915
Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.
DiedJuly 20, 1992(1992-07-20) (aged 77)
Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.
SpouseBess Henderson
ChildrenAsta Werme
Ceacy Griffin
Bruce Alexander Henderson
Bruce Balfour Henderson
Alma materVanderbilt University (BS)
Harvard Business School (dropped out)
Known forFounder of The Boston Consulting Group

Bruce Doolin Henderson (April 30, 1915 – July 20, 1992) was an American entrepreneur, and the founder of the Boston Consulting Group (BCG). He founded BCG in 1963 in Boston, Massachusetts and headed the firm as president and CEO until 1980 after which he stayed on as chairman up until 1985.

Early life

Henderson in his "red PDS sweater", ca 1930.
Henderson in his "red PDS sweater", ca 1930

Henderson was born on a farm in Nashville, Tennessee on April 30th, 1915.[1] He enrolled into the Peabody Demonstration School (PDS) while in fourth grade and remained there until his high school graduation in 1932. During high school, Henderson played on the football team as well.[2]

Career

Henderson began his career as a salesman for the Southwestern Company (which his father owned for 50 years). He went on to attend the University of Virginia[citation needed] and later earned an undergraduate degree in mechanical engineering from Vanderbilt University in 1937, before attending Harvard Business School. He left Harvard only ninety days before graduation to go work for the Westinghouse Corporation.[3]

After leaving Harvard, Henderson worked for 18 years at the Westinghouse Corporation, where he became the vice president at the age of 37,[1] making him one of the youngest vice presidents in the company's history.[4]

In 1959, Henderson left the Westinghouse Corporation to join the consulting firm Arthur D. Little as a senior vice president for management services. He left the firm in 1963 over disagreements with the firm's leadership.

Founding and leadership of The Boston Consulting Group (BCG)

Upon leaving Arthur D. Little, Henderson accepted a challenge from the CEO of The Boston Company. He challenged Henderson to create a consulting arm for the bank, operating as a subsidiary under the name "Management and Consulting Division of the Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company." This consulting arm started operations in 1963.[1] Initially, it advised clients of the bank. The billings for the first month of BCG were only US$500. Nevertheless, Henderson hired his second consultant, Arthur P. Contas, in December of 1963.

Henderson provided a very specific imprint to the firm, that of strategy consultants. As to how that choice was made, the account from Robert Mainer is the main source for providing an answer:

"[Henderson] asked what we thought [BCG's] specialty should be. Many suggestions were offered, but in each case we were able to identify several other firms that already had strong credentials in that particular area. The discussion began to stall. Then Bruce asked a momentous question: 'What about business strategy?' I objected: 'That's too vague. Most executives won't know what we're talking about.' Bruce replied, 'That's the beauty of it. We'll define it.'"—Robert E. Mainer Boston 1964-1967[5]

Bruce created the publication format which came to be known as "perspectives" as a new form of marketing and in response to the McKinsey Quarterly and ADL's Prism. He wrote extensively using the format up until 1980.

In 1973 Bill Bain left BCG, along with Patrick Graham and five other colleagues, to create the Bain & Company. The exact account of the events surrounding his departure are disputed, except for the fact that it was not a friendly parting, with Henderson stating that "It was war, the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor. I felt more betrayed and robbed and desecrated than ever before in my life."[6][7] The bitterness eventually went away with Henderson stating that "Bill is an imaginative man. He is a very able man. I wish he had stayed."[8]

In 1974 Henderson made BCG an independent business and was one of the first to take advantage of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 that allowed the establishment of an employee stock ownership plan (ESOP). The ESOP began the process of buying BCG from The Boston Company, the parent corporation of Boston Safe Deposit. (The buyout would be completed in 1979, five years ahead of schedule.)[6]

Between 1974 and 1980, Henderson focused on growing the firm and expanding its international presence. By the end of 1977, revenues were split evenly among business originating in the United States and overseas.[6]

Retirement and later years

Henderson eventually stepped down from his role as president and CEO of BCG in 1980, and was succeeded by Alan Zakon.[6] By that time, he had grown BCG from a one-man-shop to a global firm with seven offices and 249 consultants.[4] He stayed on as chairman until 1985, where he formally retired from BCG to Nashville and taught at the Owen Graduate School of Management at Vanderbilt University.[1]

Henderson died in 1992 at age 77, only 10 days after suffering a stroke at his home in Nashville. He was survived by his second wife (and former BCG secretary), Bess, and by his divorced first wife, Frances. With Frances, he had fathered four children, all of whom survived him: two daughters, Asta Werme of Murfreesboro, Tenn., and Ceacy Griffin of Colrain, Mass.; and two sons, Bruce Alexander Henderson of Greenwich, Conn., and Bruce Balfour Henderson of Rancho Santa Fe. Henderson was also survived by a sister, Ceacy Hailey of Nashville; two brothers, Glenn Dixon Henderson of Mandeville, La., and J. B. Henderson of Ashland City, Tenn., and seven grandchildren.[1]

A memorial service was held with an overflow of attendees at Memorial Church at Harvard Yard, Cambridge, on December 11, 1992, amidst a blizzard. Speakers at the service included John S. Clarkeson, then-president and chief executive officer of BCG, George Stalk, a senior vice president of BCG, and Alan Zakon, former BCG chairman (who had succeeded Henderson as CEO and, later, Chairman).[9]

Ideas and concepts

The experience curve

"Costs characteristically decline by 20-30% in real terms each time accumulated experience doubles."—Bruce D. Henderson, 1968

"The strategic implications of the experience curve came closer to shattering earth."—The Economist, 2009[10]

The Experience Curve is a managerial tool primarily used to predict cost behavior. It states that "costs characteristically decline by 20-30% in real terms each time accumulated experience doubles. This means that when inflation is factored out, costs should always decline. The decline is fast if growth is fast and slow if growth is slow."

The Experience Curve partially relies upon the concept of the learning curve, yet expands upon it in de-linking it from labor-driven repetitive tasks.

As a managerial tool, the experience curve is still in use in the 2010s, for example by Petrobras in Oil-Field Development.[11]

The growth-share matrix

"To be successful, a company should have a portfolio of products with different growth rates and different market shares. The portfolio composition is a function of the balance between cash flows."—Bruce D. Henderson (1970)

The growth-share matrix or BCG Matrix, as it came to be known, is a managerial tool used to visually represent a company's portfolio. It is a two-by-two matrix, which divides the dimensions of relative market share (x axis) and market growth (y axis) into four quadrants. Individual business are represented with circles having an area proportional to the size of the business itself.[12]

The growth-share matrix evolved as a collaborative effort of BCGers (likely Kent Aldershof, Alan Zakon, Sandy Moose, Richard Lochridge, Lorne Weill, Bill Bain, and Bruce Henderson) in the period between 1968-1970. The theory underpinning it was laid out in the BCG perspective "The Product Portfolio" in 1970.[13]

One unusual characteristic of this visualization is that the x-axis is generally represented on an inverted scale (greater values are on the left), and on a logarithmic scale. The logarithmic scale may have been carried over from the work done on the Experience Curve (which uses a log-log scale), and is not always consistently used as such - in many cases the scale used is a linear one, not a logarithmic one. According to Mr. Aldershof, the inverted scale is merely accidental. During an early development session, Dr. Zakon sketched the two-by-two matrix on a chalkboard, and labeled the sections as High and Low from top to bottom, and High and Low from left to right, simply for convenience. The format persisted through later development sessions, without anyone considering that in the future the axes might become calibrated—where a low-to-high scale from left to right would be more typical and easier to produce.

The Rule of Three and Four

"A stable competitive market never has more than three significant competitors, the largest of which has no more than four times the market share of the smallest."—Bruce D. Henderson, 1976[14]

The Rule of Three and Four is Henderson's attempt to understand the implications of experience curves at the level of industry structures. In such endeavor, he conjectures that industries that are "stable" and "competitive" will evolve into a structure with "no more than three" significant competitors, with market share ratios around 4:2:1.

A recent attempt at proving the hypothesis showed that it does indeed hold true within its stated domain of applicability.[15]

Brinkmanship in business

"The goal of the hottest economic war, is an agreement for coexistence, not annihilation"—Bruce D. Henderson, 1976[16]

Henderson said the article could equally be titled “How to Succeed in Business by Being Unreasonable”. He wrote that to compete effectively, it was necessary to appear to be co-operating while in fact ensuring you get your own way. He compared business to international relations during peace time, when countries compete ferociously but exercise restraint to avoid war.[17]

Business and biology

"Competition existed long before strategy. It began with life itself."—Bruce D. Henderson, 1989[18]

By the early 1980s, the lessons of the experience curve led Henderson to shift his thinking beyond the bankruptcy of mainstream economics. He began to imagine a new and far more powerful kind of economics. The realization that organizations are not static machines but complex, dynamic systems that learn from experience, led him to begin seeing companies as living, growing organisms. Following this logic, Henderson began to argue that the competition in the economy's market niches was remarkably like competition in nature's ecologic niches.[19]

The article "The Origin of Strategy" (1989)[18] in this area was the last article he published.

Personality and style

Favorite quotes

An engineer by training, he never tired of quoting Archimedes to aspiring staff: "Give me a lever and a place to stand, and I will move the world". -- Carl W. Stern, 2006[20]

He was fond of quoting Jay Forrester: "While most people understand first-order effects, few deal well with second-and third-order effects. Unfortunately, virtually everything interesting in business lies in fourth-order effects and beyond"—Carl W. Stern, 2006[20]

Videos of Bruce Henderson

Videos of Bruce Henderson have been posted on YouTube. See the links below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YmZjJxS-Mw4

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c-STNDRnQ6M

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fYczwrR9lKY

Awards and recognitions

In 1953, President Dwight D. Eisenhower appointed Henderson to a team of five analysts who evaluated foreign aid programs in Germany under the Marshall Plan.[1]

Henderson was named one of Time Magazine's top 10 news makers under 30 years old.[1]

Henderson was inducted in 1978 by Vanderbilt's School of Engineering as a 'Distinguished Alumnus'.[21]

Henderson received the Distinguished Alumnus Award in 1985 by the University School of Nashville, which he had graduated from in 1932.

Upon his death, the Financial Times stated that Henderson "did more to change the way business is done in the United States than any other man in American business history."[20][22]

The Bruce D. Henderson Chair in Strategy was endowed by Bruce's wife Bess after his death at the Owen School of Management of Vanderbilt University.[23]

The Boston Consulting Group Bruce D. Henderson Chair in International Management was endowed by BCG in 1995 at INSEAD. It is currently held by W. Chan Kim.[24][25]

The Bruce D. Henderson scholarship was endowed in 1985 by the Boston Consulting Group to honor BCG founder and former chairman and Vanderbilt graduate, Bruce D. Henderson and awarded to the MBA student at the Owen School of Management of Vanderbilt University, who, during the first year, achieved the strongest record in personal, professional, and academic performance.[26][27]

The Boston Consulting Group launched the BCG Henderson Institute in honor of its founder, Bruce Henderson, on his hundredth birthday.[28] In January 2018, the BCG Henderson Institute was ranked the third Best For Profit Global Think Tank by the University of Pennsylvania.[29] The institute operate hubs in Europe and Asia and is headquartered in New York.

Publications

Books:

  • Henderson on Corporate Strategy. 1979. Harper Collins. ISBN 978-0-89011-526-8.
  • Logic of Business Strategy. 1984. Harper Collins. ISBN 978-0-88410-983-9.

Monographs:

  • Perspectives[30]
  • Perspectives on Experience. 1972. The Boston Consulting Group. ISBN 978-0-78370-000-7
  • The Boston Consulting Group on Strategy: Classic Concepts and New Perspectives (2nd edition). 2006. Wiley. ISBN 978-0-47175-722-1

References and sources

Notes
  1. ^ a b c d e f g HAYES, THOMAS C. (July 24, 1992). "Bruce Henderson, 77, Consultant And Writer on Business Strategy". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 September 2011.
  2. ^ Culpepper, Connie. "An alumnus looks back 60 years" (PDF). Edgehill. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  3. ^ "The Boston Consulting Group -- Company History". www.company-histories.com. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
  4. ^ a b https://web.archive.org/web/20130202193449/https://www.bcgperspectives.com/classics/author/Bruce%20_Henderson/. Archived from the original on February 2, 2013. Retrieved February 3, 2013. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help); Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  5. ^ Mainer, Robert. "BCG HISTORY: 1965". Archived from the original on February 4, 2013. Retrieved 4 February 2013. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  6. ^ a b c d Gant, Tina (December 2003). International Directory of Company Histories. St. James Press. ISBN 978-1-55862-503-7. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  7. ^ Gallese, Liz Roman (September 24, 1989). "Counselor To The King". New York Times. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  8. ^ Perry, Nancy J. (April 27, 1987). "A CONSULTING FIRM TOO HOT TO HANDLE?". Fortune. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  9. ^ "MEMORIAL SERVICE FOR BCG FOUNDER BRUCE HENDERSON SET FOR 11 A.M., FRIDAY, DEC. 11". PRNewswire. December 10, 1992. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  10. ^ "Idea: The experience curve". The Economist. September 14, 2009. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  11. ^ Jean Le Corre; Ilson Dal-Ri; André Truzzi; Henrique Sinatura; José Formigli; Mauro Yuji Hayashi; Renato Da Silva Pinheiro (September 2011). "Investigating the Impact of Experience Curves on the Development of Brazil's Presalt Cluster". World Oil. 232 (9).
  12. ^ Fripp, Geoff.“Overview of the BCG Matrix” Guide to the BCG Matrix
  13. ^ Henderson, Bruce. "The Product Portfolio". Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  14. ^ Henderson, Bruce. "The Rule of Three and Four". Perspectives. The Boston Consulting Group. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  15. ^ "BCG Classics Revisited: The Rule of Three and Four". Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  16. ^ Henderson, Bruce (March 1967). Harvard Business Review http://hbr.org/1967/03/brinkmanship-in-business/ar/1. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  17. ^ Delves Broughton, Philip (June 8, 2011). "Joined-up thinking". Financial Times. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  18. ^ a b Henderson, Bruce (November 1989). "The origin of strategy". Harvard Business Review.
  19. ^ Rothschild, Michael (December 1992). "The Henderson Revolution". Upside Magazine. Archived from the original on 2013-04-14. Retrieved 4 February 2013. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |dead-url= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  20. ^ a b c Stern, Carl (2006). The Boston Consulting Group on Strategy: Classic Concepts and New Perspectives (2nd edition). Wiley. p. 432. ISBN 978-0471757221.
  21. ^ "Academy of Distinguished Alumni". Vanderbilt school of engineering. Archived from the original on 15 November 2012. Retrieved 3 February 2013. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  22. ^ "Idea: Growth share matrix". The Economist. September 11, 2009. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  23. ^ "Vanderbilt's Shape the Future campaign and its impact on the Owen School". Archived from the original on 17 January 2013. Retrieved 4 February 2013. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  24. ^ "The Boston Consulting Group announces new chairholder at INSEAD". Business Wire. June 15, 1995. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  25. ^ "INSEAD W. Chan Kim faculty page". Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  26. ^ "Owen School of Management general information and courses of study" (PDF). Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  27. ^ "Vanderbilt endowed scholarships". Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  28. ^ "The Boston Consulting Group Launches Institute in Honor of Founder Bruce Henderson's 100th Birthday". Yahoo Finance. April 3, 2015. Retrieved 5 July 2018.
  29. ^ "2017 Global Go To Think Tank Index Report".
  30. ^ "BCG Perspectives". Retrieved 4 February 2013.
Sources