Examples of organisational transformation include: •
General Motors' transformation and restructuring (around 2009). This included consolidating manufacturing facilities, rationalising products, improving the supply chain and implementing lean manufacturing processes. They created a new company and moved the best performing brands and operations into this, to improve financial viability. •
BBC's Delivering Quality First programme (since 2011), which involved productivity savings, reducing content, improving commercially generated income and strategies for working capital savings. •
Argos -
Sainsbury's acquired Argos in 2016, allowing Sainsbury's to become a combined grocery and non-food retailer. Sainsbury's began integrating Argos into Sainsbury's stores. Commenting on financial year 2018-2019, Sainsbury's CEO said that most growth had been achieved by integrating Argos into Sainsbury's stores, which led to the closure of many standalone Argos stores, allowing Sainsbury's to achieve an expected £200 million in cost savings. This example shows that competitive advantage from acquisitions is often generated by how the business transforms to successfully integrate, post acquisition. •
Box's pivot from consumer to enterprise (around 2009-2010) •
British Airways' strategic transformation programme in response to low cost airlines (around 2004-2005) •
Netflix's transformation from a DVD company to a streaming service led to subscribers increasing from 7.48 million (2007) to 27.1 million (2012) and an increase in revenue from $997 million (2007) to $3.61 billion (2012) and facilitated international expansion into new markets. By 2020 Netflix were generating £25 billion in revenue, with over 200 million subscribers. ==References==