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How exponential organizations outcompete(d) their traditional counterparts (in the past eight years)?

Péter Kristóf (OpenExO Research, Dover, Delaware, USA and Faculty of Business and Economics, University of Pécs, Pecs, Hungary)
Chander Nagpal (OpenExO Research, Dover, Delaware, USA)

International Journal of Organizational Analysis

ISSN: 1934-8835

Article publication date: 7 March 2024

Issue publication date: 11 November 2024

84

Abstract

Purpose

Exponential organizations (ExOs) are purpose-driven companies that leverage exponential technologies and exponential business practices to grow and scale rapidly, transform industries and create massive value and impact. In contrast, non-ExOs follow a linear approach to business and organizational strategy design and execution. This study aims to validate the hypothesis, based on financial metrics, that ExOs outperform their competitors and linear counterparts. Furthermore, it also brings a new understanding of the gap raised in the past eight years about how ExOs can achieve significantly better performance, measured with financial metrics.

Design/methodology/approach

For measuring how exponential an organization is, this study elaborated a completely new assessment tool called Exponential Quotient (ExQ). This study applied ExQ to the 100 largest US headquartered companies as ranked by Fortune magazine in 2014. Calculating the ExQ enabled this study to rank these Fortune 100 companies and identify the most and the least exponential firms. This study tracked these companies as to how they performed on different financial metrics over the eight years of 2014–2021 and analyzed the results.

Findings

Through the analysis, this study revealed that the top 10 ExOs have significantly outperformed their bottom 10 non-exponential peers, delivering 40x higher shareholder returns, 2.6x better revenue growth, 6.8x higher profitability and 11.7x better asset turnover. Furthermore, this study could identify commonalities and similarities between the two groups. This means that ExOs can thrive even in tough times and that accelerating technologies unlock abundance and allow every organization to become a disruptive innovator and stay ahead of the competition. These are novel results in the research focusing on the gap between exponential and traditional organizations.

Research limitations/implications

Using the ExQ diagnostics tool, every organization can see how flexible, scalable and agile they are, which is the starting point for an exponential transformation program. Although this approach has already found its way into practice and is applied globally by thousands of organizations (startups, scaleups and incumbents), so far, the academic establishment is in its nascent phase. With this research, the authors wanted to extend this field of science. On the other hand, because of its novelty, no appropriate previous studies existed to compare the results.

Practical implications

The possible implications showed that there is a plannable way for significantly increasing an organization’s ExQ and advance it from a linear toward an exponential organizational model.

Originality/value

The results validated the robustness of the ExO framework and philosophy and shed light on the importance of exponential transformation – a proven method to increase an organization’s ExQ. This framework is not a “how to be successful” guide. Instead, it uncovered some of the previously unknown and universal mechanisms of scalability – which, in turbulent times, make companies successful (based on financial metrics). To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this study was among the first kind of in-depth analyses to validate the whole ExO model.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank the invaluable contributions of Dr Asha Bhatia, Dean of Research at Universal AI University, Mumbai, India, and Professor Michael Friebe, Director of the Center for Innovation, Business Development and Entrepreneurship, FOM University of Applied Sciences for Economics and Management, Essen, Germany.

Citation

Kristóf, P. and Nagpal, C. (2024), "How exponential organizations outcompete(d) their traditional counterparts (in the past eight years)?", International Journal of Organizational Analysis, Vol. 32 No. 10, pp. 2668-2682. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJOA-07-2023-3879

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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