60) Netflix (for the 3rd time)

危 wēi  danger

I love Netflix’s approach – I’ve written more blog posts about it than any other company (as you can see here).  Over the last few months a few people have pointed me to a version of the company’s strategy that is posted online as a short briefing to their job candidates – I took a look and was impressed with what I read but a little part of me wondered if it had been accidentally leaked into the public domain.  Surely making its strategy and beliefs public gave some sort of advantage to its competitors?

机 jī opportunity

To the contrary, the more I have thought about it the more I think it is another smart move from Netflix.  After all, it’s naïve to think in this technological age that a top-level company strategy can be kept a secret (I know that Apple is perhaps the counter-argument but even its broad strategy leaks into the public domain occasionally).  Broad strategies and ideas are easily copied – it’s the details in tactics, execution, capacity to learn fast and ability to change direction that differentiate the winners and losers.  With that in mind it makes complete sense to make top level strategy public if it reaps any rewards at all.

Those rewards might include:

  • Enabling the right potential employees to self-select themselves for recruitment
  • Ditto for partners
  • Clarity of goals and beliefs to the whole organization (after all, I’m amazed how many employees think that their company doesn’t actually have a clear goal)

Anyway, I’m confident that the company knows exactly what it’s doing because this is a version that was updated only 5 days ago:


How About…

  • Making your strategy entirely open (after all it’s likely to be common knowledge anyway)?