Feature
posted 1 Oct 1998 in Volume 2 Issue 2
Intellectual Capital - The Rewards and
the Risks
Derrick D'Souza and Ken Douglas recognise that there are significant
rewards to be gained by those businesses that can relate their investments and
management of intangibles explicitly to their market value. But first they need
to define what 'Intellectual Capital' actually means.
The measurement of 'Intellectual
Capital' is attracting a great deal of topical management interest. As companies
spend relatively higher proportions of their funds on intangibles, significant
inadequacies in traditional management models and reporting structures are being
exposed. Two prime goals, therefore, lie at the heart of this interest:
1. How to help
shareholders and investors quantify the value added by a company's intangible
assets.
2. How to
help make the right internal decisions relating to investment and management of
intangible assets.
Underpinning these goals is the observation that market/book ratios are
considerably higher now than has historically been the case. There are many
reasons for this, including, for example, a trend to lease rather than own
physical assets. In addition financial markets now place much more emphasis on
the potential cash flow creation of businesses and it is here that intangible
assets are increasingly recognised as having a key role to play.
There are clearly
significant rewards to be gained by businesses that can relate their investments
and management of intangibles explicitly to their market value. This is the Holy
Grail of Intellectual Capital measurement. However, there are also significant
risks. Our experience has been that it is all too easy for management to put
faith in inappropriate or over simplistic measures, which can significantly
hamper effective decision-making and/or do little to help investors understand
how to assess such investments.
The problem of defining
Intellectual Capital
Before we look at how to
make effective use of Intellectual Capital measures it is important to recognise
a fundamental flaw in one of the most common definitions. Intellectual Capital
is often described as the difference between a business's market value and
it's accounting book value, and that this can be divided into components
including 'human capital', 'structural capital' etc. Various measures are then defined to
represent each of these components and the objective for corporate management is
therefore to increase their 'score' on each, thereby increasing intellectual
capital and consequently the company's market value.
There are a number of problems
with this approach. For example, it is difficult to tie market valuation to
specific assets (whether physical or intangible). This is largely because an
asset's ability to create value is not an independent variable: it is heavy
influenced by interaction with other assets. Also, investors may see a 'score' for a
particular asset but it is difficult to gauge if this represented a good return
on investment or if best supports strategic aims. This approach also encourages
the view that direct comparison of specific intellectual assets across
organizations is meaningful. This is potentially very dangerous since absolute
measures of intangibles (e.g. explicit knowledge) are difficult to achieve and
their significance varies considerably depending on an organisation's
strategy.
We need
a better model to think about intangible assets and how they drive market value.
When equipped with that we can begin to consider what action management can take
to optimise the return on their intangible asset base, better inform their
investors and be aware of what can and cannot be sensibly done to benchmark
themselves against competitors.
Firstly, let's start by re-defining
what we mean by Intellectual Capital. In economic terms, capital is equivalent
to investment. Therefore, Intellectual Capital is a term that measures
investments into non-physical assets or intangible assets. Unlike investment in
most physical assets, accounting rules do not allow us to reflect investment in
most intangibles in 'book value'. However, it is possible to conceive a 'true'
book value as shown in figure 1.

Figure
1
Implementing a
useful management framework
There are several steps which
management can sensibly take to begin to come to grips with their investments
and returns on intangible assets. Measurement is a critical part of these steps
but not necessarily the primary focus:
1. Understanding and classifying
intangible assets.
2. Developing a strategy which explicitly develops and levers intangible
assets.
3.
Developing measures to gauge progress and success.
4. Communicating - as appropriate -
key portions of the strategy and measures to external parties.
Let's look at each of
these in turn.
Understanding and classifying intangible assets
There are many models
for intangible assets. These are well described elsewhere and we will not cover
these in detail here. The key point to recognise is that no one model is
necessarily right or complete. This is not an exact science and so management
should feel free to choose whatever model they feel most comfortable with - or
make any changes they feel is appropriate.
Figure 2 outlines the main categories
that business managers should be aware of and understand. It is quite possible
to assign measures to all of the intangible assets at this time and undertake a
program to improve these across the board. This approach is generally too
unfocussed to work well. To be effective the measures need to be prioritised and
tied more explicitly to strategy.
| People
related (e.g. Human Capital) - skills and competencies - tacit knowledge - behaviours Customer/Market related - brand equity - customer relationships Process/Content related (e.g. Structural Capital) - explicit knowledge - intellectual property, patent |
Figure 2: Typical Intangible Asset Classification
Developing a strategy which explicitly develops and levers intangible assets
Strategies should be clear about how and where intangible (and other assets) will interact to drive financial success. It is critical to take a systematic view and establish an explicit cause and effect relationship between desired outcomes and the assets that underpin the ability to achieve these. Taking this approach helps establish the, sometimes complex, inter-relationships between assets and how they contribute to add value. In addition it also helps management develop a common view of what is to be achieved and how.
Figure three, for example, helps "tell the story" that a process to deeply understand what being a "trusted advisor" entails is a critical driver in broadening revenue mix and improving returns. Depending on management priorities this may be an area worth investing in.

Figure
3
We noted earlier that measures of "absolute" value, which directly relate intangible assets to market value, are elusive at best and misleading at worst. However surrogate measures can be extremely useful for internal management. They can motivate action and, if properly defined and tracked, enable learning about how their strategy is working.
Typically we use a Balanced Scorecard framework for establishing the appropriate measures in a context that is easy to relate to business strategy (see Figure 4). Both "lead" measures (which relate to investment) and "lag" measures (which relate to returns/outputs) should be established along with appropriate targets. The process for doing this is often as important and revealing as the measures themselves since it provides management the opportunity to test, revise and understand their view about what drives results.

Communicating key portions of the strategy and measures to external parties
Market value is driven by a complex interplay of supply and demand, and investor and analyst assumptions about the present value of future cash flows. It is therefore important to increase their confidence and belief in a business's ability to do this. As far as value added through intangible assets is concerned this is not solely achieved through measures.
Some companies have opted to publish such measures as supplements to their annual reports. It is arguable however that it is not the figures which are important but demonstrating a convincing plan to exploit and develop intangible assets and clearly linking this to strategy.
A final note is that explicitly communicating strategy and measures for intangibles is increasingly viewed as good investor relations practice, with a caveat, however, that there remains a need to weight the benefit of communicating this versus retaining competitive confidentiality.
In Summary
In summary, here are good reasons why management should take Intellectual Capital measurement seriously. Intangible Assets undoubtedly play a more significant role in dictating market value than has been the case previously. However, prescriptive methods to explicitly measure such assets can be dangerous and may not help management make the right investment decisions or help investors assess the likely returns. The key lessons learned in this field are:
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Link investment decisions and measures directly to your strategy |
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Keep in mind that management is more important than measurements (measures will not per se improve performance) |
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Understand the cause and effect assumptions inherent in linking Intellectual Capital to financial results. Periodically review them, test them, and change them |
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Take a systemic view: it is the interplay of assets with each other and their use that creates value |
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Having a measure is less important than understanding what you are trying to measure and why |
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Beware of standard models - the measures could be misunderstood without the appropriate strategic context. |
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The Holy Grail of direct linkage of explicit predictable measures to value is still a long way from becoming a management reality. |
Derrick D'Souza is a Managing Consultant with Renaissance Worldwide. Ken Douglas is Principal Consultant Knowledge Services with Renaissance Worldwide.
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