Blog Update #678
Tuesday, March 14, 2017
The Conduit Theory in Practice - Speaker
Willie Brown
Willie Brown, the former speaker of the California Assembly,
never intended to have a political career when he was born. Brown was raised in
a backwater town named Mineola, Texas, in 1934, a time when Texas and the South
were not particularly conducive to the career dreams of African Americans. To
find a better path, his family packed Brown on a train from Texas all the way
to California. There, with the help of a professor, Brown found his calling at
a state University and earned a law degree from the prestigious U.C.
Hastings. However, he was yet to prove his greatest accomplishment.
In 1964, after a second try, Brown gained a seat in the
California Assembly. There, he learned simply being unique didn't get him much.
He had to learn how to be a useful broker. In that respect, Brown quietly
learned from his legislative tutors like Jesse Unruh and Philip Burton how to
become a pivot point, a conduit between the many who want something and those
with power. Positioning through legislative committees, Brown went from being a
name in the Assembly to eventually to becoming its Speaker, one of the top five
positions in state government. Brown held that chair for fifteen years, only to
then retire and become the mayor of San Francisco in his later years.
Becoming A Conduit
Point
For a business, Willie Brown's story is an illustrative one; you
don't have to be biggest, most powerful player on the market to become
instrumental. Brown, as an African American politician in the 1960s, was
clearly not in the position to leapfrog right away to leadership or the
Governor's office. However, he did find a position that everyone needed and had
to go through to get something. By identifying how and becoming a conduit
point, Brown secured his future, which is what successful businesses do in
their market.
A conduit point isn't just limited to being between end retail
customers and suppliers. Conduit businesses can easily do the same in the
business-to-business market as well, often producing far greater revenues than
they would on the retail side of things. However, positioning can be a
challenge. One needs to see the entire market, not just a segment of it.
Getting to the forest level instead of the weeds allows a business player to
identify all the connection points and where being a conduit has the greatest
potential for producing revenue. It also shows what is needed to be successful
in that particular position. Sometimes some potential conduits are too
challenging, and others may offer too little in reward for the effort. Picking
the right market position takes some experience, which means a business needs
to research well and study peers, suppliers, buyers, competitors, and
middlemen. No one in a given market should be left out.
Willie Brown was an intensive study of his legislative peers,
which is why he was able to position himself so well. He also took lessons from
those more powerful than him rather than fighting them, using that knowledge to
become one of the powerful ones himself. A growing business can learn a thing
or two from his life example.
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